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Re: Cigars becoming like baseball cards?
Cigars are not collectibles, they are consumables. Play the game if you want but in the end they are all meant to be burned. :rolleyes:
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Re: Cigars becoming like baseball cards?
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Re: Cigars becoming like baseball cards?
I would like a 2010 boxed set of fuente or padron. Or a signed Don Pepin black for my collection. I think Rocky is more like the stale useless bubblegum than any of the cards imho.
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Re: Cigars becoming like baseball cards?
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I see it this way...when I was collecting baseball cards, I abandoned all of the sub-sets and just stuck with what I loved...I'll do the same for my cigars. :tu |
Re: Cigars becoming like baseball cards?
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But then some jerk on the w00t.com forum whined about legalities and so he couldn't. |
Re: Cigars becoming like baseball cards?
Wait until you delve into Cubans.
Regional releases and Edicion Limitadas, each commanding a premium.. to each their own... |
Re: Cigars becoming like baseball cards?
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I like using those in the spokes on my bike :tu |
Re: Cigars becoming like baseball cards?
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You are definitely quite the Cuban connoisseur, Scott. :tu |
Re: Cigars becoming like baseball cards?
I have zero interest in limited/special edition cigars at all. If I paid $20+ bucks for a stogie, I'd never be able to get myself to smoke it, and what good is that?
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Re: Cigars becoming like baseball cards?
I just wonder how many different brands of cigars were out there over 100 years ago. It seemed like every town, or city, had their own roller making cigars locally. New York City used to have hundreds of families working out of their homes rolling cigars, probably on a piecework basis. I would assume that quality could be an issue.
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Re: Cigars becoming like baseball cards?
Ghurka would be Fleer in my mind , especially the Metal line with all the fancy backgrounds . WHich cigar brand would be O-Pee-Chee ? Nice thread . I do have some cigars in my collection that I wont smoke for quite some time but will eventually .
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Re: Cigars becoming like baseball cards?
The one difference is that after you have chased down a box of rare stuff, you can still enjoy it. Cigars have utility and intrinsic value where cards end up being worth nothing if sentiment changes.
Let's say you spent $1000 on a GEM '85 Topps McGuire OLY RC in 1998 or you spent $1000 on an ultra limited cigar. Now, the Mac is probably worth like $50. Maybe the cigars aren't worth as much either, but I'll be they're a lot tastier than the Mac if you tried to smoke one :) |
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