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Take a Cigar For a Walk – Catching Up…

I’ve been busy reporting on my trip, then the La Gloria Cubana festivities, but I’ve been taking cigars for walks all along. I’ve been hoping to hear from Tommy but he hasn’t responded to my e-mails lately. I can only assume he’s busy with work and family, but I hope everything’s OK with him. I also am waiting for another guest “Take A Cigar For A Walk” report that I will post when I receive it.  I don’t have exact dates for the cigars that follow, I could look them up but I’m too lazy and I figure it really doesn’t matter to my readers much anyway!

Back on St. Patrick’s day I took a Camacho Corojo Monarca Candela for a walk. I enjoy the occasional green cigar, and this is a powerhouse. I’m coming to the end of a box of these that I bought 2 years ago or so. The cigars from this box all have had a very loose draw, and I’ve come to the conclusion that the punch is the way to go with these. Great burn, that almost refreshing grassy organic flavor from the candela wrapper. Nice cigar.

My next TACFAW cigar was a 777 Maduro Corona. I picked up a few of these at my local shop around Christmas and really enjoy them. Well made, nice dark maduro flavors. I should try the 777 Corojo next time as I’ve heard good things about them.  I can’t find a website for Jesus Fuego, can anyone point me to it?

 

After that I grabbed the last of the CAO Italia robustos I had. I want to like these. The examples I had didn’t burn worth a damn, they all ran up one side, burned unevenly, needed constant attention. I enjoy the flavor, the bit of Italian leaf gives them a little bit of a unique flavor, but the burn problems detract from the experience for me.

 

I was in a lancero mood one night and grabbed a Rocky Patel Olde World Reserve Maduro Lancero. I had picked this up last summer on a visit to a shop about an hour away. I took the scooter for a spin and met up with Walt White of StogieReview and Dave Wagner of Oliva at Sire Stogies in Gilbertsville, PA. This one behaved much better that the one I smoked in the shop. Burned great and had a nice flavor. Good for 2 laps around the neighborhood (about 1.6 miles) and a cool down.

Sunday’s walk cigar was a La Gloria Cubana Serie N JSB. I enjoyed the one I smoked during Friday nights webcast so much I had to spark up another one. Don’t worry, I’m not dipping into the contest prize stash, but I will need to show some restraint! I did a little shopping around and found that several of the larger internet retailers are selling the Serie N for very good prices. One could get a box of 24 for under $90 delivered, which is not a bad price for these cigars.

Last night I dug out a Don Tomas Classico Corona Grande for my walk. I only have a couple of these left from a box I got a few years ago. I have enjoyed them quote a bit and the fact that they are tubed makes them a nice cigar to grab and throw in you r pocket. I gave this a punch since it’s a 44 ring and I’ve been playing with the punch lately for smaller ring cigars. I enjoyed this cigar while I took a nice long walk, but when I got home I noticed that I had some brown stains on my fingers. It seems there was some brown goo coming from the punch, which I clipped off as soon as I noticed. I didn’t taste anything, and I’ve had this happen in the past but haven’t experienced it in many years. I noticed afterward that my fingers smelled like I had been sifting through some Marlboro smoker’s ashtray, it was terrible! I had to use a scrub brush on my hands to get the smell off. I love the cigars, but I don’t want to have that happen again!

 

March was a record month as far as visitors to CigarCraig.com by more the triple!  I’d like to thank everyone for visiting and following along.

Until the next time,

CigarCraig

 

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Cigar Safari Trip Report: Day 2

The next several installments will attempt to recap my trip to Drew Estate’s Cigar Safari in Esteli, Nicaragua. The trip was from March 9th the the 12th, 2011. My son, Corey, went on this trip with me, along with 9 others from a couple other groups who we didn’t know prior to this trip. I would recommend this trip to any rabid cigar nut, it covers all aspects of the cigar manufacturing process and the folks at Drew Estate bend over backward to make sure you have a good time.

