Monthly Archives: February 2019

News: C.Gars Auctions Vintage Havana Auction

Here’s some news about one of our friends, C.Gars Ltd’s, semi-annual auction events. If you are a fan of rare and hard to find Havana cigars, this is  the place to look!

 

March 3rd – Vintage Havana Cigar Auction

 

C.Gars Auctions are holding the first auction of the year on Sunday March 3rd

 

Lots are live and bidding open online on the Cigar Auction website   http://www.onlinecigarauctions.com/ 

 

This will be the 29th cigar auction by C.Gars since the auction department was established in 2009

 

Almost 400 Lots of Vintage, Mature, Pre Embargo, Davidoff, Dunhill and Limited Edition Havana cigars on behalf of estates, investors and collectors are on offer.

 

Auction Lots can be viewed online and bid on  http://www.onlinecigarauctions.com/index.php

 

Featured Lots in this sale include:

 

-Davidoff Dom Perignon, No.1, No.2 and Chateau Yquem

 

-Cohiba Sublimes, Gran Reserva, Majestuosos 50th anniversary humidors and singles from Cohiba Behike 40th anniversary humidor.

 

-Pre embargo H. Upmann Dunhill Double Claro Seleccion Suprema no.15

 

-Pre Embargo H Upmann Miniatura

 

-Pre embargo Romeo y Julieta Coronation de Luxe

 

Pre Embargo Bolivar Mundiales

 

-Ramon Allones 225th anniversary humidor

 

Substantial interest is expected from overseas buyers is expected due to the weakness of the Pound Sterling currently as well as the increased demand from China.

 

Lots are available for inspection at our London offices. We are delighted to provide any further details or condition reports , simply email Laura Graham o

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r Michelle Adler in our Auction Team  at auctions@cgarsltd.co.uk quoting Lot numbers.

 

About C.Gars Ltd:

C.Gars Ltd was launched in 1997 and is now one of the world’s largest specialist cigar merch

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ants. This family business sells premium cigars and related goods from its website, 24/7, every day of the year. C.Gars also owns and operates specialist cigar shops across the UK. https://www.cgarsltd.co.uk/our-shops/

 

 

 

 

 

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A Wednesday Rant: Inequality Between Beverage and Cigar Marketing

This is going to be quick and it’s really nothing new. Obviously, tobacco marketing has been severely restricted for some time now in the US, while the adult beverage industry has had seemingly carte blanche. This was brought to my attention this morning:

How is this not marketing to children? Yet, when cigar makers playfully package cigars like these:

Examples of items that either weren’t marketed or are no longer on the market.

The cigar makers (marketers, or whatever you wish to call) them are skewered, out come the villagers with the pitchforks and torches! Both products are sold in age controlled environments, requiring age verification, although alcohol enforcement is stricter and carries large

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r penalties (for now). So how is it that there can

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be marshmallow vodka and Lucky Charms beer a

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nd nobody cares, but everyone thinks a flavored cigar (or a playfully packaged cigar) is marketed to kids?

Just had to get that off my chest t

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his morning! Enjoy the rest of the week!

CigarCraig

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Nica Rustica Robusto and CAO Esteli TAA Edition Cigars

If this post is different today there’s a few reasons. I’m a little out of sorts because yesterday somehow my WordPress user name was changed and I couldn’t log in, which caused some panic. I still haven’t quite figured this out and I haven’t had time to sit on the phone for long periods of time with anyone. I added a user as a workaround, and when I got in, it look like WordPress has changed their interface from the o

ld familiar to something called the “wonderful world of blocks”, which is a completely different layout and I don’t have time to figure it out because I have to go to work and just wanted to get a quick post done. So now I’m stressed out. Great. Anyway, I spent the last few days going through all the old posts fixing videos so they work. There seems to be some photos missing, which will be a much larger job, something I’ll have to do in front of a computer as opposed to on an iPad. Anyway, enough of my bitching and moaning, I did get a few cigars in this week.

I had a long stretch between days off, so when Thursday rolled around, I was all set to relax after my dentist appointment. Unfortunately, I ended up having a root canal in the afternoon, which kinda harshed my mellow a little. I hate Novocaine. After cleaning up the pulled pork sandwich that I dribbled all over my face, I grabbed a familiar favorite, a comfort food cigar, the trusty Drew Estate Nica Rustica, this time in the Short Robusto vitola. I’m quite sure I’ve smoked this size before, but I certainly haven’t smoked as many as the El Brujito or the Belly, and this will probably change. In this circumstance, it got off to a slow start, with the first third having less of a flavor impact, but as the Novocaine wore off, the flavor intensified and the familiar Nica Rustica goodness came through. I love this cigar, the Broadleaf, the cocoa and espresso flavors ht me just right. I always have some of these on hand and will stock up on this size. Highly recommended for post-root canal.

