Cigar Asylum Cigar Forum Mobile
Page 1 of 2
1 2 >
All Cigar Discussion>Tobacco Beetles..
iRiSh 02:00 PM 09-17-2011
I got a box of cigars a few weeks ago and have had 4 out of them.
All fine and a nice smoke.

This evening i opened one (they are all wrapped in plastic)
I noticed two small holes at the butt and a half inch slot 3/4 of the way down. Being a novice i have not come across this before and doing research i found it to be an infestation of Tobacco Beetle.

I have check the rest of the cigars in the box and found another 4 cigars with similar holes, i have seperated them from the rest.

A few questions

I should put the effected cigars in the freezer? For how long?

The other cigars with no visable signs of beetle damage should be alright?

Is it dangerous to smoke these?

Thanks in advance for any help..:-)
[Reply]
irratebass 02:06 PM 09-17-2011
I am no help here, but I sure someone will jump at this and help you.

I would contact whomever you got the box from and see about a refund or possible an exchange 1st of all and I would separate the infected from the others.

Sorry this happened to ya bro.
[Reply]
chippewastud79 02:07 PM 09-17-2011
Originally Posted by iRiSh:
I should put the effected cigars in the freezer? For how long?

The other cigars with no visable signs of beetle damage should be alright?

Is it dangerous to smoke these?

Thanks in advance for any help..:-)
No, you should put them all in the freezer. The other cigars could very well be infested.

They will not be dangerous to smoke after freezing.

Read this STICKY:

http://www.cigarasylum.com/vb/showth...ghlight=freeze

:-)
[Reply]
T.G 02:10 PM 09-17-2011
Originally Posted by iRiSh:
This evening i opened one (they are all wrapped in plastic)
Cellophane. Not plastic.

Originally Posted by iRiSh:
I should put the effected cigars in the freezer? For how long?
Silverfox posted a detailed thread here: How to Freeze and the Science behind it. Long Post

But the quick answer is 4-6 days in the freezer,. I like 6, it gives me some safety to make up for the fact that residential freezers don't keep a constant low temp, they cycle. Better to be safe than sorry later. After that, if you want to put them in the refrigerator for a day, go ahead, it won't hurt them, but it really isn't necessary. They have so little mass and water in them compared to what is normally found in freezers, that they thaw very quickly.

Originally Posted by iRiSh:
The other cigars with no visable signs of beetle damage should be alright?
Best to freeze everything as it's hard to say what might still be harboring unhatched eggs.

Originally Posted by iRiSh:
Is it dangerous to smoke these?
No, not dangerous.
[Reply]
Tbagley 02:16 PM 09-17-2011
Smoke the little bugs out of their nest!
[Reply]
iRiSh 02:42 PM 09-17-2011
Originally Posted by irratebass:
I am no help here, but I sure someone will jump at this and help you.

I would contact whomever you got the box from and see about a refund or possible an exchange 1st of all and I would separate the infected from the others.

Sorry this happened to ya bro.
Thanks bro

Originally Posted by chippewastud79:
No, you should put them all in the freezer. The other cigars could very well be infested.

They will not be dangerous to smoke after freezing.

Read this STICKY:

http://www.cigarasylum.com/vb/showth...ghlight=freeze

:-)
Good thread, good info thanks

Originally Posted by T.G:
Cellophane. Not plastic.


Silverfox posted a detailed thread here: How to Freeze and the Science behind it. Long Post

But the quick answer is 4-6 days in the freezer,. I like 6, it gives me some safety to make up for the fact that residential freezers don't keep a constant low temp, they cycle. Better to be safe than sorry later. After that, if you want to put them in the refrigerator for a day, go ahead, it won't hurt them, but it really isn't necessary. They have so little mass and water in them compared to what is normally found in freezers, that they thaw very quickly.


Best to freeze everything as it's hard to say what might still be harboring unhatched eggs.



No, not dangerous.
I will put them all in the freezer bud, better safe than sorry, pain in the arse the little bastards.



Originally Posted by Tbag:
Smoke the little bugs out of their nest!
HaHa:-)
[Reply]
Newbie_nick 03:13 PM 09-17-2011
That's scary! I'm glad that you caught it before it infected your whole humidor!
[Reply]
WittyUserName 03:26 PM 09-17-2011
May I ask what brand of cigars they are and where you got them?

I hope the freezing works and your stock is not infected.
[Reply]
bobarian 03:37 PM 09-17-2011
Originally Posted by WittyUserName:
May I ask what brand of cigars they are and where you got them?