Day 2

View from our room in the Crown Plaza - Cigar Safari March 2011We awoke bright and early in the Crown Plaza Hotel in Managua, said to be the nicest hotel in Nicaragua.  They had fairly good free wireless in the lobby, so I took a few minutes to call home using Skype, wihich worked remarkably well and cost pennies.  If I had used my cell phone to call or text I would have been in for a very large bill I think. Anyway, we had a fairly good breakfast at the hotel, although the waitstaff could have been more attentive.  We checked out and boarded the bus for the 2 hour drive north to Esteli. The Pan-American Highway connects Managua and Esteli (and pretty much connects South America with North America), and it’s slightly different from what we think of when we think of a “highway”.  It’s basically a 2 lane road, with the occasional cattle crossing, school crossing, etc.  It’s just a totally different place than most of The bus - Cigar Safari March 2011us are used to.  Someone saw a goat being carried on a motorcycle, and I think it’s mandatory if you own a pick-up truck to have people riding in the bed.  As a matter of fact, just about every truck we saw on the roads had men and boys riding on top of the cargo.  Also fascinating to me were the homes that were along the highway.  Most had no doors or windows, and building materials ranged from concrete and masonry to wood to corrugated metal to parts of old buses.  What struck me as funny was the bright orange  satellite dish that seemed to be mounted upon each roof.  Many cigars were consumed upon the ride, as there was always a seemingly unlimited supply of Liga Privadas, Chateau Reals, Joya de Nicaraguas and Tabak Especiales. Along the way, Jonathan Drew told many great stories.

Scandanavian Tobacco Group Factory - Cigar Safari March 2011As we pulled into Esteli we started seeing cigar factories.  We passed the ST Group’s CAO factory, Kiki Berger’sTabacalera Esteli, and I’m sure some others.  We arrived at the enormous Gran Fabrica Drew Estate and were treated to a delicious lunch, the first of many wonderful meals at Cigar Safari. I don’t know what it was we ate, but it was good.  There was rice and fries, and it might have been pork on a tortilla in a sauce with rasins and pineapple and other fruits.  I don’t know what the names for these were, but they sure were good.  We ate outside next to the pool, which would be our dining area for the rest of our stay.  Absolutely beautiful place.

We were told that out luggage would be taken care of and our rooms would be assigned when we returned A street in Esteli  - Cigar Safari March 2011from our first tour.  We loaded back on the bus, lit some cigars, and headed for the Joya De Nicaragua factory.  We filed into a conference room and met Mario Perez, the sales manager for Joya de Nicaragua.  In exceptional English, Mario related the history of Joya de Nicaragua, the oldest factory in Nicaragua, from the Cuban Revolution through the Sandinistas, through the US trade embargo to the present. There are actually workers in the factory who have been there from the beginning, which is quite a feat!  He took us into the factory and walked us through the sorting rooms where we watched some de-stemming, and wrapper sorting as well as weighing and counting.  It’s incredible to see all of the steps that happen before the tobacco even gets to the hands of the buncheros and roleras.  Also, there is very little waste, even the stems and small Mario Perez, Joya de Nicaragua Sales Manager and our tour guide  - Cigar Safari March 2011bits are used someplace in the process, if only to absorb odors in the new boxes.  We watched a pair (a buncher and a wrapper) making Joya de Nicaragua Cabinetta Lanceros (which we had sampled the evening prior and were exceptional).  The skill involved in bunching this size cigar is incredible, and fascinating to watch.  After the bunches sat in the press for a while the wrapper was applied, which is another skill in itself.  In another area the finishing touches are applied, as the Cabinetta gets a second wrapper of dark Nicaraguan maduro on the last two inches of the cigar which contrasts with the Ecuadoran Connecticut  nicely.  I really like the Cabinettas and smoked several on the trip.  After watching the rollers and taking in the sights and sounds of the factory, Mario sat us down and we went through an exercise Tobacco for our blending exxcersize  - Cigar Safari March 2011where we would choose our own blend to be rolled the next day.  They had arrayed before us Seco, Veso and Ligero leaves from Jalapa, Condega and Estili, as well as  three choices of binders and three choices of wrapper.  I used the Dark Corojo wrapper that is used on the Antaño Dark Corojo, a Sumatra binder, a Condega Seco, Esteli Viso, and Ligero from Condega and Estili.  As I look at it now, 30% Ligero might make for a fairly strong cigar, but Corey went and extra step farther and really loaded up the Ligero. We each received 5 robustos rolled to our own specifications, which is really very cool, I look forward to trying them after they rest for a few months. After touring the packaging area (interesting to note the quantity of cigars going to the European market, they sell quite a few cigars in countries other than the US), we said goodbye to Mario and the Joya de Nicaragua Factory, and returned to Drew Estate.

