Damn Cigar Beetles
rwheelwright
Posts: 3,296 ✭
So, I get home last night and I decide to check on my 300 ct dome humi. Would you know that I saw a little beetle in there. It is the same type I saw in that new Don Carlos 30th anniv humidor I got last month. I'm not positive that it was a cigar beetle but I am not taking a chance. So, I take the two trays out put the cigars in bags and I found another one. I put the cigars at the bottom of the humi in their chests (Gurkha Grand Age and Warlord) and the few straglers in bags. I lifted the bottom grate in the humi and found another one. I did some inspection of some of the cigars and I could not find any damage at all. Most of the cigars in that humi are in the cello. 2 are in glas tubes. Those are Partagas Limited Reserve Decadas. One 1996 and one 1997. I did have 4 Shaggy Naturals, 4 Shaggy Maduros and 3 Master Select XOs in there that are not in cello. I checked them and they all looked ok.
So, I took the humidor and trays along with the two chests of cigars and I put them outside last night. The temps dropped to 14. When I left there were around 33 today. I left the humi open so it would get a lot of the cold air. This morning it was in direct sunlight so I closed it. I wanted to put it in the freezer but I can't fit it. I put the rest of the bads in the freezer plus I put two tupperdors in there too.
I guess my question is, after leaving the humi out over night (I will leave it out tonight too), is there anything else I should do with in incase there are eggs in there? Once I take these cigars out of the freezer I am going to take the two chests and put them in bags and put them in the freezer too. I just want to be done with this as quick as possibe and don't want a chance of them coming back. Freezing cigars is easy enough but cleaning a humi may be more difficult. I wish I found this earlier because the temps were much colder last week. Oh, another question: Can beetles get through the cello? I guess I am going to have to start freezing everything I order from now on. This humidor is one of my main aging humidors and the rh is usually on the high side, 74 - 75% sometimes even as high as 78%. That is when I open the lid and let it sit for a couple of hours. When I checked yesterday, it was at 72 and when I checked last week it was 68%.
So, I took the humidor and trays along with the two chests of cigars and I put them outside last night. The temps dropped to 14. When I left there were around 33 today. I left the humi open so it would get a lot of the cold air. This morning it was in direct sunlight so I closed it. I wanted to put it in the freezer but I can't fit it. I put the rest of the bads in the freezer plus I put two tupperdors in there too.
I guess my question is, after leaving the humi out over night (I will leave it out tonight too), is there anything else I should do with in incase there are eggs in there? Once I take these cigars out of the freezer I am going to take the two chests and put them in bags and put them in the freezer too. I just want to be done with this as quick as possibe and don't want a chance of them coming back. Freezing cigars is easy enough but cleaning a humi may be more difficult. I wish I found this earlier because the temps were much colder last week. Oh, another question: Can beetles get through the cello? I guess I am going to have to start freezing everything I order from now on. This humidor is one of my main aging humidors and the rh is usually on the high side, 74 - 75% sometimes even as high as 78%. That is when I open the lid and let it sit for a couple of hours. When I checked yesterday, it was at 72 and when I checked last week it was 68%.
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Comments
From what I have read about Beetles, I would think that the cello is not any protection at all. The Beetles / eggs would have been in the tobacco itself, inside the cigar (s), and have moved into the Humi, not the other way around. I believe your Humi at 74 - 75 sometimes as high as 78% RH has a lot to do with it. What are the temps. that go with those RH readings? I am betting they are high as well.
If you can freeze everything that comes into contact with your cigars, including all your Humi's, trays or whatever you should be able to kill them off. I am betting that the Eggs within the tobacco (the beetles are within many different cigars as eggs) have hatched due to temp./ RH in your humi. That suck's bud. But freezing should end the process, from what I have read about beetles. Good luck, and keep us posted.
It is interesting to note that there were only 3 that I saw and that no damage was done. My guess is that they came from some of the cigars that were not in cello but I could be wrong. Now, I am not positive that these were tobacco beetles but they were pretty small. I'll just have to freeze each humidor and it's contents going forward and then freeze whatever new stuff I get in. Everything I inspected looked fine so I think I got to everything in time. I hope..................
I took the Grand Age and Warlord to my sisters and put them in the deep freezer they have. I checked everyone again and found one that had the shavings inside the cello and found the hole. My brother in law said, "give me that one. I won't know the different." So, I did.
im not sure what else to tell you if you cant get it in the freezer. Maybe in the other direction...
turn the oven on to about 160 or so maybe 180 and put the humidor in there for about 25-30 min. this shouldn't be hot enough to hurt the wood and probably not hot enough to hurt the finish (but im not 100% on that part) but it will be hot enough to kill any bugs.
Its almost impossable to keep my house below 70 all summer long. I kinda gave up. If i ever get another humidor, it will be a wine fridge.
20% wet in the summer
Do you think that this would be good enough?