Tag: humidors

  • 12 Amazing Uses for Pepper You Didn’t Know About

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    Various forms of pepper have long been used to satisfy our culinary experience but as it turns out, there is a lot more to pepper than meets the eye.

    Let’s have a look at some of the things pepper can be used for other than to spice foods:

    1. If your old clunker is starting to get a slow leak in the radiator, pour some black pepper into it plug up small holes. This will buy you time to get it fixed properly.

    2. Are you having trouble with biting ants in your yard? You don’t need to use harsh chemicals for this. All you need is about a half cup of black or cayenne pepper poured down the hole and voila, no more ant problem.

    3. This also holds true for hungry ants looking for something sweet in your kitchen. You can put white pepper in their path and they will disappear thinking there are no meals here.

    4. No sooner have you planted your vegetable garden than those pesky hungry bugs arrive ready to undermine all your hard work. Here is a recipe that not only keeps insects away but also animals.

    – 2 tbsp cayenne pepper

    – 2 large cloves of garlic

    – 4 medium sized onions

    – 4 cups water

    – In a blender or food processor, blend until completely smooth. Then add about a gallon of water and you are ready to spray your plants.

    5. Want to keep your colors bright when you do laundry? A tsp of pepper in your wash will keep your colors bright a lot longer. It can also keep your colors from bleeding. There are not many products that can do that.

    6. Do you have problems with your sinuses? Do you have a cold? Cayenne pepper in your favorite food can unclog you and get you cleared up in no time. Or, mix liquid pepper with eucalyptus and put it in your steamer to sooth and unclog your sinuses . (Your health food store should carry these drops. If they don’t, ask them to.)

    7. Help your liver detoxify with this early morning drink;

    – 1 lemon squeezed,

    – ¼ tsp cayenne pepper,

    – 1 cup filtered water,

    – 1 tsp maple syrup

    When you drink this every morning you begin to look forward to it.

    8. For arthritis pain you can make your own homemade warming massage to sooth where it hurts.

    Recipe: Mix together

    1 dropper of almond oil (Always use a carrier oil such as almond, jojoba or olive oil)

    2 drops of pepper

    1 drop ginger

    2 drops lavender

    Massage on the affected area and feel the warmth working.

    9. If you feel the beginning of a migraine headache coming on then immediately put about 4 to 5 droppers full of pepper in water and drink. If you don’t have the pepper tincture then you can use about a ¼ to ½ teaspoon of cayenne pepper in a half glass of water. Repeat after a half hour if you have any remaining pain.

    10. According to Dr. Richard Schulze, M.H., N.D., if someone is having a heart attack, you can revive them by putting 4 to 5 droppers full of cayenne pepper tincture directly to the mouth. If you don’t have the tincture, use a tsp. of cayenne pepper and some water and continue to give it every five minutes until the person has recovered. They may sputter and choke a bit but according to Dr. Schulze, he has seen many miracles of people recovering completely.

    11. Do you have a problem with squirrels eating the feed in your bird feeder? Cayenne pepper yet saves the day again. Sprinkling it in the feed does not affect the birds. They apparently have a high tolerance for the pepper and the vitamin A in it improves their plumage.

    12. If you have problems with rodent chewing on cables then you can rub pepper tincture on them and they won’t go anywhere near it.

    So there you have it. I’m sure we will discover more wonderful uses for this versatile spice.

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    Source by Willie Jones

  • Peru’s Shade Grown Organic Coffee From Villa Rica

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    Coffee has become one of Peru’s main exports. Coffee from the Central Region in Peru includes two of the best known coffee growing areas, Villa Rica and La Merced. La Merced and Villa Rica coffee has a thick, creamy body typical of this region, also referred to as the Chanchamoyo area. The typical coffee acidity has a salmonberry tone but it is not as overpowering as that of the high grown Puno and Cuzco coffees.

    In the 1930’s German immigrants laid the foundation for the coffee industry in Villa Rica. This is a unique ethnic and multi cultural area. The original settlers eventually adapted to the jungle environment. Today’s farmers are descendants of these immigrants. These descendants celebrate their heritage through festivities such as Settler’s Day (June 26) which feature Tirolese dances and music. The European influence is noticeable in the coffee, cigars, cheese, cold meats and other dishes served in their area. Almost all descendants have kept their ancestors’ farms in their families passing them and their traditions from generation to generation.

