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Aug 26

Buy A Butane Lighters For A Great Cigar Experience

Posted on Thursday, August 26, 2010 in About Cigar

You are relaxing in your house admiring how a beautiful a day it is and you feel like smoking a cigar or two, or picture yourself in your plush office just closing the deal of lifetime and you feel like having a personal celebration by smoking, or you just plainly want to indulge yourself and smoke your treasured Havana’s.  So you open your cigar case or the humidor containing them, you take one out, you inhale its scent and deep aroma cut off the end put it on your mouth then you take out your lighter and lit it, you’re a little giddy with excitement looking forward to great day, and looking forward to a great cigar experience. So you take your first puff, and you choke like you are going to vomit. Instead of a good cigar, you just tasted fuel. And your perfectly good cigar is ruined, not only that, your perfectly great day is ruined. The lighter did it. Who knows what is going to happen next?

Get one of those butane lighters, and I guarantee that the things I wrote above will not happen. Butane lighters are, of course, lighters that use butane for fuel. Butane when you use it in your room is a gaseous hydrocarbon compound, in layman’s terms it means it butane lighters burn clean and its flame has high heat value. Butane is also priced reasonably so your refill will not cost much. That is why butane lighters are perfect for your cigar. It is odorless and tasteless so it does not have that nasty aftertaste unlike your traditional lighter which uses traditional fuel. And one more awesome thing about butane lighters is that, although butane is highly flammable it also has very high pressure, which actually makes butane lighters very safe to use. It is even referred to as the future fuel. Who knows butane lighters could also be the future of lighters?

Having a great cigar does not necessarily mean having a great cigar experience. If you are really serious about your smoking, there are other things aside from cigar or cigarettes you need to make yourself an expert of, like lighters.

Vincent owns a network of stores. The inspiration for this article came from a store called the Best Cigar Lighter.

Aug 17

Cigars: A Great Bachelorette Party Gift

Posted on Tuesday, August 17, 2010 in About Cigar

Unlike many wedding customs, it’s not so hard to get to the bottom of the origin of the bachelorette party. It’s a fairly recent innovation, the result of the cross-breeding of the traditional bachelorette’s tea

with the idea of the bachelor party, with a bit of the even-more-traditional bridal shower mixed in.


The idea of the bridal shower goes back, perhaps, thousands of years; experts attribute it to the need for dowries. In European culture, it was expected that women would begin married life with a dowry – a gift of money or tools (or both) that would allow the new couple to set up their new household together. But women who lacked adequate dowries would be “showered” with gifts by sympathetic friends, which would enable the wedding to go on as planned.


The bridal shower was traditionally, and still is, a fairly staid affair, with older woman friends of the couple or of the bride’s family invited, and the bride-to-be accompanied by her mother. (Increasingly, as traditionally gendered divisions of labor continue to break down, men are involved in the showers as well – after all, if the man will do part of the cooking and cleaning, he has a stake in knowing what presents are received!) They serve a much-needed function, but they may not have the let-your-hair-down appeal of a last night out with the friends of your single years.


The bachelorette’s tea offered some of the peer-to-peer intimacy that may have been lacking in bridal showers, but still – a tea? The highly formal, characteristically Victorian custom of the tea ceremony holds great appeal for many people, as the recent popularity of tea shops and books on tea attest. Still, as women began to learn about the wild shenanigans historically associated with bachelor parties, over the last several decades, they decided they wanted in.


The Bridesmaidaid website compares them to Title IX, the 1972 law that mandated equal federal funding of boys’ and girls’ educational activities. Just as Title IX ensured that girls’ soccer teams and afterschool math programs would receive the same budgetary consideration as boys’ did, allowing young women to attain similar achievements, the new bachelorette party allows women to compete with men in pre-wedding-night partying. As the website’s anonymous author puts it: “Bachelorette parties are like the Title IX of weddings: they’re supposed to make the girls equal to the boys. If the groomsmen can take their boy out for a night of debauchery, so can we, right?”


