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Los Angeles – "You know what it reminds
me of? Nothing." That’s the high praise
of one Arizona retailer for the new Alec
Bradley Tempus line, which started shipping
just two weeks ago and is now in a growing number
of stores across the country. The word "tempus" is
Latin for "time" and the cigar meets
the growing desire of smokers for more and more
flavor.
"It has good strength," said Alec
Bradley president Alan Rubin, "and
waves of flavor throughout the smoke. This cigar
is going to have legs for some time." The
initial size line-up shows five shapes: a 5 1/2-inch
by 42-ring corona; a 5-inch by 50-ring robusto;
a 7 1/2-inch by 41-ring lonsdale; 7-inch by 49-ring
double corona and a 6 1/8-inch by 52-ring torpedo,
with retail pricing ranging from $6.25 to $8.75
each (not including local sales and tobacco taxes).
Made in a small factory in Honduras, where Alec
Bradley is the largest client, the Tempus line
has been in development since 2003, when Rubin
saw a specific wrapper that he wanted to use
on a new, first-line cigar. Although his company
is already well known for its MAXX line
as well as Trilogy and other blends, "I
think our flagship, going forward, is going to
be Tempus." That’s quite a prediction
in view of the success of the MAXX line. Its
bold taste has made it a popular choice, but
also created demand for a second line.
"It’s done very well for us," said
Rubin. "Many [retail] customers said they
lined the blend, but asked for more traditional
sizing." The MAXX line has seven sizes,
all with large ring gauges of 46 up to 62. The
new MAXX Traditional line has
four sizes, but with significant changes in the
blend. "We tweaked it," said Rubin. "We
concentrated the flavors ‘down’ to
the new sizes."
The tobaccos come from the same places – Nicaraguan
wrapper, Costa Rican binder and filler leaves
from Colombia, Honduras, Mexico and Nicaragua – but
the proportions have been changed for sizes that
range from 43 ring gauge up to just 52.
"The response has been phenomenal," noted
Rubin, who said he might not be done with this
line just yet. Now offered are a Churchill (7
inches by 48 ring, with a suggested retail price
of $5.60 each), Corona (5 1/2 x 43, $4.25), Toro
(6 x 50, $5.30) and Torpedo (6 1/8 x 52, $5.60),
all in boxes of 25.
>> The struggle over the U.S. rights to
the "Guantanamera" cigar
brand continues with the filing of an appeal
of a U.S. Patent & Trademark Office decision
handing such rights to Habanos, S.A. for
its Guantanamera brand.
The issue arose when the Florida-based Guantanamera
Cigar Co. sued Habanos, the Cuban
government’s marketing and distribution
firm over the American trademark rights to
the Guantanamera name. The Cubans introduced
a machine-made Guantanamera cigar brand in
2002 in four shapes; the brand’s artwork
has a guitar theme that apparently makes reference
to the popular "Guajira de Guantanamera" folk
song written by Cuban performer Jose
Fernandez Diaz in 1929 and made famous
in the U.S. by The Sandpipers in
1966. The complaint states that the Guantanamera
Cigar Co. has been selling its Guantanamera
brand since 1997 and filed for the trademark
in May 2001.
Habanos objected to the use of the name and
planned to obtain the trademark itself and the
issue has been in dispute since 2002. The brand
is a good seller, although at a very low price
point for Habanos; testimony in the case indicated
that 3.4 million Guantanameras were sold in 2002
and then sales increased to 11.6 million in 2003,
12.8 million in 2004 and 18.7 million in 2005!
The new filing, in the U.S. District Court in
Washington, D.C., argues that the Patent & Trademark
Office decision is wrong in its holding that
the Miami-based Guantanamera Cigar Co.’s
products are "geographically deceptive" in
that smokers would expect a cigar with this name
to come from Cuba, specifically the Guantanamo
area to which the song refers (a "guantanamera" is
a girl from Guantanamo). The Miami cigar maker
contends that the brand name refers to the song
and that American consumers are unaware of the
geographical reference to the now-famous Guantanamo
region in southeastern Cuba.
>> Short fillers: Although his planned
98-foot-long cigar would have been far short
of the Guinness-listed world record for the longest
cigar ever, Cuban master roller Jose
Castelar Cairo didn’t panic. He
ordered more tobacco. Already a three-time world-record
setter, he completed his latest attempt during
the International Tourism Fair in Havana and
ended with a surprising new record cigar of 148
feet, nine inches (45.38 m). "The best in
the world, no?" said Cairo – known
as "Cueto" – after he finished
the cigar, with the help of six assistants, over
a six-day period. "It’s an honor for
Cuba and I feel satisfied to do it for Cuba," he
told the Reuters news agency during a party following
the completion of his record effort. The new
record cigar is about two inches (128 ring gauge)
thick . . . find our latest tasting review, of
the three blends in General Cigar’s
Sancho Panza lines, in our News & Views
archives for May 16.
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Heard in the Humidor is a
publication of Perelman, Pioneer & Company of
Los Angeles, California, USA. Copyright 2007;
All rights reserved.
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