I’m currently trying a bunch of different blends, and wanted to know how long my tobacco will stay good in my opened Captain Black pouch?
Thank you! Central a/c, so sounds like I need not worry about it.Depends on where you live and relative humidity and things like if you have AC on where you live which pulls humidity from the air. If you are in a humid place much longer than a dry place.
Central AC dries things out that’s how it works. If the pouch is sealed you’re fine but if you say leave it open tobacco will dry out fast in general. I assume you are asking about all tobacco really not just stuffed drowned in PG solution.Thank you! Central a/c, so sounds like I need not worry about it.
Well, I guess that’s why I’m asking the question, because those roll-up pouches don’t exactly seal the tobacco. I’m sure they will keep it fresh for X amount of time. I just have no experience to know just how long that time is? Weeks, months, years? I highly doubt years.Central AC dries things out that’s how it works. If the pouch is sealed you’re fine but if you say leave it open tobacco will dry out fast in general. I assume you are asking about all tobacco really not just stuffed drowned in PG solution.
Interesting. I haven’t really found it to be all that wet. I’ve had no problem keeping it lit, without heating up my bowl. In fact, moisture wise, it has seemed to be similar to the EMP I just got.Is it even possible for Captain Black to dry? Ha ha. As for real tobaccos, like Virginia Flakes, I dry them before I even put them in a pouch. I wouldn't ever want my tobacco to stay moist and give me a steamy leather tongue.
I mean sure, if someone likes aromatics, they may want them to stay moist.
I had a pouch of Carter Hall that I smoked while on my tractor. I left the pouch in the tool box on the tractor through Fall till Spring, and it stayed as moist as the day I opened it. It never really dried out enough for me to enjoy smoking it... if one CAN enjoy Carter Hall.
I didn't say that it was sopping wet, but that codger blends are moistened with PG, so it doesn't dry out on the shelves, after sometimes over a year in a pouch. Early in my pipesmoking, I used to enjoy Captain Black White. But, as I explored other blends, I just grew away from them. I also grew to prefer my tobaccos be very dry.I haven’t really found it to be all that wet.
Thank you! I don’t smoke everyday, so I don’t see me finishing that one pouch anytime soon, because I want to try others. Right now it’s looking like I’ll be amoking 3-4 times a week (maybe a 5th). So with 12 other blends on hand it might get stretched beyond 4 months. I’m thinking I’m just going to keep it in the pouch and find out how long it will last kept there. Thank you gentlemen for all your input!I leave those open pouches of this or that in my car all the time. The heat of the summer and the cold of the winter don't seem to affect it much. There's a reason for propylene glycol in these popular blends. I wouldn't worry about it, unless you're talking three or four months of it being open. Just my experience, in upstate NY for decades. Leather roll-ups with "good" tobacco in them are another story.
The Miracle of Modern Chemistry ...Is it even possible for Captain Black to dry? Ha ha. As for real tobaccos, like Virginia Flakes, I dry them before I even put them in a pouch. I wouldn't ever want my tobacco to stay moist and give me a steamy leather tongue.
I mean sure, if someone likes aromatics, they may want them to stay moist.
I had a pouch of Carter Hall that I smoked while on my tractor. I left the pouch in the tool box on the tractor through Fall till Spring, and it stayed as moist as the day I opened it. It never really dried out enough for me to enjoy smoking it... if one CAN enjoy Carter Hall.
Thank you sir! That’s what I was looking for.If I had to give a real answer, I'd say about a month before it starts drying out just in the pouch.
But remember, dry tobacco doesn't mean bad tobacco