Bachelorette parties have indeed become associated with bachelor-party-style antics, as illustrated by pop culture and personal anecdote alike. A memorable scene in the movie The Forty-Year-Old Virgin, in which the title character’s friends attempt to set him up with what they expect will be a can’t-miss romantic prospect – a drunken bridesmaid encountered at a bar, where a bachelorette party is underway – affirms the stereotype.


But this custom has changed with time, like its twin, the bachelor party. Bachelor parties have their own Bacchanalian reputation to live up to, but gradually they’re toning down somewhat (while remaining fun). Drinking has been moderated and honoring one’s future bride is a priority; in fact, sometimes the fiance’ and her friends show up, and the party becomes a celebration of marriage, rather than a lament for lost bachelorhood. These combined bachelor-and-bachelorette parties are sometimes called stag and does parties.


One custom that isn’t changing at bachelorette parties is the ritual smoking of cigars. In fact, with the increase in the popularity of cigars over the past fifteen years, lighting up a stogie at a bachelorette party is often encouraged! After all, one feature of the new popularity of cigars has been the fact that women are more often found, today, among the new smokers of cigars. At least half a million American women smoke cigars, according to a 2002 estimate by the Cigar Association of America. That number makes sense in a country where – according to demographic research by Cigar Babes, a nonprofit organization for women cigar smokers’ women make 85% of buying decisions, start 70% of new businesses, and buy 50% of the products classified traditionally as “male.”


Cigars, then, remain a staple bachelorette party gift. For those of you planning a bachelorette party, here are some cigar basics:


1) Choose good cigars. (A wedding is a once-in-a-lifetime event!) Buy well-made, hand-rolled, long-filler cigars from a quality cigar outlet or online store. The better the cigar, the better the taste, and the more permanent the memories.


2) Speaking of taste: the outer wrapper (which gives the cigar its outer color) generally tells you how the cigar tastes. Darker outer wrappers mean sweeter taste; tan- or lighter-colored cigars are drier.


3) How to smoke: Cut off the cap of the cigar, then, using a wooden match or a butane lighter or other full flame (not a paper match), turn the end of the cigar in the flame a full 360 degrees until every part of it is lit. Don’t inhale – this isn’t a cigarette! Pull the smoke into your mouth and taste it thoroughly without allowing it into your lungs. Remember, it’s about the taste.

CigarFox provides you the opportunity to build your own sampler of the finest cigars that include cigar brands like Montecristo, Romeo & Julieta, H Upmann, Macanudo, Cohiba, Partagas, Gurkha and many more. Choose from more than 1200 different cigars! Other cigar products include cigar humidors, cigar boxes, and cigar accessories like Zippo Lighters.

Jun 27

Online Money Pack.

Posted on Sunday, June 27, 2010 in cigars and business

Online Money Pack Is A Great Collection Of Money Making Products Offered By 75digital.com. This Pack Is For Both Newbies And Experts.
Online Money Pack.

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Jun 27

Cigars in History

Posted on Sunday, June 27, 2010 in About Cigar

The indigenous inhabitants of the islands of Mexico and the Americas smoked cigars as early as 1100 A.D. This is evidenced by the discovery of a ceramic vessel at a Mayan archaeological site located at Uaxactun, Guatemala. A painted figure of a man smoking a rudimentary form of cigar adorns the vessel.
 
It was the Italian explorer Christopher Columbus who officially inaugurated Europe to the pleasure of smoking tobacco. Because of this, he is credited with being the catalyst for the advent of the modern handmade cigar. He visited the indigenous population and noticed that they used tobacco for medicine, tribal rituals and for spiritual practices.
 
Rodrigo de Jerez and Luis de Torres, two crewmen who sailed with Columbus, are said to have been introduced to tobacco for the first time on the island San Salvador in the Bahamas. There, during the famous voyage of 1492, natives offered them fragrant dry leaves with an aroma that lingered after it was lit. Further exploration revealed that tobacco was widespread among the other island tribes, such as Cuba, which is the location where Columbus and his men established their first official settlement.
 
