OK, so this is probably a silly question (first of many?), but one thing that's struck me since I've been browsing online suppliers is that cigars are no more expensive to buy in singles than they are in a box (per cigar). I would have expected that there would be a discount for buying a box (or to put another way, a premium price for buying singles as boxes would have to be split), so why do people buy boxes? Is it as simple as people knowing what they like and knowing they will get through them? or am I missing something obvious?
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why buy a box?
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In many ways cigars are like fine wine... When you buy the cigars when they're relatively new (i.e. from the shop) they can have young properties (slight notes of ammonia, harshness, or even lack of depth). If you buy a box, you can age them, allowing for the breakdown of ammonia (and the development and refinement of the flavours) in the same way that you lay down a bottle of good claret - because the tannins need time to break down and the flavours time to meld and balance. The same as with wine, you can buy them fresh from the store (or even en primeur in the case of wine), or you can pick up the pre-aged examples at auctions (or sometimes the stores will sell too) - but you will pay a premium for that. The only exception to the premium I have seen is when H&F released a few examples from 1997-1999, which were overstocks from a bit of a sick period of Cuban production - many, as it happens, have opened up and become pretty good smokes (certainly those I have tried).
There's also the case that if you have a favourite cigar that you smoke a lot of, you might as well have a store of them in your own humidor. A common train of thought is that cigars need a short period in your humidor to condition from the slightly lower RH of stores/warehouse humidors (plus the transit), so better to have a batch which are ready and waiting.
(Plus, as Dan says, there is no more beautiful sight to behold than that when you open a brand new box of cigars).
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Originally posted by Toshi View PostOK, but there isn't an issue with keeping cigars long term as singles, is there? i.e. there's no advantage to keeping them in the boxes they shipped with rather than in a humidor amongst other singles?
Example of an SLB:
Part_Lus_50__03486_zoom.jpg
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Originally posted by Toshi View PostOK, but there isn't an issue with keeping cigars long term as singles, is there? i.e. there's no advantage to keeping them in the boxes they shipped with rather than in a humidor amongst other singles?
Mingle, mingle, mingle. Just not the done thing old chap, at least not for long term. And as you've possibly noticed humidors come in all sizes and it isn't always possible to accommodate some vitola. And cigars are a little bit like matches .... if you want to know precisely where they are and always have them handy .... best to keep them in the box.If you want to, you can.
And, if you can, you must!
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Ok, points taken
I understand the advantage of ageing, and in an ideal world it would be great to afford to buy cigars by the box, but I did have a cunning plan to buy 2 or 3 singles of a few different types, and pack them up in empty cases (same vitola together) before putting them into a humidor. Is this not a good idea?
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