Here’s a little video of some Cabinetta Lancero rolling:

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XBrMkJBW8d8

Our Room - Cigar Safari March 2011When we got back, Pedro assigned us our rooms and we freshened up a little.  Corey and I got the “La Vieja Habana” room, which had 2 beds, a TV, and a cool La Vieja painting on the wall.  The vaulted ceiling had beams that I later realized were in the shape of veins on a tobacco leaf.  The rooms in our building were arranged in such a way that  two rooms shared a bathroom, so there were 5 rooms in our building, one of which was the “Liga Privada” room, which was Steve Saka’s room.   The next building housed a lounge upstairs, along with Jonathan’s office, a room downstairs with some treadmills (Take A Cigar For A Walk?) along with several rooms facing the valley. There were more rooms on the other side of the pool/dining area as well.  I can’t imagine that another cigar factory has such grand accommodations as were provided for us.  Jonathan Drew and Kiki Berger  - Cigar Safari March 2011By now it was time for dinner, which was a selection of pork, chicken and beef with tortillas and rice and beans.  Another meal that was pretty much outside my comfort zone, but absolutely fantastic.  As we were eating, Nimish Desai,  Rocky Patel’s cousin, joined us, as well as Kiki Berger of Cuban Crafters, along with Luis Mariano Garcia of Oja Cigars and a couple of gentlemen who owned shops in Houston.  Alan, one of our group, was surprised by the later two as they are the proprietors of his local shops.  You never know who you are going to run into!  We had the good fortune of spending the evening talking with “Don Kiki” and Luis, and Steve Saka joined us for quite a while as well.  Steve is always good for some hilarious stories, and didn’t let us down.  I actually smoked an Acid Kuba Kuba maduro as the last cigar of the day and it wasn’t too bad, not that I could taste much after a day spent smoking almost non-stop!

We packed it in around midnight after an action-packed and fun-filled day of traveling, touring, eating, smoking and generally having an amazing time. Stay tuned for day 3.

Contest!

We have a tie!  I need JohnG and freakboy791 to quess how many cigars my son Corey smoked on CigarSafari to break the tie! Leave your guess in the coments of this post and I’ll announce the winner in the “Day 3” post.

Until the next time,

CigarCraig

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Take A Cigar For A Walk: Guest Review by Tommy Berry Jr. – Wednesday February 16, 2011

Here’s the first in what I hope will be a long series of guest reviews in what I’d like to call “Take A Cigar For A Walk”.  I will be contributing to this as well as Tommy, and I’d like to encourage others to “Take A Cigar For A Walk” and I will happily include reader submissions as guest reviews.  Again, I don’t want to come off like some fitness zealot, because I’m not, but lets face it, walking is something we all do (barring unfortunate accidents or birth defects) and could probably all do more of.  Sure sitting and relaxing with a cigar is nice, but there’s something to be said for hoofing it around the block with a nice cigar too!  Without further ado, here’s Tommy Berry Jr.’s   “Take A Cigar For A Walk” review:

