ag794516 Posted May 23, 2017 Posted May 23, 2017 I insepected my boxes today, and in some I saw little white/yellow beetles. I thought tobacco beetles are brown but I took all that boxes to the freezer. Is -25C enough? I will kill them all these bastards. Thank you for help!!
A Huge Nerd Posted May 23, 2017 Posted May 23, 2017 I had a beetle problem a while back (not from FoH sticks). Fortunately I was able to take care of it and only lost 18 cigars in the process. Could have been a lot worse. If you freeze, make the temperature changes in either direction gradual. It minimizes stress on the wrapper, especially in non-cellophane sticks. Good luck. 1
JamesKPolkEsq Posted May 23, 2017 Posted May 23, 2017 11 minutes ago, ag794516 said: I insepected my boxes today, and in some I saw little white/yellow beetles. I thought tobacco beetles are brown but I took all that boxes to the freezer. Is -25C enough? I will kill them all these bastards. Thank you for help!! Temperatures are not the only story for beetle mortality, it's also a function of time. Colder temperatures kill more quickly, so -25C will kill, but you need to leave them in the freezer a bit longer than at -60C. Egg -20°C (-4°F) Time to 100% mortality 1 hr -15°C (5°F) Time to 100% mortality 4 hr -10°C (14°F) Time to 100% mortality 12 hr -5°C (23°F) Time to 100% mortality 48 hr 0°C (32°F) Time to 100% mortality 240 hr 5°C (41°F) Time to 100% mortality 336 hr Larval -20°C (-4°F) Time to 100% mortality 1 hr -15°C (5°F) Time to 100% mortality 3 hr -10°C (14°F) Time to 100% mortality 12 hr -5°C (23°F) Time to 100% mortality 96 hr 0°C (32°F) Time to 100% mortality 288 hr 5°C (41°F) Time to 100% mortality 336 hr
btort910 Posted May 23, 2017 Posted May 23, 2017 At -25C for 24 hours is more than enough time to kill eggs, larvae and adult beetles!
Popular Post Smallclub Posted May 23, 2017 Popular Post Posted May 23, 2017 Enjoy the weekly wood mite thread… 10
ag794516 Posted May 23, 2017 Author Posted May 23, 2017 Thank you so far for the answers. I will let them in the freezer for a week. That should be enough.
AlohaStyle Posted May 23, 2017 Posted May 23, 2017 Read the post above yours... wood mites. Do a wood mites search here and don't waste your time freezing. 2
Winchester21 Posted May 23, 2017 Posted May 23, 2017 1 hour ago, JamesKPolkEsq said: Temperatures are not the only story for beetle mortality, it's also a function of time. Colder temperatures kill more quickly, so -25C will kill, but you need to leave them in the freezer a bit longer than at -60C. Egg -20°C (-4°F) Time to 100% mortality 1 hr -15°C (5°F) Time to 100% mortality 4 hr -10°C (14°F) Time to 100% mortality 12 hr -5°C (23°F) Time to 100% mortality 48 hr 0°C (32°F) Time to 100% mortality 240 hr 5°C (41°F) Time to 100% mortality 336 hr Larval -20°C (-4°F) Time to 100% mortality 1 hr -15°C (5°F) Time to 100% mortality 3 hr -10°C (14°F) Time to 100% mortality 12 hr -5°C (23°F) Time to 100% mortality 96 hr 0°C (32°F) Time to 100% mortality 288 hr 5°C (41°F) Time to 100% mortality 336 hr Good info. I had a problem with these little bastards a while back. I pretty much followed your program and escaped with minimal damage
Fugu Posted May 23, 2017 Posted May 23, 2017 27 minutes ago, TBird55 said: Does humidity have any effect on beetles hatching? Yes it does, but - you won't want storing your sticks at conditions where beetle eggs won't hatch. If you are referring to the wood mite (book lice) example of above - these are usually an indicator of an "upper-end" storage humidity.
vintagerodshop Posted May 24, 2017 Posted May 24, 2017 I had a box i opened about a year ago just after opening i saw a wood mite scurry across the brown glistening tobacco leaf. I SCREAMED like a school girl. inspected every box i had with a magnifying glass. 1
soutso Posted May 24, 2017 Posted May 24, 2017 4 hours ago, Fugu said: Yes it does, but - you won't want storing your sticks at conditions where beetle eggs won't hatch. If you are referring to the wood mite (book lice) example of above - these are usually an indicator of an "upper-end" storage humidity. Out of interest Fugu, what do you do (or what would you do) in the event of wood mite? I find that at least half the boxes I buy have it. IMO vendors overhumify their stock. I think this contributes to the problem. For the record, given that they don't damage te cigars, I leave them and just hope that they don't breed and simply die out lol cheers
gweilgi Posted May 24, 2017 Posted May 24, 2017 1 hour ago, soutso said: Out of interest Fugu, what do you do (or what would you do) in the event of wood mite? Invest in aluminium furniture? Import a cane toad to eat all the wood mites (and hopefully any tobacco beetles)? 3
canadianbeaver Posted May 24, 2017 Posted May 24, 2017 Is this like, beetle week? I prefer Abbey Road, personally. (Gonna come out now,ha ha ha,wow look out.)She came in through the bathroom windowProtected by a silver spoonBut now she sucks her thumb and wandersBy the banks of her own lagoonDidn't anybody tell her?Didn't anybody see?Sunday's on the phone to MondayTuesday's on the phone to meShe said she'd always been a dancerShe worked at 15 clubs a dayAnd though she thought I knew the answerWell I knew what I could not sayAnd so I quit the police departmentAnd got myself a steady jobAnd though she tried her best to help meShe could steal but she could not robDidn't anybody tell her?Didn't anybody see?Sunday's on the phone to MondayTuesday's on the phone to meOh yeah 3
Fugu Posted May 24, 2017 Posted May 24, 2017 10 hours ago, soutso said: Out of interest Fugu, what do you do (or what would you do) in the event of wood mite? Simplest way is just brushing them off of sticks and vac clean the boxes (pref. outdoors). These critters only dwell on the surface. Once you get new boxes acclimated to your conditions they won't reappear. 1
Luca Posted May 24, 2017 Posted May 24, 2017 After freezing them keep the cigars separate and just monitor them. Just another precaution to be safe. I had beetles hatch and come out of my cigars during the freezing process!
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