The cigar thread

  • To unlock all of features of Rams On Demand please take a brief moment to register. Registering is not only quick and easy, it also allows you access to additional features such as live chat, private messaging, and a host of other apps exclusive to Rams On Demand.

RhodyRams

Insert something clever here
Rams On Demand Sponsor
SportsBook Bookie
Moderator
Joined
Dec 10, 2012
Messages
13,227
I know I'm not the only one who enjoys a good cigar ...so what's in your humidor

Just got my box of Perdoma Lot 23 .

in my humidor now is about 10 Victor Sinclair Double Shot along with a variety of Rocky Patel and only 2 left of the CAO flatheads
 
Last I checked, I should have a few undercrown, oliva serie G, a new world, a Fuente, and probably a few singles. I only smoke 1-2 times per month, but enjoy it!
 
  • Cheers
Reactions: RhodyRams
I gave up smoking years ago but I used to love a Cohiba Robusto, with its unique flavour and perfect enjoyment time.

Anything that takes over an hour to smoke is tiresome, in my opinion.
 
  • Cheers
Reactions: FaulkSF
20240802_102558.jpg
 
  • Like
Reactions: Selassie I
I love cigars, but I quit smoking many years ago. Because of that I gave up cigars too. I cannot consume nicotine or I would fall off the wagon completely.

But back before I stopped smoking I had developed a love for Cuban cigars. A good friend of mine and I made several trips down to Cuba and smuggled cases of those fine cigars over here. We sold most, but I always had a huge supply at home for myself. My friend's boat still has mysterious Cohiba wrappers that seem to appear outta nowhere to this day.
 
Cubans have a different and toothier flavor. While they are great cigars, good DR and Ecuadorians can still hold court with them.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Corbin
Right now mostly Punch. But I have favored Montecristo in the past. There are so many good ones... Macanudo, Cohiba, Don Diego, etc... even maduros once in a a while. I like to mix them up. The only problem with cigars is that they have gotten so expensive lately. I used to get good cigars for around $50-$75 a box with many popular brands on sale, but it seems like they have doubled in price lately. Now i just buy cheap... anything but machine-made.
 
For my 25th anniversary at my place of employ, they will gift you a few things.
Basically can pick some things out of an online shopping site.
So, picked up a few things.....a neon Dodger sign for the man cave for one.
But, one was a small cheap humidor.
I know nothing about cigars but thought it might enjoyable.
I found a little shop in Sparks Nevada, where I live, that is owned by a Nicaraguan guy. They carry different cigars of course but also some varieties from his families farm in Nicaragua.
Anyway....enjoyed them.....
Any suggestions?
 
For my 25th anniversary at my place of employ, they will gift you a few things.
Basically can pick some things out of an online shopping site.
So, picked up a few things.....a neon Dodger sign for the man cave for one.
But, one was a small cheap humidor.
I know nothing about cigars but thought it might enjoyable.
I found a little shop in Sparks Nevada, where I live, that is owned by a Nicaraguan guy. They carry different cigars of course but also some varieties from his families farm in Nicaragua.
Anyway....enjoyed them.....
Any suggestions?

Since you are just getting into it, ask the guy to give you a wide variety of different tastes and see what you like best. Sometimes your taste might change depending on your adult beverage you are having with it... but most people have different taste preferences. The cool part is sampling and finding out yourself.
 
The cool part is sampling and finding out yourself.
This. Times infinity

At the end of the day, all of us have different palates. Someone may detect dark fruits and hazelnuts, but that doesn't mean that you will.

Always try cigars (or wine, cognac, etc) yourself. Only you can tell what your favourite is.
 
I love cigars, but I quit smoking many years ago. Because of that I gave up cigars too. I cannot consume nicotine or I would fall off the wagon completely.

But back before I stopped smoking I had developed a love for Cuban cigars. A good friend of mine and I made several trips down to Cuba and smuggled cases of those fine cigars over here. We sold most, but I always had a huge supply at home for myself. My friend's boat still has mysterious Cohiba wrappers that seem to appear outta nowhere to this day.
Stupid question, did you used to boat to Cuba and buy them? If so how could you get them for there and then how much selling them? How long is that trip? Any good fishing on the way?
Cubans have a different and toothier flavor. While they are great cigars, good DR and Ecuadorians can still hold court with them.
Did you mean to type "toothier"?

