Fighting the Beetles:
Protecting Your Cigars from Infestation
Your cigar box may be at risk of a
secret predator. Many cigar aficionados have been shocked and
repulsed at finding their treasured cigars infested with
Lasioderma Serricorne, also known as tobacco beetles. This
dreaded beetle feeds on your precious cigars. They don't care
if your cigars are drugstore mass-market brands, or imported
beauties.
What is the tobacco beetle, and
where does it come from? The tobacco beetle exits in all
countries where tobacco is produced. It thrives on tobacco
plants, infesting their leaves before it is
processed.
Tobacco beetles thrive in hot
climates, and especially in the warm countries Caribbean
countries where much of the world's tobacco is produced.
Tobacco beetles lay larvae that are white and up to 4 mm long.
When the larvae hatch, they produce moths that proceed to
hungrily eat their way through the tobacco leaves.
Unfortunately, the
tobacco beetle has been known to survive the process of
fermentation and production that is used to make most cigars.
Although many countries have made the effort to rid their
tobacco crops of this dreaded pest, mostly by spraying crops
with gases, the tobacco beetle has proven highly
resistant.
If the tobacco beetle survives
into the finished product, many cigar enthusiasts may open
their cigar boxes to find that their cigars have been eaten
through. Sometimes the presence of the tobacco beetle can be
detected through the presence of small puncture-like holes on
the wrapper. The holes can make an average cigar resemble a
flute.
What can you do if you find
your cigars infested with the tobacco beetle? Research has
shown that your microwave may be your best defense in
destroying the tobacco beetle larvae. Before using your
microwave, remove and dispose of any infested cigar from your
collection.
The rest of your cigars can be
treated. In order to rid the remaining of your collection of
this pest, you should make sure to microwave your cigars
together, never individually. Microwave them for about three
minutes. After being warmed, immediately place the cigars into
the freezer.
After freezing them for 24
hours, remove them and allow them to thaw at room temperature.
After they have thawed completely, place them in a humidor.
This treatment has proven effective in removing the presence of
the tobacco beetle.
Before removing a cigar from
the humidor to be smoked, examine each cigar individually. If
the cigar shows no evidence of infestation, it is safe to
smoke.
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