ChinaVoodoo
Moderator
Lol, I thought the discussion was about the redundancy of the word Mexican. Like saying American Napa Valley wine.
Yes, but if you wanted to be more specific you could say ANVPN, or ANVOVZ.You mean ANVW?
Think about it for a second. A dude asks you what MSA stands for, and you reply "San Andres."Lol, I thought the discussion was about the redundancy of the word Mexican. Like saying American Napa Valley wine.
The contact in the DR did apologize for that. I don't know if you read it. I think it's just his habit to meaninglessly throw habano around.Think about it for a second. A dude asks you what MSA stands for, and you reply "San Andres."
As we know now, the correct answer is "Habano San Andres."
Yeah, I did read that. I still find the whole deal humorous. At least I didn't say MSA stood for Nicaraguan Habano San Andres.The contact in the DR did apologize for that. I don't know if you read it. I think it's just his habit to meaninglessly throw habano around.
Sounds like a pretty good analogy.The way I see it, Habano in some circles is like water and Chinese tea. Some in the pot, some on the pot, overfill the cups, get it all over the tray, toss some on the floor.
You are right and wrong and everywhere in between. The naming of tobacco varieties is a mess. Is it a man, or is it a Muppet? Should it be named for its genetic origin (often unclear) or by where this year's crop from the Cigar Brand du jour was grown, or named after the geographic location where it first became well known? ARS-GRIN kind of formalized some varietal names. Commercial cigar marketeers have preferred confusion and obfuscation. And a number of Internet vendors of tobacco seed have been "creative" with varietal names. So it's all perfectly clear, and clearly a perfect mess.Again, please correct me if I'm wrong.
Yesterday we couldn’t spell afficianato, now we are one.Well I didn't mean to open a can ... lol

Nice job. I actually have a good friend who lives in Bradenton.View attachment 30506
After 2 months of packing, moving from Seattle to Sarasota, then Sarasota to Bradenton I finally got my stuff set up to roll again. Nice to get back to it.
Habano wrapper, Vuelta abajo binder, corojo and CV Criollo ligero, corojo viso, and a half leaf of PC ligero in the second half to close with a punch.
We've only been here a week and a half but we like it so farNice job. I actually have a good friend who lives in Bradenton.
From what I can see from your rolling room it looks pretty good.We've only been here a week and a half but we like it so far
We discuss any variety of tobacco, as well as numerous approaches to growing, harvesting, curing, and finishing your crop. Our members will attempt to provide experience-based answers to your questions.