Tobacco and Cold/Hot Temps

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Hobbs

Lurker
Jan 12, 2022
43
136
Central New York State
I’ve only been smoking pipes for about 2 years so still learning. I live in upstate NY where (obviously) we get freezing temps in the Winter. In the last few Winters when temps were mid 20’s-30’s, I would brave the cold and smoke on my deck as long as there wasn't too much wind. But below these temps and I’m out of luck.
But was thinking about turning my mud room into a smokers room since the only items in there are coats. It doesn’t get any heat or air from the house but I could easily use a space heater and there is a window to open also.
My question is that would storing tobacco out there be a problem? Not only the freezing temps but the hot summer. Could this degrade the tobacco even if I had them stored in mason jars and in a cabinet?
 
Oct 3, 2021
1,116
5,182
Southeastern PA
Much like cigars, you want to keep your tobacco at a fairly consistent temperature, usually between 60-70 degrees. Any colder than 60, (and you might get different opinions on this) and you might affect the flavor and aging (if cellaring) and any hotter, you run the risk for tobacco beetles. If your mud room gets up into the 90s, then you might produce some humid conditions inside the mason jars too which ups your chances for beetles - warmth and humidity. Now, I'm not sure how prevalent they are in pipe tobacco, but I think the same rules might apply.

Smoking out in the mud room wouldn't be an issue, but I can't see anything but potential issues with the temp swings if you store your tobacco out there.
 

kcghost

Lifer
May 6, 2011
13,713
22,449
77
Olathe, Kansas
You have look out for temperature changes in the room. Too hot or too cold is bad. The preferred range is a very narrow 60-70 degrees. And the humidity should be kept between 55-70 per cent. The humidity is as important as the temperature.
Realize that pipe smoking generates a decent amount of smoke so your coats will need protection from that.
 

Tate

Lifer
Sep 27, 2023
1,259
17,457
30
Northern Illinois
I've left some tobacco the cold garage and didn't notice an issue in mechanics or flavor. Don't know the long term effects though! Definitely watching for more experienced answers.
 

Hobbs

Lurker
Jan 12, 2022
43
136
Central New York State
You have look out for temperature changes in the room. Too hot or too cold is bad. The preferred range is a very narrow 60-70 degrees. And the humidity should be kept between 55-70 per cent. The humidity is as important as the temperature.
Realize that pipe smoking generates a decent amount of smoke so your coats will need protection from that.
As far as the coats, I assumed they might absorb the smoke but am curious as to how bad.
Muttinchop video stated that since pipe tobacco doesn’t have chemicals like cigarettes, a “room” will not smell like smoke.
Of course Aeros do have some chemicals but am going to experiment by taking MY coats out but leaving my Mother-In-Laws in there…🥴. Will start with a strong Lat Bomb while sitting next to her coat.
 
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HawkeyeLinus

Lifer
Oct 16, 2020
5,612
41,206
Iowa
As far as the coats, I assumed they might absorb the smoke but am curious as to how bad.
Muttinchop video stated that since pipe tobacco doesn’t have chemicals like cigarettes, a “room” will not smell like smoke.
Of course Aeros do have some chemicals but am going to experiment by taking MY coats out but leaving my Mother-In-Laws in there…🥴. Will start with a strong Lat Bomb while sitting next to her coat.
The room will smell like a pipe has been enjoyed, how much depends on how often. Absent something trying to prevent it, pretty much everything will absorb whatever there is from the smoke - and I wouldn’t count on any “counter measures” preventing that if you smoke there often (leaving out the labyrinth of air filtration and ventilating systems).
 
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warren

Lifer
Sep 13, 2013
11,788
16,524
Foothills of the Chugach Range, AK
Smoke adheres to surfaces. tenuously. This includes hair, skin, carpets, paint, glass, clothes and so forth. The reek, mostly unnoticed by the smoker is insidious. Just embrace it as an unavoidable result of smoking. Do as many of us, embrace it, ignore it and simply enjoy your wee vice. "Give it no thought", is my advice.

Up here, in the frozen North, I simply dress for the weather, do my chores, exercise the dog and such all while smoking my pipe. It's currently -2, surrounded by tall snow banks, the dawg and I will be out playing fetch and enjoying the "winter wonderland." It's a cold, sunny, grand day!
 
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Chasing Embers

Captain of the Black Frigate
Nov 12, 2014
43,598
110,239
Muttinchop video stated that since pipe tobacco doesn’t have chemicals like cigarettes, a “room” will not smell like smoke.
Muttnchop is wrong on a great many things. Smoke is smoke and tobacco smoke of any kind will saturate everything in a room unless you're using an air purifier. Unless you grow it yourself, most pipe tobacco has added chemicals, both natural and unnatural added to it.
 

Lees65GTO

Starting to Get Obsessed
Nov 29, 2022
261
332
79
Texas
Everything will get coated with a thin layer of yellow/brown yuck from the smoke. As for the beetles, unless they were in the tobacco when you bought it, or in another tobacco and you put them together or near each other uncovered, you should not have a problem. I had to throw out over five pounds of Canadian Virginia leaf because some Brightleaf Virginia I bought had beetles and they spread to the Canadian. These were whole leaf tobaccos not a blended tobacco. On a good note freezing them for about eight hours will kill them.
 
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makhorkasmoker

Part of the Furniture Now
Aug 17, 2021
586
1,413
Central Florida
I keep my tobacco and pipes in a garage. Temps range from freezing to 100 degrees f. Humidity can be high here in Florida. I’ve never had a problem, but I don’t really cellar the tobacco. I buy a pound of burley, smoke it, and replace it with another when needed—usually 2 or 3 months later. If I were cellaring nice Virginias, or anything else for much longer, I’d keep it in a temperature controlled room
 
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badbriar

Part of the Furniture Now
Oct 17, 2012
714
1,294
Suncoast Florida by the Beach
Not sure abut pipe tobacco, but storing cigars in cold temps (mid 50's & below) sure is detrimental to the quality and tastes of the cigars. This is from experience when my wineador reset during a power outage to the lowest temperature setting of 54 deg. Discovered that after about a week.
 
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Reactions: Scottmi
Apr 26, 2012
3,397
5,785
Washington State
As for the smoke in the room, yes the coats will reek of smoke. Whether it's pipes, cigars, and/or cigarettes, your clothing will smell. I have a couple sweatshirts I keep in my shop as well as some jersey's hanging up, and they smell of smoke. If I wash them, they're fine, but in between washings, they smell.

As for the temps, I store all my pipe tobacco in my shop in my pipe cabinet. I have tins and bulk in mason jars. In the winter, if I don't have my heaters on, the temps can get down to 50 and in the summer, they can reach the low 80's as I don't have an air conditioner for the shop. I've been doing this since I started smoking pipes back in 2011. I've never noticed a problem with my tobaccos.
 

proteus

Lifer
May 20, 2023
1,240
2,103
53
Connecticut (shade leaf tobacco country)
Depends on the tobacco for sure. I smoke some blends that are the same to acco as cigars and cigs. Straight Virginias. Burleys like OJK. Virginia blends with DAC. The GH Irish X series too. They all leave a fingerprint of cigs. I have to be careful sneaking a bowl of these inside. Especially perique blends. Aromatics dissipate and some other blends leave no lingering long term note. Have to read the reviews and experiment to know which. Some reviews include a lingering room note observation.