Oliva Cigar Co.
- This article is about the Florida-based makers of the Oliva cigar brand. For the Florida-based growers of cigar tobacco, see Oliva Tobacco Co..
Oliva Cigar Co. the manufacturer of several brands of cigars primarily grown and produced in Nicaragua and sold worldwide. The family-owned company traces its roots to patriarch Melanio Oliva, who began growing tobacco in Pinar del Río, Cuba in 1886. In 1964, in the aftermath of the 1959 Cuban Revolution, Melanio's grandson Gilberto Oliva emigrated with his family to Spain before eventually moving to Nicaragua and reentering the tobacco business. In 1995 Gilberto and his son, Gilberto Jr., launched the "Gilberto Oliva" brand — a label which evolved into today's Oliva. The company is based today in Miami Lakes, Florida.
Company history
Forerunners
The family-owned Tabacalera Oliva Tabolisa, known in the United States as the Oliva Cigar Co., traces its roots back to Melanio Oliva, who first began to produce tobacco in Pinar del Rio, Cuba in 1886.[1] The farm was continued by his son, Hipolito Oliva, who took over the growing operation during the 1920s and continued the work for several decades.[1]
The tobacco growing business was assumed by Hipolito's son, Gilberto Oliva Sr., who continued until the 1959 Revolution, at which time he ended his career as a grower and began working as a tobacco broker.[1] This job took Gilberto Oliva to various countries as a buyer and eased his decision to emigrate from his native land for Spain in 1964 and from there to Nicaragua.[2]
Emigration
After working for others, Gilberto Senior began growing tobacco on his own in 1969.[3] For Oliva, no other locale compared with Nicaragua for the production of potent Cuban-style tobacco: "Nothing compares to Cuba like Nicaragua," Gilberto Senior later declared. "Northern Nicaragua enjoys all the natural blessings for great Habano."[2]
Gilberto Oliva Sr. had four children, the last of which, José Oliva, was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey in 1973 because the Olivas wanted an American-born child.[2]
He continued to farm tobacco in Nicaragua for a decade, but was forced to leave the country in 1979 as a result of the Sandinista revolution.[3] Gilberto Senior spent the next six years growing tobacco in Honduras, Mexico, Panama, and the Philippines before returning to Nicaragua in 1995.[3] Upon his return, Gilberto Senior also moved into the world of cigar manufacturing.[2]
Establishment
The "Gilberto Oliva" brand was launched in 1995 with Gilberto Oliva Sr. initially making use of one of Plasencia's Honduran factories for his production.[4] The cigars initially were composed of fillers from the Dominican Republic and Nicaragua, Dominican binder, and wrapper grown in Ecuador from Connecticut seed.[4]
The following year the brand name was shortened to "Oliva."[2]
Oliva did not achieve rapid success, but the company nevertheless managed to survive the shakeout of the numerous cigar-making startup companies which emerged in the 1990s.[4] The cigar market grew rapidly in 1995 and 1996, but by 1997 the established giants of the industry had reacted to the increase in demand, forcing many underfinanced upstarts to fall by the wayside.[2]
Oliva's proverbial ace in the hole proved to be the ample stock of tobacco which Gilberto Senior had himself produced and which was aging in storage in Nicaragua. For the next year and a half, this Nicaraguan-grown stock tided over the brand's production needs.[4] The manufacture of spicy Nicaraguan-grown "puros," initially undertaken for financial reasons due to the down market, had the unintended side effect of improving the quality of the brand, thereby cementing its position in the marketplace.[4]
As one writer has noted
"It pushed the family closer to self-sufficiency and gave it a product that was embraced by the cigar cognoscenti in the United States. The world was falling in love with Nicaraguan tobacco, and Oliva had it to spare."[2]
Development
Oliva opened up a new facility in Estelí in July 2003, replacing a smaller factory there.[3]