    Villa Rica is a prosperous and busy town located on the eastern foothills of the Andes. The combination of shade coffee plantations found in this area and the remaining forest areas make Villa Rica an excellent bird sanctuary. Villa Rica has a list of more than 400 different bird species documented to date.

    As a country, Peru has the second highest number of bird species in the world. Peru also has the world’s largest flying bird, the Andean Condor and the next-to-smallest bee hummingbird, the Little Woodstar. Bird watching in Villa Rica is fun, interesting and plentiful: the shade growing plantations are a preferred bird and butterfly habitat.

    Villa Rica established the tradition of “technified shade coffee growing,”

    • What this means is the use of Inga, a tree in the bean family, planted to provide the shade that coffee needs. Inga trees are called locally “Pacay.” They produce flowers and fruit that attract hummingbirds, parrots, warblers and tanagers.
    • The coffee farms are organized in cooperatives to market their coffees collectively and take advantage of their buying power.
    • The farms in Villa Rica vary in size; they are larger than the average Peruvian coffee farm.
    • Each farmer, as is common in Peru, has his own wet mill and partially dries his or her crop before taking them to a central collection point.
    • There, the dry milling is completed and the coffee is processed for the export market.
    • The cooperatives achieve significant savings through their own dry mill because they can ship product directly for export and avoid outsourcing the coffee milling and packing coffee in Lima.
    • The coffee cooperatives are linked with the international Fair Trade and similar organic networks. This stimulates the coop growth and adherence to organic cultivation practices.
    • It is remarkable to notice that, after working as partners with Equal Exchange, Peruvian small coops such as in Villa Rica, became the second largest suppliers of Fair Trade certified coffee after Mexico and one of the world’s top organic coffee producers.
    • Equal Exchange is a for-profit Fairtrade worker-owned, cooperative dedicated to small-scale coffee farmers in the developing world.
    • Each farm also maintains a nursery where young coffee plants are grown and planted to replace mature coffee trees.
    • The farmers use natural fertilization including the use of compost removed from the coffee cherry skins and pulp during the wet milling. Literally, “coffee grows coffee.” Nothing is wasted in the process, a very efficient and smart use of natural resources.

    Ready for a cup of delicious Peruvian Shade Grown Organic coffee?

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    Source by Timothy S. Collins

  • Salem Witch Trials of 1692

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    There are very few people who have not heard of Salem and the infamous witch trials that were held there in 1692. These trials cost twenty people their lives, they were executed, while another two hundred were imprisoned, and five of those people died as well. What started it all anyway, was it just the Puritans dealing with a witch kick hysteria? Did they use less desirable, or perhaps too desirable of people as scapegoats for their own failings? To be fair and not be guilty of the same crimes as the Puritans were in 1692, we will look at their beliefs in an effort to understand.

    Salem Village was torn by disputes between neighbors over whether or not Samuel Parris should be the first ordained minister. At the same time, at the east end of Maine, there was a terrible massacre by the Abenaki Indians. They killed many of the citizens of York and who they didn’t kill they took captive.

    Neighbors also feuded over land because families were growing and their economy was based on farming. Bad weather could come and wipe out an entire year’s crop. It became harder and harder to support a family, which forced farmers to push their lands into the wilderness where they would come across the people that lived there. With the Puritans dedication to spreading their religious beliefs, this added even more tension to an already boiling environment.

    The losses seemed to overwhelm them, crops, livestock and children combined with earthquakes and bad weather that were all attributed to being the wrath of their God. It is a Puritan belief that one’s soul is predestined at birth as to whether it will go to heaven or hell. They were in constant search of signs to let them know where they were going to end up. The world of God and Angels and the Devil was as real to them as the woods that surrounded their farms. Combined with the belief that women were to be subservient to men and that women were more likely to work for the Devil than a man would, women were seen naturally as lustful beings. Restrictions heaped upon the females, the adventures of the males and the inability for secrecy in such a small town was a feeding ground.

    But it was two little girls that would bring to life the witch trials. Betty Paris who was nine, and Abigail Williams who was eleven were victim to fits that were beyond natural disease. It is reported that these girls screamed and threw things, made strange sounds, crawled under furniture and put themselves in odd positions. During sermons, the girls would cover their ears in fear. Dr. William Griggs, who did their examination, could find no signs of ailment. Then others in the village began to exhibit the same symptoms.