I hope the freezing works and your stock is not infected.
The brand of cigars is irrelevant. Any cigar can become infested even though many factories and distributors freeze before shipping. Tobacco beetles like mold are prevalent everywhere. Although called tobacco beetles they in fact also eat paper and most other vegetable based products including cellophane. :-)
[Reply]
WittyUserName 03:41 PM 09-17-2011
Originally Posted by bobarian:
The brand of cigars is irrelevant. Any cigar can become infested even though many factories and distributors freeze before shipping. Tobacco beetles like mold are prevalent everywhere. Although called tobacco beetles they in fact also eat paper and most other vegetable based products including cellophane. :-)
Thanks Bob. I understand all of that, I am just curious.


May I ask what brand they are and where you got them?
[Reply]
irratebass 03:41 PM 09-17-2011
Originally Posted by :
But the quick answer is 4-6 days in the freezer,. I like 6, it gives me some safety to make up for the fact that residential freezers don't keep a constant low temp, they cycle. Better to be safe than sorry later. After that, if you want to put them in the refrigerator for a day, go ahead, it won't hurt them, but it really isn't necessary. They have so little mass and water in them compared to what is normally found in freezers, that they thaw very quickly.
Thanks for the quick answer.
[Reply]
gbum 08:22 AM 09-18-2011
urghhh that nasty!
[Reply]
LostAbbott 09:31 AM 09-18-2011
Let the grow on a few sticks you won't mind loseing then fry and cover in chocolate, yummm... :-)
Posted via Mobile Device
[Reply]
sikk50 02:08 AM 09-19-2011
Ugh, beetles are like cigar koodies. Treat with aggressive freezing!

The fact remains that very likely your humidor went above 70*f for a period of time. That means all of your cigars may be infected. Freeze everything.
[Reply]
webjunkie 02:53 AM 09-19-2011
Man I hate the little buggers. Freeze everything as per silverfox's excellent thread. Freeze all cigars before putting them in your humi. Constant Vigilance!
[Reply]
iRiSh 01:00 PM 09-19-2011
Originally Posted by WittyUserName:
May I ask what brand of cigars they are and where you got them?

I hope the freezing works and your stock is not infected.
Torano Virtuoso Robusto, Bought from the UK

Originally Posted by sikk50:
Ugh, beetles are like cigar koodies. Treat with aggressive freezing!

The fact remains that very likely your humidor went above 70*f for a period of time. That means all of your cigars may be infected. Freeze everything.
:-)

Originally Posted by webjunkie:
Man I hate the little buggers. Freeze everything as per silverfox's excellent thread. Freeze all cigars before putting them in your humi. Constant Vigilance!
:-)
[Reply]
sparkboss 05:02 AM 02-02-2012
i just recieved a humi (VERY DRY) with a good amount of cigars within, roughly 10 (VERY DRY) Gran Habano's and ~25 of another irrelivant cigar. but ALL the habano's had many holes and pits from tobacco beetles, i actually recieved these third hand as the person whom they were intended for has no interest in keeping and caring for these precious sticks, but the man he recieved them from claimed that the tobacco beetles were "Good" for the cigars. now im no cigar professional but the first thing that comes into my head is a flashing red exclamation point that denotes obvious worry for infestation.. However i've no freezer and i have no clue how long the sticks have been sitting in this ultra drymidor, would it actually be worth re-humidifying these cigars and making them smokable once again?

Also, the other 25 cigars are untouched by the bettles, so my guess is that they're dead :-)
[Reply]
massphatness 05:55 AM 02-02-2012
Originally Posted by sparkboss:
the man he recieved them from claimed that the tobacco beetles were "Good" for the cigars
much in the same that syphallus is good for your johnson :-)
[Reply]
Cornrow_Wallis 09:34 AM 02-02-2012
Originally Posted by sparkboss:
i just recieved a humi (VERY DRY) with a good amount of cigars within, roughly 10 (VERY DRY) Gran Habano's and ~25 of another irrelivant cigar. but ALL the habano's had many holes and pits from tobacco beetles, i actually recieved these third hand as the person whom they were intended for has no interest in keeping and caring for these precious sticks, but the man he recieved them from claimed that the tobacco beetles were "Good" for the cigars. now im no cigar professional but the first thing that comes into my head is a flashing red exclamation point that denotes obvious worry for infestation.. However i've no freezer and i have no clue how long the sticks have been sitting in this ultra drymidor, would it actually be worth re-humidifying these cigars and making them smokable once again?

Also, the other 25 cigars are untouched by the bettles, so my guess is that they're dead :-)
Dry and full of holes...just pitch them. :-)

And I wouldn't put any of the cigars, even the seemingly untouched ones, into another humi with other cigars.
[Reply]
jluck 10:53 AM 02-02-2012
Originally Posted by sparkboss:

Also, the other 25 cigars are untouched by the Beatles, so my guess is that they're dead :-)
Or....These 25 aren't even good enough for beetles to enjoy. :-) (Thompson?)
[Reply]
Page 1 of 2
1 2 >
Up