Columbus exported tobacco back to Europe and it was immediately all the rage. In fact, tobacco was such hit that, to much of the European population, the idea of farming tobacco served as a rationale for the colonization of North America, South America and the Caribbean.
 
Ship manifest records of 1592 recorded that the Spanish galleon, San Clemente, brought 50 kilograms, or 110 pounds, of tobacco seed over the Acapulco-Manila trade route to the Philippines. There the seed was allocated to Roman Catholic missions, where the clerics discovered that the climate and soil were ideal for growing high-quality tobacco.
 
In the centuries that followed, the use of tobacco became widespread. Its use for recreational purposes and as a stimulant became popular among people who worked long hours. By the 1700’s, Cuba became the premiere location for the best tobacco and for the development of what we know today as the modern cigar. The origins of the English word “cigar” come from the Spanish word cigarro, which in turn was a derivative from the Mayan word for tobacco, siyar.
 
From the 1700’s to today, Cuban cigars and Cuban tobacco became recognized as the world’s finest. However, the Communist take-over of Cuba by Fidel Castro in the early 1960’s, and the subsequent U.S. embargo, challenged that country’s title. Former Cuban cigar-makers took their skills and seeds to the Caribbean, Dominican Republic, Honduras and Mexico, producing high-end cigars categorized as premium and super-premium.
 
Today, the exquisite pleasure of the premium cigar remains one luxury that connoisseurs enjoy worldwide. Handmade cigars that are part of this remarkable heritage may be obtained online through premium companies.
 
Enjoy laughter. Enjoy life. Enjoy a fine cigar.

For access to the best Fine Cigars and Cigar accessories available check out the great deals available only on the authors website – http://www.davidoffmadison.com

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Jun 27

Does Santa Smoke a Cigar or a Pipe?

Posted on Sunday, June 27, 2010 in About Cigar

There is a debate raging among cigar and pipe aficionados as to whether Santa smokes a cigar or a pipe. That’s right–the world is being held in suspense over what the Man in Red prefers to smoke with. The debate has the country divided and the opposing parties are at odds grappling over the issue of pipe vs. cigar.
 
The pipe faction, encouraged by the poem “A Visit from Saint Nicholas” by Clement Moore, believes that Santa smokes “the stump of a pipe he held tight in his teeth, and the smoke it encircled his head like a wreath.” The pro-pipe group remarks that Santa would be better off smoking a pipe. They submit the idea that if Santa were a cigar smoker, he would leave ashes and cigar butts in homes when he takes his breaks to eat all those cookies that are left out for him. They also insist that Santa stops for a cookie break every 3,000 miles, when he changes the reindeer harnesses and gives them some of the carrots that children leave out for them, and that he would have to leave at least some clues behind in the form of cigar ashes during these frequent stops.
 
The cigar faction reasons that Santa, being a practical yet sophisticated man, would definitely enjoy a good stogie. Imagine, they argue, the changing of reindeer harnesses while wielding a pipe! No, that image calls for a fine cigar like a Winston Churchill 10 or an Avo Domain 60. These are cigars designed for a workingman who is intent on getting the job done. Besides, they say, cigars are biodegradable and easy to stow away on a long sleigh ride.
 
My staff called the North Pole and interviewed elves that occupy key positions in Santa’s workshop and warehouses, but the findings were inconclusive. The elves agreed that only Santa and Mrs. Claus know what he prefers, though they did allude to the fact that Mrs. Claus shops online for purveyors of fine cigars and pipes.
 
The debate was finally resolved by a council of retired senior elves and Santa’s worldwide agents. They took a vote, and here was their conclusion: Santa smokes cigars while traveling the world south of Miami’s latitude point. Santa smokes pipes when he travels north, with a few exceptions: England, where he often smokes Churchill 10′s, and California, where he smokes anything he darn well pleases. So have a jolly holiday! Oh, and leave out some carrots for the reindeer.