    They believed that this hysteria was caused by a slave called Tituba who entertained the little girls. It was Tituba, Sarah Osborne and Sarah Good that were the first three to be brought to trial. All of whom were undesirable people, one because of ethnicity and the other two because they were old and unpleasant. Once accused, the possessions of that person were taken. It is enough to make one wonder if the Salem Witch Trials were because the people were unhappy, and unwilling to except fate, they needed someone to blame and pay for what they felt they were owed.

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    Source by Frank Dix

  • Women With Smoking Fetish – Browse a List of Them in Your Neighborhood!

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    Let me assume that you are a guy who is looking for women with smoking fetish. You want a list of ladies in your neighborhood who have a fetish for cigarettes, cigars, or pipes (or maybe all three). This information is not easily found. I can tell you a way to find out this information for free in a matter of minutes. If you look around Google, you will find lots of smoking fetish dating sites. All of these dating services come at a cost – usually a big one! The information is valuable so they bump up their prices accordingly. The truth is, there is only one good place to look: the free community side of major dating sites, those ones you see on TV with millions of members.

    To browse a list of women with smoking fetish in your neighborhood, just get yourself a free membership to any large dating site. Once you’ve confirmed your membership and logged in, head over to the search page. Big dating sites have the most amazing search engines and you can use them for free. What you must now do is enter your criteria. You could, for example, enter in that you would like a list of women who have a fetish for smoking and live within 5 miles of your front door. You will be given a list of these women and at the head of the list will be all those ladies who are currently online. This is the free and easy way to contact women who share your fetish.

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    Source by Angelina Andrews

  • Bars & Restaurants: How to Invest to Make Free Media Pay Off

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    In under five years, the owners of Northside Social (Nicole Harlan-Oprisu, Tim Oprisu, Bill and Nancy Ficca, and Jamie Browning) have expanded their family of restaurants and bars to include four additional establishments: Northside Kitchenette, Village Cigar, Delicia, and La Mulita. Together they employ over a hundred people. So what has helped them flourish? A whole recipe that excludes paid advertising.

    This group of restaurateurs has worked at crafting each establishment to fill a different niche, making each appeal to different customer types or moods: casual but refined brunch/lunch, upscale evening dining, impromptu drinks with or without a bite to eat, Latin American dining, or relaxing with fine liquor and a selection of quality cigars. They didn’t try to wrap everything under one roof, because each needs it’s own distinctive atmosphere to be most effective.

    As an example of the added benefit to filling a niche, because Delicia and La Mulita are in the smaller category of Latin American, they can automatically rise to the top of some searches by those looking for local options.

    A few positive reviews on Yelp led to many more. Early on, Yelp reached out to these businesses for a photo shoot which was mutually beneficial: improved content on Yelp draws more website visitors, which in turn encourages more people to visit and review the restaurant or bar. Stephen Greiner, part-time manager of Delicia who previously managed Northside Social, said that they receive far more reviews on Yelp than other review sites like Urban Spoon, though they’ve never paid for ads on Yelp. Greiner says Yelp is just more popular with the dining public.

    Building on success, Yelp volunteered to invite eighty frequent Yelpers (people who post reviews on Yelp) to a “release party” when La Mulita was first opening. Frequent Yelpers would have enough experience to judge the new bar’s quality, and be inclined to post about it online-again, bringing value to both Yelp and La Mulita.

    Building something quality, unique, or with style, attracts the attention of media who need interesting things to fill their pages. Indianapolis Monthly magazine (print and web) has mentioned and featured these five establishments multiple times over the last five years-sometimes of their own initiative, sometimes at the prompting of these establishments’ management.

    Northside Social does pay for Open Table, a reservation management website, and they’ve seen reservations increase. This is an example of paying for a service that facilitates serving your customer.

    Greiner also said that they’ve had a paid social media manager for the past two years, who posts their daily specials on Facebook and Twitter. Social Media may be free, but it takes time to create the daily posts necessary to capture an audience; even more time to watch for customer comments and questions on the sites, and to keep your profile up to date. The owners and managers of these five establishments understand the power of reaching your public on a daily basis, and the value of paying someone to manage that power.

    Beyond making free media pay off, their ingredients in their recipe for success include in-house comment cards that help them increase their mailing list, sharing their database among all their locations, and using Constant Contact to send periodic emails to patrons.

