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Just wait till you have a large collection going back years, and can have the fun of smoking different cigars from different acquisition dates and can see which get better and by how much. Lots of surprises. Of course some cigars are just inherently bad and stay bad forever, but quite a few are "bad" Right Off The Truck (ROTT), but years later, they're vastly improved. Always nice when that happens.
If you buy at a faster rate than you smoke, an aged collection will build automatically. Those cheap, big, clear plastic tubs and the kind of humidification and monitoring setup for them that I mentioned previously will provide a very inexpensive, reliable and low maintenance form of mass storage for them all to age in proper conditions.
A strong suggestion though: starting NOW, right at the beginning, get a few Sharpies and write the month and year of your acquisition on everything. For example, stuff you get this month is marked "6/19". If it's a single, write it on the cellophane sleeve. If it's a bundle or box, write it on the bundle or box, and later if you take cigars out of the bundle or box, look at the month/year and copy it onto the cellophane sleeve(s) of the cigars you remove from them.
On individual cigars' cellophane sleeves I write it once, but on a box or bundle I typically write it several times for redundancy, as over time handling can cause a single copy to get rubbed off or become otherwise illegible. If it's in two or three places, this is unlikely to be a problem. And, writing it twice or three times to cover 20-25 cigars is pretty low-effort.
The result is that you know when you acquired each and every cigar, bundle or box, without needing any external database (a log book, a spreadsheet file, database in an app, etc.) which are all unnecessary pains in the rear. Plus, if you gift cigars to anyone, there's the acquisition date right on the cigar for the recipient to see, which lets them correlate their experience with the cigar to its age (which is interesting and useful), and it also impresses them that you're sharing not new stuff, but significantly aged stuff (you get good friend brownie points).
If you don't start this from day one (or close to it), though, it won't work well. You'll never go back and Sharpie them all "en masse" because it's a pain and you won't remember the dates of acquisition anyway. However if you do it to each cigar/bundle/box as you get them it's very quick and easy, and if you do it from the start it's comprehensive too, covering your entire collection.
I've done this from the start, and down the road it's really, really nice.
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