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Posted

A rational reason for me to buy more cigars than I keep up with smoking is the regulatory pressure and potential supply chain disruptions. Buy 'em while you can, basically. I intend to smoke everything I have, and I intend to enjoy cigars for many more years than theywill probably be easily accessible or even available at the current pace. 

And while I'm sure the regulatory pressure on alcohol is ramping up as well, it's at least a few years to decades behind. Most spirits I want, I can buy at the click of a button. And I do mean literally pretty much anything. Even if I want to buy a specific single cask select rum from a specific year, it's likely gonna be available to ship to me from somewhere in the EU. With cigars on the other hand, can't even view what a store has online anymore in most EU countries, let alone order.
 

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Posted

A box purchase of cigars is 25/50 count. A case purchase of wine is 6/12 count. Spirits are typically bought singly. That alone means there are more units of cigars to potentially age. Once you get past the casual stage, money-wise I would say typically 1 box Cuban cigars = 1 case wine = 2 bottles spirits (based on my buying habits). Again, there are more cigar units to potentially age. Of course, all that assumes some sort of median - all bets are off if you are into Habanos auction humidor releases, DRC allocations, or Karuizawa or 3 bottle Macallan releases in Lalique.  

Cigars and wine are intentionally aged. Spirits are only accidentally aged (because they don't improve with age, due respect of Serge and OBE advocates) when they are hoarded. There is much, much more literature, conventional wisdom, up-to-date punditry about the age curve of just about any wine, so punters will have an idea of peak consumption periods. You get much less help with deciding when to finish off that box of cigars. Keep that bottle of Lagavulin as long as you want.

For what it's worth, on a descending scale, I have too many: cigars, then spirits, then wine, even though I buy and keep "sensibly" all of them.

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Posted

It goes without saying that if your average wine and cigar buyer consumes their acquisition within one year on average, then by comparison, I definitely am not your average wine and cigar consumer.

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Posted

The majority of wine I buy is to be enjoyed "soon".  Special bottles for momentous occasions I buy in advance.  Cigars I buy with the intent to smoke "later" for the most part.  And while both pursuits share a lot of similarities, I find the dynamics quite different.

A box of cigars can be opened, a cigar picked out and smoked and then socked away for a short or long while until I feel like revisiting it.

A wine bottle, once opened needs to be enjoyed sooner than later.  Sure i can buy a case of it, but to consume it, it's a bottle by bottle basis.  The cigar box once closed is the same as it was when purchased.  I don't have to smoke the box ASAP.  I must drink the wine I just opened within at most 3 days.  Sure, the other bottles can age but you won't know if it has changed until you've opened.  The same goes for a cigar you smoke that you aged.  In my mind, there is far more flexibility in the box of cigars than in a case of wine. 

Both hobbies have general rules on when it's best to consume a product.  With wine it's hold / drink now.  With cigars its' smoke in now, 2, 3, 5 years(aging #'s vary by marca).  I can pull a cigar out of the box, change my mind and not smoke it and put it back. No harm no foul, unless I've left it out for a week.  But if I open a bottle of wine, I'm committed. Drink ASAP or experience diminishing returns.  

As for Spirits, it takes me years to open some bottles and to consume them.  I can only drink so much. My wife isn't into much of them besides rum and tequila for certain mixed drinks.  So, I might have 2 - 3 bottles opened at a time.  And I won't crack another open until I've finished off a bottle.  

As for this observation:

  • Wine and spirits are depleted.
  • Cigars are accumulated.

I think this is bang on and it's reflected in some of what I've said above.  It's easier to go through a bottle of wine, especially if shared within your household. It's harder to go through a cigar box , even if you're  a voracious smoker, to the tune of 2 / day 365 days.  I've known a few people that are 3-5/day.  I'm at 3-5 per week in the warmer months. During winter, 1/month if I'm lucky.  

My cigar tastes are very wide across many marcas and vitolas whereas my wine tastes are few, mostly due to the fact that I tend to buy bottles that both my wife and I enjoy.  There really isn't' a bottle of wine in my collection that is mine only.  We tend to buy the same bottles unless a recent vintage deviates too much from what we've enjoyed in the past. We also buy a new bottle now and then to sample to see if we can find another staple.  

Posted

I can’t speak to the wine/spirits because I quit drinking, but I definitely have started buying way more cigars than I can smoke soon. These things almost universally get better with a year or two in my environment and entirely universally get more expensive over time. I’ll gladly pay less upfront for a better experience in the end. 

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