Jars don't break as easily as people make out like they will. I have thousands of jars, as we can everything from juices to jams to green beans. I have a room where they are stacked from floor to ceiling, and we drop them all the time. They bounce, unless they are empty with no top. A sealed jar, I can hit with a baseball bat and have it bounce around a few time in the yard before landing safely. No kidding, I have done this. However, a jar full of iced tea, falling off the kitchen table breaks instantly. This is just how they are designed, to take high pressure canning processes, over and over, decade after decade.
If you have a bag full of aged tobacco mailed, you will just have a bag full of crap in a week or so, as the rotting process speeds up to hyper drive after you open aged tobacco in a jar.
I would never, ever, ever buy a jar full of an aged tobacco, where I am paying anything above a depreciated retail price. Once a tobacco goes into a jar, it's a sucker's bet. Guys who remove tobaccos and put them in jars, do so only if they are going to be the ones consuming it, and to me the idea of transferring from tin to jar just seems... ::cough cough:: anyways. But, I understand it better if you are doing this to share with friends. But, as an investment in the enjoyment of aged tobacco, you're rolling the dice against the House, and the odds are always in favor of the House.
If you have a bag full of aged tobacco mailed, you will just have a bag full of crap in a week or so, as the rotting process speeds up to hyper drive after you open aged tobacco in a jar.
I would never, ever, ever buy a jar full of an aged tobacco, where I am paying anything above a depreciated retail price. Once a tobacco goes into a jar, it's a sucker's bet. Guys who remove tobaccos and put them in jars, do so only if they are going to be the ones consuming it, and to me the idea of transferring from tin to jar just seems... ::cough cough:: anyways. But, I understand it better if you are doing this to share with friends. But, as an investment in the enjoyment of aged tobacco, you're rolling the dice against the House, and the odds are always in favor of the House.