Friday I decided to pay a visit to my local shop, just two miles from my house. I don’t actually spend a great deal of time there. I go to events when they have them, I know the people there, and stop by from time to time, but I’m just not the guy who spends a lot of time hanging out in any cigar shop. Neighbors are often asking me why, when they drive by this particular shop at all hours of the day, mornings especially, the parking lot is always pretty full. My usual response is that there is a group of guys that hang out there, some retirees, some who set up their laptops and work from the lounge. So I figured since I had Friday off I’d go in for a smoke and hang out for a while. Since CigarCigars is a TAA shop, I decided to give the CAO Esteli TAA Exclusive a try. This is a 6″ x 54 Toro, and it is made in the Scandanavian Tobacco Group’s Esteli Factory, with a Nicaraguan Jalapa wrapper, Honduran binder and fillers from Dominican Republic and Nicaragua. This was an intriguing cigar, and if I ‘d been smart, I would have smoked the CAO Nicaragua when I got home to compare, but I was distracted by a shiny band. It was a nice, medium bodied cigar, with a distinct cookie-like flavor. It had some caramel and almond nut kinds of flavors, if that makes sense. It was a departure from many CAO cigars, much like the CAO Nicaragua is, but they are different cigars. I’ll work through more of the TAA exclusives as I visit the local CigarCigars shops (there’s no less than six with in ten miles of my house).

That’s all for today. I have to work another Sunday, but I should have next weekend off, with is nice for a change! I gotta figure

out all this new WordPress nonsense! As always, thanks for reading along, until the next time,

CigarCraig

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Revisiting the Colibri V Cut Cigar Cutter

Since I’ve been busy working, and managed to catch a cold and haven’t had a cigar since Friday, I figured I’d follow up on the Colibri V-Cut Cutter I reviewed last April. You may or may not recall (if you don’t, you can go back and read my initial thoughts here), I first became acquainted with the V-cut in the mid-90s when I’d buy a cigar at my local shop and cut it with their Boston Cutter on the counter. Those were the days when I’d buy a cigar and smoke it rather than worry about storing cigars in humidors at home, or having tools of my own. A simpler time. Anyway, I’ve been using the Colibri V-Cut for probably 90% of my cuts over the last 9 months or so, the exceptions being those times when I’m out and about and don’t want to be weighed down by the heaviness of the cutter, which I still find to be my least favorite aspect of the tool, and when I’m smoking an odd shape that I feel will work better with a straight cut or a punch. There’s one other funny exception, and I don’t do this all the time, but every now and then when I smoke something from Dunbarton Tobacco and Trust I’ll give it a straight cut, because I know Saka has said he doesn’t get the deep V cut trend, and for some reason, in deference to him, I smoke his cigars the way he intends them to be smoked (but sometimes I V cut them just to be an ass). I guess the point here is after cutting probably 250+ cigars with this cutter, it still cuts like the day it came out of the box, I can’t recall one cigar I’ve had to re-cut because the draw wasn’t right, and it looks like new.  Of course, it hasn’t been in my pocket every day, because it’s not my habit to carry any cigar tool in my pocket every day. It hasn’t suffered the wear of keys and change and whatever other pocket stuff rubbing against it every day does to it. I still dig it, the other V-cutters I have sit in a drawer unused, and this is a near-everyday tool f

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me. My only wish is that it were lighter in the pocket, but that would compromise the quality and usability, so I guess finding that Batman utility belt is the way to go.

 

Thank you to Colibri for sending me this cutter to use last year, I wouldn’t hesitate to purchase one, as they are very reasonably priced.

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News: Black Label Trading Company Announces Bishops Blend 2019

Here’s some Wednesday news from Black Label Trading Co. 

 

Black Label Trading Company is pleased to announce they are shipping Bishops Blend Vintage 2019 to select retailers this month. Bishops Blend is hand crafted in Esteli, Nicaragua at Fabrica Oveja Negra.

“I’m very excited about this release of Bishops Blend. We wanted to start the year off strong and release one of our most anticipated releases early. Bishops Blend boasts big bold flavors of anise, pepper, raisins and a sweet earthiness on the finish. It is very complex and extremely

refined. As with the past vintages, the broadleaf fillers shine at the forefront and are perfectly balanced by the Nicaraguan filler tobaccos,” said James Brown, creator of Black Label Trading Co. and partner at Fabrica Oveja Negra.


BISHOPS BLEND will be available in limited quantities at select retailers.

Country of Origin: Nicaragua
Wrapper: Ecuador Haban

o Maduro
Binder: Ecuador Habano
Filler: Nicaragua, Connecticut & PA Broadleaf
Corona Larga – 6.25 x 46 (20 count) MSRP $11.50
Robusto – 5 x 48 (20 count) MSRP $11.00

Black Label Trading Company is redefining the standards for cigar making. With a “less is more” philosophy, Black Label Trading Co. creates hand crafted premium cigars of the utmost quality in small batch, limited quantities.

BLTC cigars are available for purchase through Boutiques Unified. For more information contact info@blacklabeltrading.com.

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