This time of year, as many here do, I tend to start smoking an occasional cigar. Particularly in the mornings, as lawn and garden work starts picking up.
It's not so much because I won't smoke cigars indoors (out of kindness to Mrs. C), as much as it cuts the reaction I suffer from everything outdoors this time of year.
Go figure, but I always feel better puffing away on a cigar when the grass and pollen are flying. The stick doesn't taste quite as good as it does lounging on the evening patio. But it does the trick.
And like many here, I tend to like at least a decent cigar, even for lawn and garden duty.
So for many decades, I would happily puff away on a "cheaper cigar", an AF 858, my preferred daily, as I bounced along on the tractor.
Nowadays, I no longer bounce along on a tractor so much.
And looking at the prices of 858s, I don't think I'll be puffing them on lawn and garden days much anymore.
Almost one hundred and ninety dollars a box with some vendors. Almost $8 a stick ... for an 858. Nuts. I don't think I paid much more for Padron '64s not that long ago. This was once a $2 or $3 cigar for me. They should just round the price up to $8.58, and complete the holdup. I can't even imagine what a box of '64 Anniversaries is now selling for.
Thankfully, I still have about 175 858s in the cabinet. I'll still be smoking them, along with hundreds of other better cigars stashed in there over the years. But only on the evening patio, where I can fully enjoy them.
No more $8 "cheap cigars" for my morning battles with cut grass, pollen and tractor dust.
Next lawn and garden day, I'm going to try something I haven't touched in 45 years. A $1 US-made White Owl. I recall them having a brand phrase in the early 70s ...
"We're gonna get'cha". Thanks to the crazy price spikes on decent cigars, they just might.
I'll let you know how that goes.
It's not so much because I won't smoke cigars indoors (out of kindness to Mrs. C), as much as it cuts the reaction I suffer from everything outdoors this time of year.
Go figure, but I always feel better puffing away on a cigar when the grass and pollen are flying. The stick doesn't taste quite as good as it does lounging on the evening patio. But it does the trick.
And like many here, I tend to like at least a decent cigar, even for lawn and garden duty.
So for many decades, I would happily puff away on a "cheaper cigar", an AF 858, my preferred daily, as I bounced along on the tractor.
Nowadays, I no longer bounce along on a tractor so much.
And looking at the prices of 858s, I don't think I'll be puffing them on lawn and garden days much anymore.
Almost one hundred and ninety dollars a box with some vendors. Almost $8 a stick ... for an 858. Nuts. I don't think I paid much more for Padron '64s not that long ago. This was once a $2 or $3 cigar for me. They should just round the price up to $8.58, and complete the holdup. I can't even imagine what a box of '64 Anniversaries is now selling for.
Thankfully, I still have about 175 858s in the cabinet. I'll still be smoking them, along with hundreds of other better cigars stashed in there over the years. But only on the evening patio, where I can fully enjoy them.
No more $8 "cheap cigars" for my morning battles with cut grass, pollen and tractor dust.
Next lawn and garden day, I'm going to try something I haven't touched in 45 years. A $1 US-made White Owl. I recall them having a brand phrase in the early 70s ...
"We're gonna get'cha". Thanks to the crazy price spikes on decent cigars, they just might.
I'll let you know how that goes.