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Counterfeit Cigars Go Up In Smoke In the Dominican Republic

August 10th, 2006

In the Dominican Republic last Friday, the National Tobacco Institute (INTABACO), the Attorney General’s Department,Counterfeit Cuban Cigars Destroyed in the Dominican Republic and Dominican state security institutions impounded 2,871 boxes of counterfeit cigars from tourist centers and stores in that nation.

The latest raids, part of a crack-down by Dominican authorities, netted 40,000 cigars counterfeiting famous brands that included Romeo y Julieta, Cohiba, Montecristo, Davidoff, Partagas, Gloria Cubana, Macanudo, Punch, Troya, and others. The cigars were seized in shopping centers, stores, beaches and tourist plazas in Santo Domingo, Bayahibe, Higuey and Bavaro.

Yesterday, on August 9, INTABACO incinerated 7,000 boxes of confiscated cigars, most with fake Cuban brand labels, seized in this most recent round of raids. The incineration took place in a lot next to INTABACO’s offices, located in the community Villa González, in this northern province.

INTABACO director Adalberto Rosa said that with these actions against the fake cigars, the national tobacco sector will obtain a market free from irregularities that will allow the development of healthy business practices. “These actions represent a hard blow for the cigar forgers who have affected the image of the Dominican Republic abroad,” he said.

Would that it was true and it was that easy.

More on the counterfeit cigar problem after the jump.

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Top Ten “Made In The USA” Cigars To Light Up The Fourth of July and Beyond: Part III

July 5th, 2006

Read the Entire Article Series:  One  Two  Three  Four  Five

Light Up Your Fourth of July Celebration With Cigars Made in the USAThe third installment in this series on the best cigars made in the USA brings us back to Florida. It also showcases two very different cigar lines.

One is very close to Cuba and has recently been called one of the best cigars made in the United States.

The second is closer to Cuba than the first, and it too has a claim on the title of best U.S.-made cigar.

If that makes sense to you, then you will have a good idea of where we are headed. If it doesn’t, just sit back and relax. It will all be explained in the cigar reviews below the fold.

The order in which cigars are presented in this series does not indicate relative quality or rating. It is not a top-to-bottom or bottom-to-top list. All cigars in this list are quite good, all are quite different, and each one is a #1 cigar in its own way.

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What’s So Special About Cuban Corojo Cigar Wrappers?

July 5th, 2006

Camacho Cigars LogoDo you like Maduro cigars?

Do you like Corojo cigar wrappers?

Ever wished that you could have the best of both in one cigar?

If so, then you are going to love the latest news from Camacho Cigars. Thanks to an exceptional harvest of cuban-seed Corojo tobacco, all of their popular Camacho Corojo cigars will now be available in Corojo Maduro.

That’s right. Corojo Maduro.

The Eiroa family, owners of the Camacho brand as well as Baccarat and La Fontana, are also major growers of Honduran cigar tobacco. Their tobacco is grown in Honduras in the Jamastran Valley, near that country’s border with Nicaragua.

Corojo tobacco takes its name from the Santa Ines del Corojo Vega, a plantation near the town of San Luis y Martinez in Pinar del Rio in the heart of Cuba’s famed Vuelta Abajo tobacco-growing region. Diego Rodriguez began renting the farm from its owner in Spain in the 1920’s, and worked for years to select and develop a superior wrapper tobacco for Cuban cigars.

Between 1930 and the late 1990’s, all cigars from Cuba — regardless of brand or factory — used Rodriguez’s Vuelta Abajo grown Corojo tobacco leaves for their wrappers. The spicy quality and peppery smoothness gave the leaf that unique Cuban “punch” that connoisseurs came to associate with authentic Cuban cigars.

The only problem is that true Corojo tobacco is also delicate and hard to grow. It requires just the right soil, rainfall and weather conditions. It is extremely susceptible to blue mold and black shank disease.

Cuba stopped growing it for that reason.

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The Truth About Kennedy and Those Cuban Cigars

June 28th, 2006

You may have heard the story of President John F. Kennedy sending his press secretary, Pierre Salinger, out to buy a stockpile of Cuban cigars the night before he signed the Cuban embargo into law. You might have wondered if the story was true, or simply an urban legend.

Well, it is true.

Here, courtesy of Janson media, is some archival footage in which the late Pierre Salinger recounts the incident in his own words Just click on the player (you might have to click twice if you are using Internet Explorer) and you’ll learn some things not only about that incident, but about some cigars smuggled into the White House after the embargo became law:




More about the Cuban Petit Upmann and President Kennedy’s favorite cigar below the fold.

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Alberto Hits Cuba’s Pinar del Rio Tobacco Province

June 13th, 2006

Tropical Storm Alberto, the first named storm of the 2006 hurricane season, has brought heavy rains to Cuba’s tobacco-growing western province of Pinar del Rio.

Initial reports are that the weather had not severely affected the tobacco crop because the harvest has been completed. The leaves used to make the island’s famed cigars are already inside curing houses and need only be protected from excess humidity or storm damage to the buildings.

Flooding in Pinar del Rio tobacco-growing province of western Cuba

More than 25,400 people have been evacuated from the Pinar del Río Province due to the passage of the storm. Alberto, which formed during the morning of June 11 in the southeast part of the Gulf of Mexico, was moving away from Cuba’s coasts.

However, the Defense Council in Pinar del Rio has instructed that all precautionary measures be taken to protect human lives and economic assets, and warned that the danger was not yet over. The possibility of increased flooding in low-lying areas near reservoirs continues according to reports from the area.

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Judge Halts Sale of Cohiba Caribbean’s Finest Cigars As Counterfeits

June 9th, 2006

By way of David Savona at Cigar Aficionado:

General Cigar Cohiba logoCompanies selling a Cohiba cigar called counterfeit by General Cigar Company were ordered to cease making, importing, and selling the cigars by a Reno, Nevada judge.

The order, issued by U.S. District Court Judge Brian E. Sandoval on June 2, also prohibits the defendants in a lawsuit filed by General from claiming that they have “any legal right” to use the Cohiba trademark, according to General Cigar. General Cigar owns the U.S. rights to the Cohiba cigar name.

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