Also you buy/bought Ecuadorians? I went to the DR last year and got quite a bit, don't think I got good prices on them, any idea where is good place to get good prices on those by chance?
 
Also anybody recommend a good Humidor?

It's basically a wooden box you can make right?

I mean outside of the type of wood (Spanish cedar?) I don't see any technical difference in any of the basic ones but they sell for quite a bit for just a plain wooden box?
 
Stupid question, did you used to boat to Cuba and buy them? If so how could you get them for there and then how much selling them? How long is that trip? Any good fishing on the way?


Let me try and decipher your questions best I can...

I used to rent a small office in downtown Melbourne FL. In the office next to mine there was an art dealer. She somehow had permissions to travel legally to Cuba... it had something to do with her business. So she is the person who gave me the info down in Cuba for the cigar contact. Without that, our smuggling operation would have never happened. Plus, she had also given that contact to another guy who had already made several trips to buy from this contact and he gave us all the water info etc before we ever decided to take the plunge.

We took my friend's boat on our trips. It was a center console cat like the boat I have. It was just smaller than mine. Cats like ours have fully planing hulls and that allows tremendous miles per gallon compared to all other boats. As an example... I've traveled 150 miles one way to Walkers Cay Bahamas from Ft Pierce FL with my boat loaded down so much that it sat down in the water about a foot lower than normal and only burned trough less than 35 gallons of fuel. We obviously took his boat over completely empty basically. So making the trip there and back without refueling is absolutely no problemo. Most boats that size (especially back then) probably wouldn't make it across from where we left from without carrying extra 55 gallon drums of fuel on the deck. So we looked like a boat that was far too small for this kind of trip in the first place.

We also made sure that we looked like we were just fishing by having rods in all the rocket launchers and we left out of Marathon Key FL (the middle Keys). Leaving out of the middle Keys is way less obvious than leaving out of Key West, but it adds about 60 more miles to Cuba. If I remember right it was about 150 miles one way for us. We also took a round about path that I won't go into... but we did our best to appear as just a recreational fishing boat. We didn't fish on any of the trips but we did put fresh caught fish (that we'd catch the day before) in the fishbox in case we happened to be stopped by Marine patrol. We left and returned in the dark too even though that probably wasn't even necessary.

I don’t remember exactly how much we sold them for when we got back, but we both made between like $12K - $20K each to put in our pockets each time. We made more after our first trip because we found better paying buyers. That art dealer had rich clients and she was able to hook us up with some of them who loved those Cohibas. Honestly, I think they would buy them more for the fact that they were illegal here than the quality. They are good, but there are many other legal ones that compare very close if not better. I think back then there weren't as many comparable producers though.

Bottom line is we were young and dumb and somehow luck was with us. I know that it helped that we did this prior to 9/11, but we were still very lucky. I wouldn't even think about trying it today.
 
Last edited:
@Corbin Toothier is grainier and more fuller bodied. I’ve always purchased from Cigars International (not an advertisement). But if you want really fresh, purchase them at your local cigar shop.

Make sure the humidor is at least lined with cedar if not fully cedar. It should seal well and is recommended you get one with a hygrometer attached to let you know the moisture/humidity within the box.

I recommend cleaning it every couple of months. I wet a cloth in distilled water and rub down the interior of the humidor (remove cigars first). You may also use hydration packets, I prefer about 68-70% humidity to keep my cigars fresher.
 
  • High Five
Reactions: Corbin
Let me try and decipher your questions best I can...

I used to rent a small office in downtown Melbourne FL. In the office next to mine there was an art dealer. She somehow had permissions to travel legally to Cuba... it had something to do with her business. So she is the person who gave me the info down in Cuba for the cigar contact. Without that, our smuggling operation would have never happened. Plus, she had also given that contact to another guy who had already made several trips to buy from this contact and he gave us all the water info etc before we ever decided to take the plunge.

