HolcombeMeans324

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Your cigar field could be at risk of a key predator. Many cigar fans have already been repulsed and shocked at finding their cherished pipes beset with Lasioderma Serricorne, also called tobacco beetles. That beetle feeds in your important cigars. They do not care if your matches are supermarket mass-market manufacturers, or imported girls.

What is the tobacco beetle, and where does it come from? The tobacco beetle exits in all places where tobacco is made. It thrives on tobacco crops, before it is processed infesting their leaves. Tobacco beetles thrive in warm climates, and especially in the hot countries Caribbean countries where much of the world's tobacco is produced. Cigarette beetles lay larvae that are white and around 4 mm long. If the larvae hatch, they develop moths that check out hungrily eat their way through the tobacco leaves. Regrettably, the cigarette beetle is proven to survive the process of production and fermentation that's used to generate many pipes. Although some countries have made the time and effort to clear their tobacco crops of this dreadful pest, generally by spraying crops with fumes, the tobacco beetle has proven extremely resistant.

If the cigarette beetle survives in to the finished product, their cigar boxes may be opened by many cigar enthusiasts to find that their matches have been eaten through. Sometimes the presence of the tobacco beetle might be discovered through the presence of small puncture-like holes around the wrapper. The holes will make an average cigar resemble a flute.

Exactly what do you do if you find your cigars plagued with all the cigarette beetle? Research indicates that the microwave might be your best defense in destroying the tobacco beetle larvae. Before using your microwave, remove and get rid of any infested cigar from your selection. The others of the cigarettes can be treated. In order to rid the remaining of the collection of this insect, you need to make sure to stove your matches together, never separately. Stove them for about three minutes. After being heated, immediately place the cigars into the fridge. After freezing them for twenty four hours, eliminate them and allow them to thaw at room temperature. Place them in a humidor, when they have thawed entirely. This treatment has proven successful in removing the current presence of the tobacco beetle. Before removing a from the humidor to become reviewed, examine each cigar independently. It is safe to smoke, If the cigar shows no evidence of invasion.

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