For access to the best Fine Cigars and Cigar accessories available check out the great deals available only on the authors website – http://www.davidoffmadison.com

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Jun 15

Fine Cigar Culture

Posted on Tuesday, June 15, 2010 in About Cigar

The image of a gentleman smoking a fine cigar evokes many a scenario. There are many occasions for a fine cigar: the reward at the end of a long struggle, the victory at a poker table, the celebrations after the birth of a child, the end of tough business negotiations, a fine outing with a son or grandson, the heat of battle, the song of a woman humming in the den after a night at the opera. Mostly, the occasion for a fine cigar is one that evokes the view of men as gentlemen, a view that is presently experiencing resurgence, and for good reason.

Gone are the not-so-glory days of the boy-man whose pants are at the ready to fall down around his ankles, and who has experienced neither a proper shave nor a good haircut. Oh no–a quality cigar brings to mind not only a man, but a gentleman who understands what it is to go to a real barber, and that going to a real barber is something that takes time. He understands what a handkerchief is for, and that it isn’t just for keeping his own nose clean. Fine cigars are part of a gentleman’s lifestyle. He is a man who owns (and on occasion wears) cufflinks, who wears aftershave and knows what Bay Run is for. He knows that women really do love to see a man wearing a handsome pair of suspenders.

Yes, there is indeed a mystique around the kind of man who smokes fine cigars, an image of a gentleman who knows quality in all things and why quality is important, from institutional connections to connections that have been obtained from years of attending the school of life. This is the kind of man who brings a Mona Lisa smile to the women in his life, whether she is his dear friend, sweetheart, fiancé, wife, mother, mother-in-law, daughter or granddaughter. Whoever she is, she knows what kind of cigars he smokes, and the idea of giving a box of fine cigars to this gentleman for the holidays brings her the pleasure of giving. That’s because buying such a man his favorite cigars not only means that she loves him, but it means that she understands him.

It’s important to find the right kind of cigar for the right gentlemen. A quality cigar may be obtained online or at brick and mortar stores. Remember, too, that quality cigars are something that must be cared for and kept as fresh as possible in humidors to ensure the perfect moisture level for the perfect cigar-smoking experience.

For access to the best Fine Cigars and Cigar accessories available check out the great deals available only on the authors website – http://www.davidoffmadison.com

Jun 15

Cigar Size and Shape

Posted on Tuesday, June 15, 2010 in About Cigar

Cigars are categorized by size and shape. Together, these are known as the vitola of a cigar.

Cigar size is measured two ways: ring gauge (its diameter) and its length. For example, most non-Cuban robustos have a ring gauge of approximately 50 and a length of approximately 5 inches. Robustos of Cuban origin always have a ring gauge of 50 and a length of 4 ? inches

The most common shape is the parejo. It has a cylindrical body, straight sides, one open end, and a round tobacco-leaf “cap” on the other end that must be sliced off in order to be smoked.

Parejos are designated by the following terms:
Coronas
Rothschilds (4 ½” x 50), after the Rothschild family
Robusto (4 ?” x 50)
Hermosos No. 4 (5″ x 48)
Mareva/Petit Corona (5 ?” x 42)
Corona (5 ½” x 42)
Corona Gorda (5 ?” x 46)
Toro (6″ x 50)
Corona Grande (6 ?” x 42)
Cervantes/Lonsdale (6 ½” x 42), named for Hugh Cecil Lowther, 5th Earl of Lonsdale
Dalia (6 ¾” x 43)
Julieta, also known as Churchill (7″ x 47), named for Sir Winston Churchill Prominente/Double Corona (7 ?” x 49)
Presidente (8″ x 50)
Gran Corona (“A”) (9 ¼” x 47)
Panatelas – longer and generally thinner than Coronas
Small Panatela (5″ x 33)
Carlota (5 ?” x 35)
Short Panatela (5″ x 38)
Slim Panatela (6″ x 34.9)
Panatela (6″ x 38)
Deliciados/Laguito No. 1 (7 ¼” x 38)

These dimensions, of course, are estimated at best.

