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Do some Cigars just get hard?

WaterDemonWaterDemon Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 269
So I was looking around for an answer, didn't really see anything. It seems like some of my cigars are getting rather hard. They are about as hard as a pencil...but I have other ones that were as nice and slightly soft as the day I got them. I have a bunch of My Father Corona sized cigars and they are rock hard, and then I have some other corona sized cigars that aren't, same humidor and the humidity is usually around 70/70 degrees. Some of my bigger stogies are also getting there, around the cap area. I had a CAO MX2 tonight, the cap part was hard, the rest of it was slightly softer and it smoked alright... didn't notice any dryness, burn was good...etc. I'm going to go thru my bigger humidor tonight and double check on some, but I know the humidity is fine in there. I might just switch to an electric humidifier soon for the big humi(300ct), any suggestions? I'm using pretty much all Boveda packs, 69Humidity. Thanks!

Comments

  • Gray4linesGray4lines Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 3,439
  • DiamondogDiamondog Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 4,169
    This is quite standard...as long as you trust your equipment and you calibrate semi regularly....I used to worry about a cigar being plugged because it was hard, not the case....sometimes you get a dud but most times they are fine....cohiba sig vi's get like this, almost rock hard but they almost always smoke perfectly...
  • WaterDemonWaterDemon Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 269
    Ok, I checked my bigger humidor, Some of my cigars that have been in there for awhile since like April-May are slightly hard, the others have a slight squish. These are the ones with cello around them. My cigars that have no cello on them seem to be fine with some give when i squeeze them slightly. I smoked one of my Est. 1844's that have been sitting in there for about 6 months and it smoked fine...even though it was hard. Idk, first time I've had cigars sit this long, kind of freaks me out.
  • Gray4linesGray4lines Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 3,439
    Lol! I wouldn't worry unless you notice consistent burn problems. Sounds like they are healthy! Always good to be cautious though
  • Unthought_KnownUnthought_Known Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 454
    I had a Cain Daytona Torp on Saturday, and it was hard as a rock. It was stored in my bigger humidor with mid 60's humidity, and none of the other cigars around it were nearly as hard, so I figured it was just the way that individual cigar was. It smoked fine, with no burn problems and no draw problems.
  • RhamlinRhamlin Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 4,530
    I had a 5Vega AAA with over a year on it the other day that was like that. Rock hard and the wrapper looked wierd. But it smoked and tasted normal
  • interpiminterpim Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 146
    Sometimes, when they are near really pretty girl cigars
  • jgibvjgibv Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 5,996
    interpim:
    Sometimes, when they are near really pretty girl cigars
    LMAO
  • jthanatosjthanatos Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 1,563
    jgibv:
    interpim:
    Sometimes, when they are near really pretty girl cigars
    LMAO
    There is a NUB joke here somewhere. I am not going to make it, but I feel the need to point out it exists...
  • phobicsquirrelphobicsquirrel Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 7,349
    jthanatos:
    jgibv:
    interpim:
    Sometimes, when they are near really pretty girl cigars
    LMAO
    There is a NUB joke here somewhere. I am not going to make it, but I feel the need to point out it exists...
    lol, well now that you said it like that it wouldn't work.
  • buckeyecigarbuckeyecigar Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 500
    interpim:
    Sometimes, when they are near really pretty girl cigars
    Thats what she said
  • CAcigarguy007CAcigarguy007 Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 239
    If the cigar is kept at proper humidity it will naturally shrink and get a bit hard. This is a good sign of aging (must stress, so long as the humi is working properly) that occurs (generally) at about a year of stable rest. Actually, my best cigars tend to have free floating bands. This means that long term stable rest has occurred and I think you'll find that cigars like this smoke well and more importantly taste better (more balanced/more nuance) than their fresher counterparts. No need to worry this is part of the aging process, when the bands free float she is ready to smoke!
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