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December 22, 2009

The perils of poor humidification!

It was pretty mild the other evening, and I was in need of some forced contemplation. So I started a fire in our
patio fireplace, grabbed a Fonseca, and enjoyed some deep thought.

But not for long. That cigar burned so hot I had a hard time enjoying it. I smoked about an inch of it and then decided to save my taste buds for another day.

You see my humidor suffered my neglect for a while, and while the reletivw humidity never got be low 50%, even the 50′s are way too low. I’ve got it back up to 65 now, but clearly it takes a while for the cigars to adjust.

Lesson learned!


April 20, 2007

My First Home-built Humidor

As I wrote earlier (meaning like a year ago ;-), once I’d been gifted a box of Fonsecas, I had to find someplace to put them. When you combine that with some upcoming woodworking projects for my daughter, I had a great excuse and a great practice project rolled into one. I built this humidor back in June of last year and photographed it as soon as I filled it. I’ve been meaning to put up pictures of it ever since. These are not so great, but I know if I wait until I have a chance to take better ones it’ll be another year.

I made it out of maple and cherry, with a spanish cedar interior. I finger jointed the corners, and it ended up pretty bomb-proof. What it needs is a good couple of coats of varnish over the thin oil coat I gave it to make it nice and tight as far as humidity goes. It’s a bit leaky right now.

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June 26, 2006

Humidor seasoning is important

As you know I built a humidor a while back, and I’ve had cigars in it since it was finished. When you read about seasoning humidors (that is, getting them humidity-stabilized) folks generally recommend leaving the humidifier beads or foam or whatever in the humidor with NO cigars for about a week to let things stabilize. The cedar lining can evidently take a while to get up to the proper humidity level.

Well, when I finished my humidor I wiped the inside down with water and let it go for an afternoon, and then put the cigars in. I’ve been monitoring the humidity, which should be 65%, and I’m finding that it keeps dropping. Now, it could be that the humidor isn’t sealing well, but it’s pretty tight. I’m thinking instead that the thirsty lining is still soaking up the humidity. So my solution has been to put a small container with a wad of wet paper towel in it in the humidor. The humidity will go up for a while, but when it gets above about 73% I pull it out. Since I’m using beads, which will absorb excess humidity, the idea is that the beads will bring humidity back down to the target 65% level. the humidity then starts to drop, and when it drops too much (say, down to 62%) I end up putting the wet stuff back in. None of this is really difficult, it’s just a pain to do it and there’s a risk that I’ll forget about the little pot of paper towel and inadvertantly let the humidity level get too high.

I think this is what people call “doing it the hard way” 8-)

My only message here is that when you get a humidor, follow the advice of others – get it stabilized before you put the cigars in.