Irregularly shaped cigars are known as figurados and are more difficult to make, leading many to consider them higher quality cigars. During the 19th century, figurados were the most popular shapes; however, they have since fallen out of fashion and all but disappeared.

Figurados include the following:
Torpedo – Like a parejo except that the cap is pointed.
Pyramid – Broad foot and evenly narrows to a pointed cap.
Perfecto – A caricature of a cigar, narrow at both ends and bulged in the middle.
Presidente/Diadema – Shaped like a parejo but considered a figurado because of its enormous size and occasional closed foot akin to a perfecto.
Culebras – An exotic of three long, pointed cigars braided together.
Tuscanian – Typical Italian cigar. This shape, known as a cheroot, is the largest selling cigar shape in the United States.

Little cigars differ greatly from regular cigars. They weigh less than cigars and cigarillos, and resemble cigarettes in size, shape, packaging and filters.

Whatever shape or size you prefer, a variety of cigars can be found online at fine purveyors’ websites.

For access to the best Fine Cigars and Cigar accessories available check out the great deals available only on the authors website – http://www.davidoffmadison.com

Jun 9

Benefits Of A Single Action Ignition System On Cigar Lighters

Posted on Wednesday, June 9, 2010 in About Cigar

Today, you’ll find a wide range of advanced lighters on the market. Options such as Lotus lighters embody the latest trends in style and design. However, you will also find that these lighters offer better performance over older, outdated designs. While the style of a wick-type lighter might be appealing, you will discover that modern lighter designs offer greater convenience, as well as better operation. For instance, a single action ignition system can provide you with greater convenience, as well as additional benefits.

What is a single action ignition, you ask? Why should you consider purchasing a lighter with such a system? You’ll find that the majority of lighters on the market are dual ignition models, meaning that it requires at least two steps to light the lighter when you want to smoke. To use the wick style lighter as an example, you must first flip the lid and then strike the flint wheel. This can be difficult, particularly if you have something in your other hand. How do you get around this problem? What will you find with single action ignition models?

Single action ignition models offer quite a bit more ease of use. For instance, rather than forcing you to use two hands, these models allow you to operate the lighter with one hand. Most lighters make use of a push button, or a wheel; depressing or turning this device results in the lid moving aside and the lighter igniting. Obviously, this can help you save time and effort. You’ll also find that this is a great way to find a lighter that fits the modern age in terms of style and design.

You will find that this style of lighter offers considerable benefits over those of yesteryear. Advancements in lighter technology have enabled smokers to attain more convenience, as well as better quality. For instance, most lighters that use the single action ignition system are torch lighters, which offer better performance over traditional lighters.

Finding the right single action ignition lighter can be quite simple when you use the Internet to compare different manufacturer’s offerings, as well. With a small investment of time, you can compare several different models and determine which type of lighter you want. You will need to consider the length of the manufacturer’s warranty, as well as the price of the lighter in your comparisons.

Dave Sabot is the owner of specialty cigar lighters store. With expert knowledge of cigar accessories, including torch lighters, Dave also authors a highly rated blog featuring cigar lighter repair.

May 31

Super Accurate Round Digital Hygrometer

Posted on Monday, May 31, 2010 in About Cigar


www.cheaphumidors.com Not only is this hygrometer easy to use and accurate, but it is so much smaller than other models. This means it takes up less space in your humidor allowing you to store more cigars. I have searched all over for a good supplier of digital hygrometers and these are the best around for the price. They are really accurate and work great. What is even better is that the manufacturer is so easy to deal with and really responsive to questions. Studies have shown that people who purchase this hygrometer have a 92% chance of being allowed to smoke in their house. Just dont tell my wife I said that.

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