UK Cigar Scene Magazine February Issue 2 | Page 6

The Impending Death of Thin Ring Gauge Cigars Size matters. Especially when it comes to a cigar. The feel of it in your hand and in your mouth. The amount of smoke it produces. The complexity of flavours in that smoke. All of these are affected by size. At one end of the spectrum are large ring gauge cigars like double robustos - powerful, full of smoke, intense. At the other end are thin cigars like lanceros - subtle, elegant, complex. But your freedom to explore those differences in Cuban cigars is disappearing because the thin ring gauge cigar is on the verge of extinction. Some numbers. In the last 60 years, Cuba has created 200 regular production cigars under 40 ring gauge. 170 of those have been discontinued. One third of those discontinuations have occurred since the year 2000. Right now, of the 177 cigars in current production, only 17% are thin. Meanwhile, about 25% of current production cigars are over 50 ring gauge. Two thirds of those have been created in the last decade alone.* There are a couple of reasons why we are moving from thin to thick. The first is economics. The profits are much smaller the thinner the ring gauge. They require more skill to make, thus more waste. But thin cigars also have a lower price tag because less tobacco is used. The obvious choice, then, are larger, easier to make cigars for which you can charge more money. The second reason is social. Many new cigar smokers want a bang for their buck - a bigger cigar delivers mor