....i do dislike the c&d and sutliff type tins......simply horrid...
Hey man! Good to see you made it back!All I know is this one goes to eleven....
I dislike Sutliff’s because the walls are made of cardboard but the C&D/McClelland tins are the best to cellar, I feel good having those in my cellar, it’s the perfect environment for the tobacco to have a good chance at improving with age.....i do dislike the c&d and sutliff type tins......simply horrid...
Orlik changed their cool rectangle tin to round as well.I have mad respect for them, they didn’t cave in to the round tin conspiracy.
Granby, Colorado (Elevation 8400) theoretically has an average humidity of 5%, but it seems like everytime I check my weather station it is 0-1%. Open tins dry super fast here.Where do you live such that a few extra hours or days would dry the tobacco significantly?
Granby, Colorado (Elevation 8400) theoretically has an average humidity of 5%, but it seems like everytime I check my weather station it is 0-1%. Open tins dry super fast here.
Gosh almighty. That is drier than dry. Sure hope it doesn't stay at zero for long- wouldn't that kill all living things by desiccation?Granby, Colorado (Elevation 8400) theoretically has an average humidity of 5%, but it seems like everytime I check my weather station it is 0-1%. Open tins dry super fast here.
Where I live, humidity seldom goes below 50%. This evening it's at 93%Granby, Colorado (Elevation 8400) theoretically has an average humidity of 5%, but it seems like everytime I check my weather station it is 0-1%. Open tins dry super fast here.
Land of the blood boogers. Everything dries out. Most of the Colorado High Country is a high mountain desert. We can have 5' of snow of the ground and still only average 14" of moisture for the year. For those doing the math, that is pretty fluffy snow! And not much rain!Hydrate and moisturize!
It’s beautiful country though. I love it up there. Cool in the evenings, no suffocating humidity. There’s something really beautiful about the starkness of the high desert.Land of the blood boogers. Everything dries out. Most of the Colorado High Country is a high mountain desert. We can have 5' of snow of the ground and still only average 14" of moisture for the year. For those doing the math, that is pretty fluffy snow! And not much rain!
Was that directed at me @jpmcwjr ?Where do you live such that a few extra hours or days would dry the tobacco significantly?