“I took the first walk this week, only one…but it was a start! I walked this past Tuesday night for sixty five minutes with a buddy of mine, Dr. Scotty Short. It was cold but we enjoyed a great walk, great conversation and a great smoke. We both had a full body Rocky Patel Maduro. I chose a full body smoke as I feel when it is cold, you get the most from a full body smoke…something strong. As the air is so cold, a lighter, Connecticut style cigar seems to lose it’s “punch” and aromatic qualities as your senses seem muted by the cold air. The Maduro has many great features, one being my favorite, “leather”. It also had many “woodsy” hints…something that went well with the cold air and burning wood in the air from area fireplaces. Anyway, enough scientific mess…we both loved the “punch” that this cigar had. I seem to like any strength of cigar, but I really enjoyed this stick by Rocky. Like I said, we ended up walking a full 65 minutes. It wore my lazy rear out…but it was so worth it. I don’t really have any good excuses for not walking since…but I am not done. Who knows, maybe I will make the time to walk again very soon and enjoy another fine smoke during the hike. The weather is warming up here…so I won’t be able to use “its too cold” as an excuse anymore!

Oh, by the way…let me address this for some of you. As you may have read in my previous post with a bit of my bio…I am largely overweight. With that being said…and because of the fact that with smoking cigars, you don’t inhale…I never lost my breath. I had no problem walking a strait, hard 65 minutes, carrying on a great conversation…while smoke a full body cigar. So, if you are scared of such, take the chance and see that you too can do the same. I have to say, with the smoke…I really enjoyed the walk. I look forward to doing it again.”

I too took a cigar for a walk on Sunday. My wife and I had some errands to run around town so we decided to do it on foot.  We ended up walking about 3 miles as I enjoyed a CAO Black Bengal.  This cigar is one that is an OK cigar to me.  It’s not a bad cigar by any means, but it lacks any real “wow” factor.  For me it’s just kind of a generic cigar.  My wife got me three 5 packs of CAO cigars for Valentine’s Day last year and this it the last of these.  I will say that this was the best of the three.  All that being said, this was an enjoyable cigar for a long walk in the cold.  I chose this cigar for a couple of sentimental reasons, one of which being that it was a day shy of being a year old.  I still have a couple Brazilias and an Italia from that batch of cigars, the previous Italias have had terrible burns.  There were also some CAO VRs in maduro which I enjoyed quite a bit, as well as MX2s that were very good.

Anyway, that’s about it for now.  Thanks to those who have offered words of encouragement and to anyone who wants to join us in “Take A Cigar For A Walk” and contribute a review, feel free to send it to me at craig@cigarcraig.com.

Until the next time,

CigarCraig

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This Week’s Cigars and a Contest Winner! – Sunday, August 1, 2010

It’s been an exciting week.  Today I announce the winner of a 5 count box of Drew Estate Liga Privada No.9 cigars, and earlier this week I debuted the first in a series of celebrity interviews.  Before I get on with the contest announcement, I managed to smoke a few cigars this week.

Wednesday I lit up a Padron Fumas, a gifted cigar that was procured in Little Havana in Miami.  These are mixed filler cigars that are made especially for sale to the locals from the many cafeterias or coffee shops in the area.  Judging by the deep amber of the cellophane, this example must have been the better part of a decade old.  It was a terrific cigar.  I’m not going to compare it to a Padron Anniversario, but it certainly compared favorably with the regular line.  Perfect burn and draw.  I remember a few years back they released these commercially, but the couple examples I had were terribly plugged.

Thursday I went for a CAO LX2 Rob.  When these first hit the streets two years ago they were good and spicy and strong.  They were too strong for my tastes, which is odd, because I’ve never been one to shy away from strong cigars.  The recent trend toward the ligero heavy blends has been a little bit of a turn off for me. I like the flavor of cigars such as the Cain, and the LX2, but the nic-kick does me in.  Time has mellowed this LX2, as I was able to enjoy it without feeling woozy afterward.  These won’t enter my regular rotation, but it’s a nice cigar every now and then.

