The current trend may be new, but the story of Cuba's world famous cigars is an old one, stretching back to the conquest of the New World, when Christopher Columbus arrived on the island to find the native shaman smoking strange brown leaves out of a wood pipe.
Later, the Spaniards picked up the habit. Then they began rolling the leaves into long sticks that could be smoked without a pipe, and the cigar was born. By the late 1500s, tobacco was grown commercially in Cuba for export to the Old World.
The process for making Cuban cigars today remains much the same as it was more than four centuries ago. Now, as then, the best tobacco is grown in broad fields in the island's west, where farmers lovingly tend the tobacco plants' thick green leaves.
Rather than use damaging pesticides, nets are sometimes placed over the plants to keep out insects. In some cases, cheesecloth is draped over the leaves to keep out the burning rays of the sun.
Once the plants reach maturity, a process that takes two to four months, leaves of up to a foot long and almost as wide are picked by hand in the primary growing region of western Pinar del Rio province.
Workers sort through the leaves, selecting the best ones. They will later be used to make the Cohibas, the Partagas, and the Romeo y Julieta cigars favored by tobacco connoisseurs the world over.
Finally, the leaves are hung to dry in special curing warehouses.
Once dried to a brown, crinkly texture, the leaves are packed in bales and trucked to the numerous cigar factories of Havana. There, workers unpack the leaves, sort them again, flatten them and deliver them to the rollers.
Cigars are rolled by hand by workers sitting along rows of tables. The roller saves a higher quality leaf for the outer, final layer of the cigar or wrapper.
Cuban authorities project that Cuba's 25,000 tobacco workers, involved in everything from cultivation to final packaging, will produce 200 million cigars for export this year. That's 25 percent more than last year.
Spain remains Cuba's biggest export market for cigars, receiving about 42 million annually. France is second, followed by the tourists who buy boxes of cigars when they visit Cuba.
Switzerland, Britain and the countries of Asia also big markets for Cuba's cigars.
The most important potential market is only 90 miles away, but out of bounds: the United States. Officials of Cuba's state-run tobacco companies estimate they could sell 50 million to 60 million cigars to the United States annually if the three-decade-old U.S. trade embargo against the communist island were lifted.
© Copyright 1999 The Associated Press