Cigars for beginners

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Re: Cigars for beginners

by pomps » Mon Dec 08, 2025 7:30 am

Marvellous

Re: Cigars for beginners

by Loki » Mon Dec 08, 2025 5:29 am

fond memories of Ybor City, as spent a few hours at an very small, private after hours club, more dancing speak-easy, though very few people there, as a weekday, but after an EC show I flew down to see from Philly. a fine moka of cuban coffee, though didn't help wake me any, a bit counter to the rum.... :lol:

only knew the one person that took me there, and also not a local......an excellent evening...... ;-)

After 150 Years of Rolling Them, Tampa Is Close to No Cigars

by jingjai » Tue Jul 22, 2014 6:12 pm

Leave it to the "nanny" government to fvck traditions up. One of the first cigars, I smoked at the tender age of 17, was a "Hava-A-Tampa Jewel" brand cigar. A little too sweet for my adult tastes today. Oh, but those memories...
After 150 Years of Rolling Them, Tampa Is Close to No Cigars
By LIZETTE ALVAREZJULY 21, 2014

TAMPA, Fla. — Some unforgettable places waft into memory on a scent. For Floridians, it may be the sweetness of mangoes in Miami, the salt-sprinkled air of the Keys, the pungency of the Everglades.

In Ybor City, a neighborhood in Tampa, history is cloaked in the woody, earthen notes of a cigar, the product that helped define this once-quiet town and propel it well into the 20th century. Today, the 150 cigar factory sites that dotted this historic neighborhood once redolent with the aroma of tobacco have faded away, one by one, done in by cigarettes, health concerns, the trade embargo on Cuba and competition from abroad. Many were torn down; others stand there empty or recycled for more profitable ventures.

There is one exception: On the northern side of Ybor City sits the J. C. Newman Cigar Company factory, a family-owned business tucked inside a classic brick building nicknamed El Reloj, a nod to its clock tower. Both have defied the maw of modernity to outlive a century.

But now J. C. Newman faces its biggest threat: the possibility that the Food and Drug Administration may introduce strict, expensive regulations on cigars that the Newman brothers, who operate the company, say could close the last working cigar factory in town...

“We have gone through two World Wars, the Great Depression, the Cuban trade embargo, smoking bans, excessive taxation and competition from low-wage countries,” said Eric Newman, who with his brother Bobby, owns and operates the country’s oldest premium cigar business, founded in 1895 in Cleveland by his grandfather Julius Caeser Newman. “The toughest challenge of all these is the F.D.A. regulations.”

If the factory closes, Tampa would lose its most historic link to the city’s 150-year-old cigar legacy, a blow that many agree would be deeply felt. It is not hard to see why. Inside El Reloj, cigar workers, most of them women, sit behind 1930s-era machines and lay a long tobacco leaf on a metal plate, cutting it before it slides off to be rolled. In another room, women push pedals on machines from the 1910s that strip the stem from the leaf (the women are indelicately called strippers). The process has not changed since the 1930s when Mr. Newman’s grandfather bought his first set of machines; two decades later he moved his cigar factory to Ybor City from Cleveland.

The fight to save the factory has galvanized both Democrats and Republicans, among them Gov. Rick Scott of Florida. They are lobbying the F.D.A. to look carefully at the provisions they say could unfairly exclude the cigars made in the Newmans’ Tampa factory from the protection the agency may offer premium cigars.

“It goes to the heart and soul of Tampa,” said Representative Kathy Castor, a Florida Democrat from the area who introduced a bill to try to protect premium cigar manufacturers. “This would be a blow to our cultural history to have the last remaining cigar factory close.”

Eric Newman, who grew up in the area, said he would not shy from fighting to keep the factory doors open. “Cigars are to Tampa,” he said, “what wine is to Napa and automobiles are to Michigan.”
Entire article plus slideshow :http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/22/us/af ... igars.html

Re: Cigars for beginners

by jingjai » Wed May 22, 2013 1:50 pm

Hamlay wrote:What is the price of Cigars like in Thailand? Any places to buy half decent cigars in Udon?
Villa market is now carrying cigars. Cubans, which are a little pricey. Also some smaller Dutch cigars in tins of ten cigars.
Appeared to be stored somewhat properly.

Re: Cigars for beginners

by Nobbles » Wed May 08, 2013 6:51 pm

In an AC bar ... :!:

Re: Cigars for beginners

by Aardvark » Wed May 08, 2013 3:46 pm

Turbo Noodles wrote:i was always under the impression that those areas are cheap as chips for duty free things..?

i recall buying in a liquor store in patters years and years back(corner of the junction of pattaya klang and second road)...cigars where hard to find, but there where one or 2 shops that stocked them usually next to the till and always a liquor store and JJ is correct...not stored very well and some where dry and stale...then when Robinson opened oppersite they stocked them a bit better in the Whisky and wine section, but i never came across 1 girl who liked the smell.....Men Men thats all you got, i also find i did'nt enjoy so much in the searing heat.... the right ambiance is vital to get the best out of your smoke.

Ham...look out for some Sweet Orient Mahari's, a flavoursome sweetish smoke slim style(panatela) 1 will last about 15-20 mins of regular puffing, very satisfying imo.
i also find i did'nt enjoy so much in the searing heat [end quote] I thought that's what made a Cuban so good ?? A nice Cigar and a Rum Cocktail :beer: sorry never had a rum cocktail smiley ...

Re: Cigars for beginners

by Loki » Wed May 08, 2013 8:20 am

If on extended visa and hang around Thailand, Gourmet Markets in Bkk have decent selections and stored quite well, though pricing is hit and miss. Sold in the Wine Shop department. Forget which one, possible ChitLom or Paragon, had good selection.

Re: Cigars for beginners

by Nobbles » Wed May 08, 2013 1:50 am

i was always under the impression that those areas are cheap as chips for duty free things..?

i recall buying in a liquor store in patters years and years back(corner of the junction of pattaya klang and second road)...cigars where hard to find, but there where one or 2 shops that stocked them usually next to the till and always a liquor store and JJ is correct...not stored very well and some where dry and stale...then when Robinson opened oppersite they stocked them a bit better in the Whisky and wine section, but i never came across 1 girl who liked the smell.....Men Men thats all you got, i also find i did'nt enjoy so much in the searing heat.... the right ambiance is vital to get the best out of your smoke.

Ham...look out for some Sweet Orient Mahari's, a flavoursome sweetish smoke slim style(panatela) 1 will last about 15-20 mins of regular puffing, very satisfying imo.

Re: Cigars for beginners

by Hamlay » Tue May 07, 2013 11:10 pm

jingjai you are a true gentleman.

I'll try and stock up in duty free but Qatar is bloody expensive and I'm flying direct to Thailand.

Re: Cigars for beginners

by jingjai » Tue May 07, 2013 8:45 pm

They are expensive here in Thailand.
There is a liquor store on the corner of Sisutha Rd. & Posri Rd., that sells Dutch cigars...once again, expensive. And they are not stored properly. IMO.
If you are planning a visit, I'd suggest bring your own stash with you. If you happen to have a stopover in Amsterdam, there is a excellent Duty Free cigar store at the the international airport there. Good Dutch Cigars at very reasonable prices. IMO.
If you are already in Udon, and in need of a few good smokes...PM me, and I will tighten you up.

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