Friday I went with a new-to-me cigar that came from Jason of Rock’s Smoke Shop.  This was a toro sized cigar at 6″ x 50, with a plain paper strip for a band which has Renaissance printed on it.  A little research told me that this was from Rocky Patel and my suspicion is that this was a pre-release sample. It was a fantastic cigar.  It was well made, rich flavors, copious amounts of thick smoke.  A very nice cigar.  I’ll have to try to find the production version and see how it compares.  It was really a good cigar.

Winner Announcement!

Here’s what you’ve been waiting for, the winner of a box of 5 Drew Estate Liga Privada cigars.  The rules were simple, guess the number of bands my daughter used to create this great box that she gave me for Christmas a few years ago and use to hold my cigar accessories. I was surprised to see that quite a few people tried to count the bands and make a judgment based on the photo.  Most of the guesses were in the ballpark, but there was one clear winner.  Take a look at the video to see the hermetically sealed envelope opened.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-aVtMYfxVY

There are 196 bands on the box.  The winner, with a guess of 195, is PatriotGeek.  Congrats Bill, Look for your prize in your mailbox this week.  The music featured on today’s video is “Blaming It All On You” from  Jim Babjak’s Buzzed Meg, Vol 1.  Thank yous to Drew Estate for providing the prize, and Jim Babjak for being my first celebrity interviewee and providing the music.

Until the next time,

CigarCraig

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This Week in Cigars: Vegas de Santiago, Partagas, Rocky Patel, Sir Stogies – Sunday June 13, 2010

Tuesday or Wednesday I decided to try a Partagas Petit Coronas Especial, a box of which recently arrived from overseas.  I will revisit these periodically, as this had only had about a week in the humidor after traveling.  It behaved like a well kept cigar, burn was straight, draw was good, flavor was nice, but had a harshness that should smooth out with age.  These have a June ’08 box date so they are only 2 years old.  Looking forward to seeing how they develop.  These are a tremendous bargain for the size and quality.

Later in the week I grabbed a Vegas de Santiago Chaman  Panetela Extra which was from a 5 pack that I received from the manufacturer after I signed up for their Yahoo Group.  Another smaller cigar that burned well, but it had a grassy taste that wasn’t really to my liking.  Not bad, mind you, but not what I look for flavor-wise.  I will be featuring several of the Vegas de Santiago offerings in the coming weeks along with a contest in which someone will win some of their cigars.

Saturday I took the scooter for a ride about 30 miles north to Sir Stogies in Gilbertsville, PA.  It was a fine ride, although it was hot and I hit every light.  I met up with Walt of Stogie Review who was there hanging out for the afternoon.  Also there was Dave Weber, the national sales manager for Oliva Cigars.  I had met Dave once before and was flattered that he remembered me.  Sir Stogies is a fine shop. I was greeted by Ken (I believe that was his name) who asked if I’d been there before and showed me to the walk in humidor.   The first thing I spied was a box of Rocky Patel Olde World Reserve Maduro Lanceros which were on sale for $5.00 a stick.  I grabbed 2 of them and didn’t really look any further.  This turned out to have been a mistake since I was later to find out that they had  La Aurora 107s and I  probably would have picked one up.  It was a nice way to spend an afternoon.  The shop is spacious and comfortable.  Highly recommended if your in the area.

This evening I took a break from writing this and went to our local park to see my favorite local band, “Now and Then” play in the summer “Concerts in the Park” series.  I took a Montecristo No.2 which was awesome.  It was smooth and delicious, not the powerhouse that I remember from years past though.  This was in a gift bag that I received on the dinner cruise we attended last week.  My son had a Rocky Patel Decade Maduro torpedo which  he enjoyed.  I don’t think I saw anyone give us looks, but I wasn’t looking.  I saw some old friends there and it was a good time. Great band, great cigar, great friends.

In my last post I asked for comments on this picture.  There were a lot of great guesses, I especially liked the IPhone ap comment from Jeff.  What was I really doing? I was listening to the band of course!

Anyway, that’s all I have for now.  Until the next time,

CigarCraig

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