    These restaurateurs have also continued to refine their customers’ experiences along the way, from physical tweaks such as changing the seating arrangements of their first restaurant numerous months after it opened, to digital changes like recently revamping their websites to link all five locations.

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    Source by Caitie Parten

  • Interesting Facts About Cuba

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    The Republic of Cuba is considered as one of the most populated insular nation in the Caribbean. Its main island, Cuba or Isla De la Juventud which spreads 766 miles in circumference is the 17th largest island in the world. It is located south of United States and the Bahamas, west of Mexico and south of Jamaica. One thing that comes into mind when you mention “Cuba” is probably their finest cigars. But that’s only half of what’s interesting in this country. In case visiting this country is part of your agenda soon, here are a few facts that you might want to know that you may find interesting.

    *Cuban food is a mix up of Spanish, African and Caribbean cuisine. Their most popular dish is Ropa Vieja which is shredded flank steak in a tomato sauce base topped with black beans, yellow rice and fried yuca.

    *Officially, Cuba is an atheist state. However, most are Roman Catholics, Protestants, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Jewish and Santeria-which is of West African and Caribbean origin

    *Internet usage in Cuba is closely monitored for those who connect to the Internet without permission. This means that very few people in Cuba are granted permission due to security reasons. And those who access internet without permission may serve jail time up to 5 years!

    *Cuba is famous throughout the world for its fine cigars. Three of the most popular brands are Monte Cristo, Romeo y Julietta and Cohiba-which is derived from the Taino word for “tobacco”.

    *”Tocororo” or Cuban Trogn is the national bird of Cuba. It’s natural habitats are dry, moist forests which is suitable for Cuban tropical weather.

    *Christopher Columbus first sighted the island of Cuba in October 1492. However, Diego Velasquez colonized the island of Cuba for Spain.

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    Source by Pollux Parker

  • Weird Smoking Laws

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    As more and more states adopt laws that prohibit smoking in public, crushing the hopes of cigar smokers with the ease of crushing a used cigarette, people everywhere are calling “foul,” restraining themselves from telling lawmakers to kiss their ash. The laws, to the avid cigar smoker, are avidly ridiculous.

    But, ridiculous laws are a part of worldly culture. From a law in Denver that forbids people from loaning vacuum cleaners to other residences, to a law in Wyoming that prohibits people from taking photographs of rabbits during the month of June, many rules and regulations simply make no sense. There is even a law in Champaign, Illinois that makes it illegal for someone to pee in the mouth of their next door neighbor, undoubtedly ruining the weekend plans of innumerable Midwest citizens.

    It was only a matter of time before this law lunacy filtered into the tobacco industry. Recently, they’ve become more obvious, branding our world with a “No Smoking” sign. Not limited to any one state, or any one country, strange smoking laws can be found almost anywhere.

    Australia: Australia has a law that bans children from purchasing cigars or cigarettes. This isn’t particularly strange as many countries have similar regulations. However, Australia stands out because children, though they can’t purchase tobacco, are legally allowed to consume it. As long as they get an adult to buy it for them, Australian children are freely allowed to smoke a cigar in front of a policeman, a parent, a teacher, or even a kangaroo.

    New Orleans, Louisiana: In a city known for guilty pleasures – home to everything from Mardi Gras to extravagant casinos – cigar and cigarette smoking are a bit tamed. New Orleans possesses a law that prohibits anyone participating in a carnival or parade to use tobacco products while doing so. In addition to this, a “No Smoking” sign must be visibly attached to all parade floats, not that any onlookers, with troves of nearby women attempting to get beads, are really paying attention.

    Zion, Illinois: Just when you think you’ve heard it all in regards to rules, there is a law in Zion that prohibits owners from giving a lit cigar to any of their domesticated animals. While the law specifically names dogs and cats, it surely applies to any kind of pet: hamster, gerbil, and goldfish. None of these pets are allowed to smoke cigars, no matter how much they beg and plead.

    France: Colonel Mustard, in the Boiler Room, with an ashtray. That’s right, an ashtray. In France, ashtrays are considered deadly weapons. Perhaps this is because people can use ashtrays to hit others, or perhaps it’s because ashtrays are known to prey on unsuspecting victims, jumping them in alleys and blinding them with a cloud of dust. But the most likely reason is simply because it’s France. A nation reputed for passivity, some people may think the citizens of France are homicidally threatened by the cast from The Brady Bunch. We do hear that Marcia’s packing.