By 2005, Oliva Cigar Co. was producing 6 million cigars a year and expanding its operations rapidly.[4] About 90% of the company's production was in Oliva-branded product.[3] It was at that time the second largest grower of tobacco in Nicaragua.[5] Within a period of just four years, the company managed to more than double its output, producing 13 million cigars for the market in 2009.[2] The brand uses tobacco grown by the company itself in Estelí, Condega, Jalapa, and Somoto, Nicaragua.[4]
The brand's flagship is the Oliva Serie V, a cigar launched in 2006 which was named to Cigar Aficionado magazine's list of the Best Cigars of 2008.[6] In addition to its array of Oliva-branded products, the company also makes a line of squat, thick cigars bearing the brand-name "NUb."[2]
The brand's premiere products are produced in a 60,000-square-foot (5,600 m2) rolling facility located in Estelí, Nicaragua, capable of producing 50,000 cigars a day.[2] Lower-end products are manufactured in a smaller facility located in Danlí, Honduras and transshipped to Nicaragua for final export.[2] Some 350 rollers were employed in the Estelí facility in 2010.[2]
Oliva also makes cigars for other companies under contract, such as the Savinelli Liga Especial and the Savinelli Special Selection 2005.[2]
Company today
The four Oliva siblings, the great-grandchildren of Melanio Oliva, remain actively involved in the family brand. Gilberto Junior runs the Nicaraguan leaf growing operation and creates blends, Carlos oversees production, Jeannie runs the office in Miami Lakes, and José directs sales.[2]
The company employs a sales force of 18 people, who sell Oliva products in 18 countries.[2] Approximately 95% of Oliva's sales are made to the American market.[2]
In 2011, Oliva Cigar Co. joined forces with Padilla as part of a project called Studio Tobac. As part of this venture Oliva was contracted by Padilla to manufacture its "Studio Tobac Special Edition" figurado.[7] Oliva also manufactures the Nica Libre "Potencia" under contract by internet cigar retailer Meier and Dutch.[8]
Oliva Cigar Co. is not to be confused with the Oliva Tobacco Co. of Tampa, Florida, an important tobacco grower which supplies a number of leading brands, or with the long-established brand Oliveros.[2]
Oliva Cigar Co. brands
- Oliva
- Flor de Oliva
- Master Blends
- NUb
- Cain
- Georges Reserve
- Sol Cubano [9]
Oliva Serie V
Introduced in 2007, the Oliva Serie V has been offered in thirteen different vitolas:[10]
- Belicoso (5 x 54) — Regular Production.
- Churchill Extra (7 x 52) — Regular Production.
- Culebra — 2007 Raffle Event Prize/2011 Nicaraguan Cigar Festival Factory Tour, Limited Edition.
- Diadema (6 x 46) — Serie V Sampler/CRA Holiday Sampler, Limited Edition.
- Diadema “Den Bosch” (7 x 48) — Cigar World (Europe) Oliva Cigar Lounge Exclusive, Limited Edition.
- Diadema (7 x 49) — Serie V Sampler, Limited Edition.
- Double Robusto (5 x 54) — Regular Production.
- Double Toro (6 x 60) — Regular Production.
- Edición Europea 2010 (Short Robusto) (4 1/2 x 50) — Cigar World (Europe) Oliva Cigar Lounge Exclusive, Limited Edition.
- Lancero (7 x 38) — Regular Production.
- No. 4 (5.1 x 42) — Outlaw Event Exclusive/TAA Exclusive/Full Production later this year.
- Special V (Figurado) (6 x 60) — Regular Production.
- Torpedo (6 x 56) — Regular Production.
Footnotes
- 1 2 3 "Family History: Oliva Cigar Family," olivacigar.com/
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 David Savona, "With Its Penchant for Innovative Smokes and a Sizable Supply of Tobacco Leaf, Oliva Cigar Co. Has Doubled Production Since 2006," Cigar Aficionado, April 2010.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Moving Forward in Nicaragua," Cigar Aficionado, July/August 2007.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 David Savona, "The Survivors," cigaraficionado.com, February 1, 2006. Retrieved September 13, 2010.
- ↑ Patrick Lauer, Interview with José Oliva, October 2, 2005.
- ↑ "Ratings," olivacigar.com/
- ↑ "Figurados," Cigar Aficionado, April 2012, pg. 122.
- ↑ "Cigar Blender Database," robustojoe.com/
- ↑ Note that "Sol Cubano Cuban Cabinet" is manufactured by A.J. Fernandez.
- ↑ Charlie Minato, "Review: Oliva Serie V Lancero" TheCigarFeed, May 15, 2011.
External links
- Oliva Cigars homepage, olivacigar.com/ Retrieved September 13, 2010.
- Patrick Lauer, Interview with José Oliva, October 2, 2005. puff.com/ Retrieved September 15, 2010.