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Photo Gallery: Els for Autism Charity Golf Tournament, 2010 - More from Miscellaneous
Part Two: Las Vegas Big Smoke Saturday Seminars
Wrapper Leaf
Gregory Mottola
Posted: November 14, 2007
It is often said that the wrapper leaf is the most important part of the cigar-smoking experience. The Saturday morning panel of expert tobacco growers presided over the issue of the wrapper's importance and the difficulty of growing the leaf. On stage was a quartet of accomplished wrapper growers: John Oliva Jr., Nestor Plasencia Jr., Josh Meerapfel and Carlos Fuente Jr., who addressed a crowd of knowledge-hungry cigar smokers. Between the four of them, these growers provide wrapper leaf for an enormous part of the premium cigar industry. James Suckling, European editor of Cigar Aficionado magazine, mediated the panel with senior editor David Savona.
David Savona
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Carlos Fuente Jr.
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Josh Meerapfel, the premier grower of Cameroon wrapper, stressed the wrapper's delicacy and how cigarmakers should blend tobacco around the wrapper in order for the leaf's inherent flavors to best be expressed.
The cigar panel addressed many of the travails that come with growing wrapper, from adverse climate and inhospitable landscapes to tribal tensions. Meerapfel mentioned how there are 250 tribes in Cameroon who don't want to work together, so everything is grown in small plots of about one and a half acres. The plots are changed every year, keeping the ground fertile, but it is difficult to farm because the region's poverty does not allow for any irrigation system.
John Oliva Jr. (left), Nestor Plasencia Jr. (center) and Josh Meerapfel discuss the challenges of growing tobacco.
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Suckling added: "What's cool is you see Bono and all these guys going to Africa, but these guys through buying tobacco and growing tobacco are feeding 100,000 people, so remember that when you're smoking Cameroon."
Growing cigar tobacco in Honduras and Nicaragua, however, is a very different operation. Nestor Plasencia plants around 4,000 acres a year, 1,500 dedicated to wrapper leaf. He is constantly assessing soil composition, harvesting time and the curing process.
"You can have the best crop in the world, but you can spoil it in one single day if you don't make the right decision," said Plasencia.
John Oliva Jr., who grows much tobacco in Ecuador, cited cloud cover and proximity to the equator as influencing the wrapper leaf that he cultivates.
The stories the tobacco men told led to a greater appreciation for the product.
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This claim is supported by the fact that Oliva dedicates one part of his farm for growing wrapper exclusively for Fuente's darker cigars, and at the same time grows wrapper on another part of the farm for La Gloria Cubana, which typically has a lighter wrapper.
Fuente told the story of how difficult it was to grow Cuban-seed wrapper leaf in the Dominican Republic. Prior to Fuente, no one had successfully grown such wrapper there, and he was told that it could not be done, but he strived to re-create the flavor of Cuban-seed wrapper grown by the Olivas that he had tasted when living in Nicaragua. In the early 1990s, Fuente harvested his first wrapper crop for the Fuente Fuente OpusX cigar.
Oliva got a good laugh out of the crowd when he relayed words of wisdom that his father, John Sr., had imparted to him: "My dad says that if a country is fun to go to, the climate is great and the people are nice, the tobacco ain't worth a shit there."
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SCOTCH AND CIGAR PAIRING
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TOP LEGAL CIGARS
WRAPPER LEAF
CUBAN CIGARS
THE BLIND TASTING
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David Savona
Carlos Fuente Jr.
John Oliva Jr. (left), Nestor Plasencia Jr. (center) and Josh Meerapfel discuss the challenges of growing tobacco.
The stories the tobacco men told led to a greater appreciation for the product.

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