    New Jersey: While a sign reading “Do Not Feed the Animals” is common in many zoos, New Jersey takes this notion one step further. Passing a law that prohibits people from giving local zoo animals cigars or whiskey, the creatures in this captivity obviously have no fun. But, being that whiskey is the only liquor specifically named, it leads one to wonder if providing the animals with a cold beer would be equally frowned upon. If not, perhaps the animals would be able to smoke a cigar on occasion. Ya know, socially.

    South Bend, Indiana: Keeping with the animal kingdom theme, in South Bend it is illegal to make a monkey smoke a cigarette. This law goes back to 1924 when a monkey was found guilty of the crime of smoking a cigarette and forced to pay a fine of 25 dollars, as well as trial costs. We’re not sure what happened when the monkey, recently out of work, wasn’t able to come up with the money. Perhaps, he was prohibited from partaking in any form of Evolution.

    Newport, Rhode Island: Resting on the East Coast, Newport has a law that prohibits people from smoking a pipe after sunset. Any other time is fine, but once the sun sets, this is one law the avid tobacco lover can not put in his pipe and smoke.

    Marceline, Missouri: In this Missouri town, minors are allowed to purchase rolling papers and tobacco, but they aren’t allowed to purchase lighters. If only, if only, there was a way to get matches easily, perhaps from a local restaurant or café. Maybe in a perfect world, the ability to find matches would appear.

    Obviously, this world contains a great number of laws that are founded with about as much reason as turning down a million dollars or volunteering to stay on the Titanic. But, the cigar smoker can rest assured that it’s not just their luxury that falls victim to this madness. These kinds of laws are everywhere, from prohibiting humming to saying its illegal to drive in a housecoat, these kind of rules put the word “awful” in the word “lawful.” And, they make one wonder if more laws can be passed, perhaps a rule that replaces every cigarette with its superior: a cigar.

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    Source by Jennifer Jordan

  • Are You Allergic to Cigarette Smoke?

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    Is just one breath of smoke enough to ruin your day? As soon as the person next to you lights up, the first thing to cross your mind is the unpleasant memory of your last clash with secondhand smoke and the runny nose, sneezing, and congestion that followed. For some, the reaction to cigarette smoke closely resembles an allergic reaction, which leads them to believe that they have “smoke allergies”.

    There are a lot of “smoke allergy” myths that actually make it harder to properly treat your condition. This article will help you tell if determine whether you are affected by “smoke allergies” and what you can do to better protect yourself from the illnesses associated with smoke exposure.

    #1 Myth: “Allergic to Smoke”

    No one is really allergic to smoke. A large number of people insist that they are allergic to smoke created by cigarettes or cigars, but the truth is that they have having an allergy-like reaction due to other health conditions. Understanding exactly why you feel like you are having allergy attack when around a smoker is the key to understanding how to prevent future symptoms.

    Why do I say that there is no such thing as a smoke allergy? Because technically smoke is not an allergen – but it is an irritant. This little difference explains why most people feel no relief when they take antihistamine allergy medicine after exposure to smoke. The key to avoiding the problems caused by cigarette smoke is determining what type of sensitivity you have and how best to treat it.

    Who is Prone to “Smoke Allergies”?

    • Children and Infants
    • Elderly Persons
    • People with allergy history (anyone with allergies, asthma, eczema, etc)
    • People exposed to heavy smoke for long periods of time

    Sometimes people who are sensitive to tobacco smoke will also experience allergy-like symptoms when they encounter strong odors, perfumes, weather changes or temperature changes.

    Symptoms of Cigarette Sensitivity

    For some people, exposure to tobacco smoke can cause a list of symptoms:

    • Sneezing
    • Coughing
    • Watery, burning eyes
    • Runny nose
    • Post nasal drip
    • Congestion
    • Shortness of breath
    • Headache

    These symptoms appear shortly after exposure to cigarette smoke and last for hours afterward. In addition to these symptoms, people who are in smoky environments on a daily basis are more likely to experience constant respiratory infections like sinusitis and bronchitis as well as the development of wheezing and asthma.

    Tobacco Smoke Exposure

    A lit cigarette is capable of releasing over 4,000 different chemicals into the air (80 of these are known or suspected carcinogens). Sometimes avoiding situations where people are smoking is almost impossible. Often a family member will smoke indoors, or a public place like a bar or restaurant will allow smoking. Depending on the severity of your reaction, just the smell of smoke on someone’s clothing or in a room where someone had smoked can cause irritation. So, even though avoidance of tobacco smoke is the best method to prevent “smoke allergies”, it may not be a practical solution.