We took my friend's boat on our trips. It was a center console cat like the boat I have. It was just smaller than mine. Cats like ours have fully planing hulls and that allows tremendous miles per gallon compared to all other boats. As an example... I've traveled 150 miles one way to Walkers Cay Bahamas from Ft Pierce FL with my boat loaded down so much that it sat down in the water about a foot lower than normal and only burned trough less than 35 gallons of fuel. We obviously took his boat over completely empty basically. So making the trip there and back without refueling is absolutely no problemo. Most boats that size (especially back then) probably wouldn't make it across from where we left from without carrying extra 55 gallon drums of fuel on the deck. So we looked like a boat that was far too small for this kind of trip in the first place.

We also made sure that we looked like we were just fishing by having rods in all the rocket launchers and we left out of Marathon Key FL (the middle Keys). Leaving out of the middle Keys is way less obvious than leaving out of Key West, but it adds about 60 more miles to Cuba. If I remember right it was about 150 miles one way for us. We also took a round about path that I won't go into... but we did our best to appear as just a recreational fishing boat. We didn't fish on any of the trips but we did put fresh caught fish (that we'd catch the day before) in the fishbox in case we happened to be stopped by Marine patrol. We left and returned in the dark too even though that probably wasn't even necessary.

I don’t remember exactly how much we sold them for when we got back, but we both made between like $12K - $20K each to put in our pockets each time. We made more after our first trip because we found better paying buyers. That art dealer had rich clients and she was able to hook us up with some of them who loved those Cohibas. Honestly, I think they would buy them more for the fact that they were illegal here than the quality. They are good, but there are many other legal ones that compare very close if not better. I think back then there weren't as many comparable producers though.

Bottom line is we were young and dumb and somehow luck was with us. I know that it helped that we did this prior to 9/11, but we were still very lucky. I wouldn't even think about trying it today.
@Selassie I that's a totally amazing story! lmao Totally my personality, love in ingenuity. The devils in the details and sounds like you guys had them locked down pretty good. That was some pretty damned good extra cash there! haha IMO and isn't a crime that hurts anybody with laws that are pretty antiquated.

Man that Florida life and hoping over the Bahamas, the Keys, Cuba or wherever sounds so amazing and just the fishing part as well with that.

Reason I was inquiring is with the products I sell in South America looking to start bringing back goods and one that struck me was cigars besides the normal ass coffee/panela, vanilla, etc. I bring back now.

I'm defiantly planning on moving to Florida in the near future to make the plane rides a lot shorter and want to get a Cat to, so basically with a center cat you can easily get around for about 150 miles? How much does the tank take out of curiosity? How much is a decent cat to fish travel decently and live comfortably cost?

Most importantly which is the reason I haven't moved there yet is what the hell do you do when a Hurricane comes? With your boat, house etc etc.

P.s. a passion of mine was reading up on that 1715 Spanish fleet? You have any stories regarding those? :thinking: Haha Could talk all day about this stuff! :laugh3:

@Corbin Toothier is grainier and more fuller bodied. I’ve always purchased from Cigars International (not an advertisement). But if you want really fresh, purchase them at your local cigar shop.

Make sure the humidor is at least lined with cedar if not fully cedar. It should seal well and is recommended you get one with a hygrometer attached to let you know the moisture/humidity within the box.

I recommend cleaning it every couple of months. I wet a cloth in distilled water and rub down the interior of the humidor (remove cigars first). You may also use hydration packets, I prefer about 68-70% humidity to keep my cigars fresher.
Never heard of that adjective before! :laugh3: I was thinking you could chew on it more! lol Wow that's very interesting, I'll look into getting one now for the Dominicanos I have left. I do a shit ton of business and travels to Ecuador so apparently in Manabi they make those. have to see if if I can get a good source there.
As with so many things, it’s all subjective.

I hated any semblance of dryness in my cigars, so I’d go for 72-75 humidity.
Hmmm so how do you go about making it more humid? Do you put water in that hygrometer and it controls the percentage in the box? Also, can you tell a difference when you smoke it at all? Burns slower?