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  1. #1

    Smile Newbie Introduction

    After lurking here for a while, I decided to sign on and introduce myself.

    From what I've read here, I know that what I would have called my first cigars several years ago really should not be called cigars at all. So, they will remain unmentioned. Eventually, I did send for a Thompson sampler when they were under $20.00, and got a bundle of Honduran handmades soon thereafter.

    After a long hiatus of not smoking cigars, I got interested again after talking to a friend who sells them, along with pipes and snuff. I'm waiting for him to bring me a sampler now to pack the humidor I just bought online. It's a small cherry box that might hold 25 coronas comfortably. I know what you're thinking - yes, the half-ounce tube of 65% beads is on the way.

    My office is near the river, so I like to take a walk over there at lunch time and decompress, watching the birds fly and the water flow by. Smoking a cigar ensures that I spend an adequate amount of time over there. This means my ideal stogie would last around 40 minutes, so please offer any appropriate suggestions. The Havana Honeys and Acid Krush Classics I've gone through are a little too small for the time I have to spend.

    One of my interests is the Civil War, and I noticed as I watched the film, Gettysburg, this week that there is quite a bit of footage of General Longstreet with a stogie in his mouth. I'd watched the film several times, but just noticed the cigar significance this time. General Grant is probably the most well known cigar smoker of the Civil War. If anybody knows what brands he liked, please let me know. I wonder what kind of smokes the Civil War reenactors use in their living history impressions.

    Enjoy your smoke, and I look forward to reading more!

    Wigglesworth
    "A cigar provides a man the opportunity to manipulate fire and smoke. These devastating elements of nature that can ravage forests and snuff out life are conquered and dominated by the lightest adjustment of the lips and the breath. Such awesome potential for destruction manipulated in peaceful contemplation reminds a man that he is, regardless of what others have said about him, a man." - Wigglesworth

  2. #2

    Default

    welcome to the board

  3. #3

    Default

    Thank you for the welcome, Counselor. I've practiced mainly criminal defense and family law.

    By the way, here is a picture of the box I have on the windowsill in my office.



    It came without a humidifier, so I'm customizing it. I put a Credo-style, small, round humidifier in the lid, and there should be a humi-tube in there next to it by the end of the week. This is my first humidor, so it's clearly no comparison with some I've seen on the board. It will do for now, and if I need to build a humiroom in my house someday, I can still keep this one on the windowsill (out of direct sunlight of course).
    "A cigar provides a man the opportunity to manipulate fire and smoke. These devastating elements of nature that can ravage forests and snuff out life are conquered and dominated by the lightest adjustment of the lips and the breath. Such awesome potential for destruction manipulated in peaceful contemplation reminds a man that he is, regardless of what others have said about him, a man." - Wigglesworth

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Winchester,KY
    Posts
    328

    Default

    Welcome to the forums from Virginia.
    I am new myself and I would recommend anything from the Carlos Torano line. Those are great smokes. I have tried the Exodus 1959 and just finished a CT 1916. Was not dissapointed with either. They are priced nicely as well.

  5. #5

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    For a short smoke, I would recommend Arturo Fuente Brevas Royales or Arturo Fuente Curly Head Deluxe Maduros. Both very affordable, both very good short smokes, but neither are flavored. You might enjoy them Paul

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Auburn, California
    Posts
    598

    Default

    Welcome to the board.

    One piece of advice . . . you may want to move that humi off of the windo sill. Temp variations will play hell with the climate in the humi.
    Let us so live that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry. - - Mark Twain

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