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 Small Cigars

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Slow Puffs
Resident Sportscaster


Number of posts: 4890
Age: 64
Location: Alberta. Canada
Tobacco: GLP Telegraph Hill
Pipe: Dunhill Tanshell Liverpool
Registration date: 2007-12-10

PostSubject: Small Cigars   Thu Mar 27, 2008 2:06 pm

Some of you seasoned cigar smokers will likely roll your eyes, shake your heads or just have a belly laugh...
but I took the plunge and ordered some small cigars...

3 different tins of Meharai's
and 8 different tins of Panter.

I figure I might use them while golfing this summer or maybe my wife will smoke some of them.

The image I am visualizing is looking like Clint Eastwood in those spaghetti westerns of the 60's. Get on the tee, place the ball, toss back the poncho, light up and give a mighty swing...

Does anyone bother smoking these things?

Embarassed Paul
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puros_bran
Nightrider


Number of posts: 9207
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PostSubject: Re: Small Cigars   Thu Mar 27, 2008 2:10 pm

I sometimes grab a tin of the Rocky Patel or CAO mini's...other than that I've never tried any.
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ftrplt



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Age: 66
Location: Split between Raleigh, NC and OKC, OK
Registration date: 2007-12-15

PostSubject: Re: Small Cigars   Thu Mar 27, 2008 2:30 pm

When we stop at JR's, my wife will pick up a bunch of various small cigars; even a few of the dry-cured ones! I'm not real big on'em; occasionally will try one of the dry cures. FTRPLT
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frankluke



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Age: 32
Location: Worcester, MA.
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PostSubject: Re: Small Cigars   Thu Mar 27, 2008 2:44 pm

when its cold out i'll have a mini cigar, there not bad, though i've never tried the brands you bought.
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docwatson



Number of posts: 1196
Age: 65
Location: Central Massachusetts and midcoast Maine
Tobacco: Peretti's Burleys, Samuel Gawith Va.'s,Gawith & Hoggarth Va's., J.F. Germain Blends, MacBaren's Blends, so I'm a tobacco slut.
Pipe: Browning Hi Power
Registration date: 2008-03-21

PostSubject: Re: Small Cigars   Thu Mar 27, 2008 3:31 pm

I'm not usually into real small cigars, but during the summer playing bocce I enjoy smoking some Avanti dry cured Anisette flavored cigars. They're a bit on the full flavor side, but taste great and others actually like the aroma.
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luckydogguy



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Location: Wisconsin, USA
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PostSubject: Re: Small Cigars   Thu Mar 27, 2008 7:38 pm

I agree with what has been said. They are great for cold weather! Also windy conditions are a good time to break out some small cigars. Like... on the golf course. And I also like the CAO And RP small sticks. Some others I like are the Ashton Esquires and La Aurora's Princpes.

I don't smoke them often , but they ure do have their place in a cigar smoker's humidor! Smile



Lucky
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Puff Daddy



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Registration date: 2007-12-09

PostSubject: Re: Small Cigars   Fri Mar 28, 2008 3:38 am

I've tried some minis in the past and never really cared for them. To me the slow smoldering of layered tobacco leaves in a large ring guage is what allows the magic to happen, the small sticks just seem to be completely different animals and are un-cigarlike to me insofar as taste and complexity goes, and that's what I like about a good cigar, the subtlety and complexity. I love the fatter smokes, 50 ring and up. There is only one small ring cigar I really like but it's hardly a small cigar at 7 inches long and 34 ring: the Macanudo Portofino is an extremely tasty and sophisticated smoke. I used to smoke em a lot back in the 90's and have had a couple recently, very, very yummy. Mild but a lot of flavor.

Anyone try the Party shorts (Partagas)? Not sure if these are the cubans or not, but am hearing a lot of chatter about them and how great they are, not quite sure exactly which stick these are.

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bobcat



Number of posts: 8
Registration date: 2008-03-03

PostSubject: Re: Small Cigars   Fri Mar 28, 2008 6:52 am

I really like the Habanos mini's that I've had although I find they always need a little time to age and mellow out.
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Carlos



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PostSubject: Re: Small Cigars   Fri Mar 28, 2008 7:19 am

I like the Panter Mignon real well.

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puros_bran
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PostSubject: Re: Small Cigars   Fri Mar 28, 2008 7:48 am

Heres the funny thing about that PDiddy, The traditional blenders design their smokes using 'corona' or even smaller sizes. This relatively new trend for large ring guage actually presents a slightly different flavor profile than intended. I'm not saying its a bad thing, all my fav's are 46 or up. I'm sure some of the boutique company's aren't following this tradition because their smaller guages seem to be 'not quite right' to me.
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Slow Puffs
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PostSubject: Re: Small Cigars   Fri Mar 28, 2008 7:51 am

Is there a chart that displays "ring size"... Is this somewhat akin to bowl size for a pipe, at least the diameter?

Question Paul
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jhuggett
BoB's Pioneer & Founding Father


Number of posts: 5233
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PostSubject: Re: Small Cigars   Fri Mar 28, 2008 8:22 am

Ring gauges....

http://www.cigarhandbook.com/RingGuide.asp

_________________
Jason

"Freedom, Security, Convenience: Choose Two"
"For me, I will take freedom over security and I will take security over convenience." ~ Dan Geer


Last edited by jhuggett on Fri Mar 28, 2008 9:03 am; edited 1 time in total (Reason for editing : typo)
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puros_bran
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PostSubject: Re: Small Cigars   Fri Mar 28, 2008 8:59 am

Yeah Puffs... Rings are measured in 64ths of an inch, course that does you metric junkies no good huh...lol....
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JohnnyO



Number of posts: 296
Age: 30
Location: San Jose, CA
Tobacco: Maltese Falcon
Pipe: Oh I don't know...I have so many...I happen to like Savinelli pipes, cheap and pretty good, only problem I really had with them was an air hole drilled too high, which I fixed with pipe mud. I also enjoy old pipes I've restored and pipes I've made myself.
Registration date: 2008-01-30

PostSubject: Re: Small Cigars   Fri Mar 28, 2008 9:30 am

I enjoy the CAO vanilla small cigars, and the mayorga coffee ones, but the last tin I bought was some Macanudos at the local walgreens about 4 years ago, smoked ONE, thought they were gross, threw them on my bookcase and forgot about them for all this time and found the tin a couple months ago and smoked one and it was great Laughing So maybe thats the trick, age them for 4 years Wink
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adauria



Number of posts: 435
Location: Wake Forest, NC
Registration date: 2008-02-28

PostSubject: Re: Small Cigars   Fri Mar 28, 2008 10:37 am

Personally I like smaller cigars a lot (though I haven't tried the brands you mentioned). Yes, they are good for cold weather, quicker smokes, but they tend to be a little spicier in general than their fatter brethren. Some are made with mixed or short filler, while the bigger ones under the same brand are made with long filler, so they aren't always apples to apples on par quality-wise.

I found Macambo from JR to be a great bargain for small smokes. Also like the El Rey del Mundo little ones too (in natural and maduro)

-Andrew
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