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#1 |
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Hiding my Visa bill
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Depends on how long the cigar has been "unhumidified."
http://www.cigarasylum.com/vb/showth...ghlight=revive
__________________
Marriage is not a word. It is a sentence. (A life sentence!) |
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#2 |
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Have My Own Room
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#3 |
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Neither here, nor there
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#4 |
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Have My Own Room
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I agree that you can't revive a cigar once it's dried out but does the local climate have any bearing on this? The reason I ask is because I live in Houston where the humidity is generally between 60-100% most of the year, no joke. I never have to spray my beads...ever.
I've always wondered what would happen if I just left a cigar out of the humidor for an extended period of time here. |
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#5 | |
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I Need My Space
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Quote:
Leaving it out of the humidor for a long time may allow it to come in contact with too much air and lose it's flavor, but that wouldn't be the humidity's fault. If they were in a box, I'd say they are likely revive-able. If your humidity never dropped below 60%, you have nothing to worry about. |
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