    Two Main Types of Smoke Sensitivity

    The best way to treat your “allergy” to smoke is by first identifying what sort of sensitivity you are experiencing. There are two forms of smoke sensitivity:

    • Smoke Aggravating Underlying Allergies: your body is weakened by smoke and begins reacting to all the tiny bits of pollen, dust and dander that usually would not have been a problem.
    • Vasomotor Rhinitis: this is a condition that has the exact same symptoms as allergic rhinitis (or nasal allergies), but cannot be treated by antihistamine allergy medicine.

    Smoke-Aggravated Allergies:

    An allergen is a small particle that is made up of proteins that the body mistakes for a dangerous intruder like a virus or other germ. Smoke contains tiny tar ash particles (you can see these particles in the form of a white cloud created by burning tobacco). But tar ash particles are not the same as a true allergen because they are not protein based, but a form of carbon.

    Instead of being tagged as an allergen, smoke particles are classified as an irritant. Irritants can cause you quite a bit of discomfort, worsen illnesses like asthma and allergies, and cause other serious health problems. So, in medical terms, no one can really be allergic to smoke, but they can suffer complications to their existing allergies or other illness.

    If you have allergies or allergic asthma, smoke can trigger an allergic reaction because it is putting an extra strain on your body and immune system. The speck of cat dander drifting through the air that would not have normally set off a violent reaction; but with the addition of tobacco smoke, your body can no longer handle the allergens. Asthma becomes dangerous when mixed with exposure to tobacco smoke-even deadly for some.

    You are likely to experience complications to existing allergies if:

    1. You know that you are allergic to other things like pollen, pets, mold or dust mites.
    2. You have eczema or food allergies.

    Treatment

    • Avoid as many situations as you can where you are exposed to smoke.
    • See an allergist to optimize your existing allergy treatment, or see if you have developed new allergies.
    • Run an air purifier to reduce the number of allergens in the air. Even a smaller, portable air filter like a home smoke eater is effective at removing allergens in guest rooms of smoking family members.

    Vasomotor Rhinitis:

    Vasomotor Rhinitis is a form of inflammation and irritation of the nasal area as well as the throat and eyes. Seasonal or indoor allergies are called “allergic rhinitis”. This condition is different from the allergic type because it is not caused by allergens. For this reason, Vasomotor Rhinitis is sometimes called “non-allergic rhinitis”. It causes many of the same symptoms that an allergic reaction would, but is caused by highly sensitive or excessive amounts of blood vessels in the delicate tissue of the sinus area. The symptoms you experience are trigger by your nervous system rather than allergens.

    What this means is while another person may be able to tolerate cigarette smoke, a person with vasomotor rhinitis will experience a lot of discomfort with the same amount of smoke. So you are not overreacting when you complain about even small amounts of smoke – these small amounts REALLY ARE affecting you more severely than those around you.

    In addition to cigarette smoke, often strong odors or weather conditions will also cause symptoms, so you may find that many aspects of your environment cause allergy-like symptoms. Some people even have allergic rhinitis and vasomotor rhinitis simultaneously.

    You are likely to have vasomotor rhinitis if:

    1. You are highly sensitive to other elements like perfume, strong odors, changes in weather, changes in temperature, or even spicy foods.
    2. Walking into a slightly warmer (or cooler) room makes your nose runny or painfully stuffy.
    3. Antihistamine medications do not alleviate the symptoms.

    Treatment

    • Avoid as many situations as possible where your condition might be aggravated. This includes smoke, as well as some other vasomotor rhinitis triggers like wearing perfume, burning scented candles, etc.
    • Talk to your doctor about treatment options. Some over the counter medications like oral decongestants and saline nasal sprays may offer you some relief. Some prescription medications that have been proven effective are antihistamine nasal sprays (as opposed to oral antihistamines which typically have no effect on vasomotor rhinitis), anti-drip anticholinergic nasal sprays and corticosteroid nasal sprays.
    • Limit your exposure to smoke and smoke odor as this is often the cause of many vasomotor rhinitis cases. Use an air purifier like a home smoke eater to minimize airborne pollutants.

    A Note to Those with Existing Allergies:

    Inhaling even small amounts of smoke over a long period of time can actually cause you to develop new allergies or even asthma. In young children, second hand tobacco smoke inhalation greatly increases the likeliness of developing allergies when they get older. If you live with a smoker, you are likely to have more cases of bronchitis, pneumonia, ear infections, sinus infections, and other respiratory illnesses.

    The best thing you can do for yourself make your living space a zero-tolerance smoke area. If this is not an option, you might want to consider an air purifier as an investment in your health.

    Some of the symptoms of sinusitis (sinus infection) can closely resemble the vasomotor rhinitis and allergic rhinitis described in this article. Be sure to see your doctor to help you diagnose your condition if tobacco smoke has you feeling under the weather.

    Remember: always be sure to talk to your doctor or allergist about your symptoms and treatment.

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    Source by Dan Buglio

  • Cigar 101: Basic Tips for the Cigar Novice

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    Many of you, for different reasons, are having a love affair with cigars, rendezvousing in sidewalk cafes, coffee shops, and restaurants for a few joyful moments. Perhaps you like the flavor, perhaps you like the aroma, or perhaps you just like to tell people who smoke skinny cigarettes, “My cigar can beat up your Marlboro.” For whatever reason, the cigar is a luxury many of you choose to use.

    However, for some of you, the above statement might not be true. You may, never having gone beyond the pink or blue bubblegum cigars handed out in hospitals after the birth of a child, be a little leery of cigars. They might seem scary, or intimidating, and you might find yourself with a variety of questions: How should I hold a cigar? How should I cut a cigar? How do I know which cigar to choose? Do I need to take some sort of Lamaze class to learn how to puff?

    What’s What

    Some say, “Potato,” some say “Po-taught-o,” some say, “Filler,” some say, “Huh?” If you’re not used to having a cigar in your mouth, some of the jargon – the Filler, the Binder, the Wrapper – may have you scratching your head in confusion.

    In sum, the Filler is the cigar’s soul, stuffed in the middle; it is essentially what the cigar is filled with. The Binder is made up of thick tobacco leaves and used to bind the Filler together. The Wrapper is the outside leaf of the cigar. Basically the cigar’s wardrobe, the Wrapper is an extremely important outfit for two reasons: it holds everything together and it provides a lot of the cigar’s flavor.

    Stogie Selection

    Buying a cigar from a reputable dealer, such as What’s Knot to Love, will guarantee your purchase is premium. Once you’ve chosen a dealer, the art of cigar buying becomes a bit free form: there are very few set rules. It is, however, good to keep in mind that the darker the tobacco, the stronger the flavor.

    Make the Cut

    There are a million different ways to cut a cigar – use a knife, use cigar scissors, use a V-cutter, or, if your cigar has been found guilty of crime during the French Revolution, use a guillotine cut. It’s your cigar, so cut it anyway you want – even use a circular saw or your teeth, just make sure no one is watching.

    After deciding how you’re going to cut your cigar, you need to know where to cut it. Cutting off the cigar’s head, the general rule is to slice the cigar just past the shoulder (where it stops being round).

    Puff, the Magic Dragging

    To light a cigar, simply hold it out and allow the flame of the match or the odorless lighter to meet its end. Turn the cigar, rotating it so that the end becomes evenly charred.

    Once the cigar is lit, and take off has commenced, let the smoke wallow near your mouth, drinking in the aroma and the flavor. Gently puff on the cigar, instead of inhaling like a cigarette.

    Holding Time

    Most people recommend that you don’t hold your cigar like a cigarette, unless you are European (I know, it doesn’t seem fair that the Europeans got sexy accents, the Spice Girls AND cigar holding). For the rest of you, a cigar should be held between your index finger and thumb.

    Size Matters

    When it comes to cigars, the length of the ash is important. You should allow your ash to grow to around three quarters of an inch long, which will inevitably turn into two feet during locker room talk. A lengthy ash is vital to a good smoking experience. The ash creates an air block, which helps decrease the temperature of the smoke and results in a slower burning cigar. These factors intensify the taste and make the experience more enjoyable.

    Once a cigar is smoked halfway, let it die: it’s served its purpose so bid it a fond farewell with a tip of your hat and a “It’s been nice smoking you.” Then, go on your way.

    Now rest, and smoke, assured, just knowing these few tips will have you looking like Groucho Marx in no time, except with better trimmed eyebrows.

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    Source by Jennifer Jordan