I store all my tobacco snuff included (except ones that I’m aging in the cellar) in a 2 door cabinet that I call my “baccynet”
I just use 2 cigar boxes in my desk drawer.
Some years ago my wife built me a wooden box to hold my machine, tobacco and tubes for RYO, which I dubbed the Altar of Smoke. It is now also the Altar of Snuff. Michigan’s climate is cold dry winters and hot humid summers, but I haven’t had much issue with texture or scent loss…
If anyone needs help storing snuff you can store them in my apartment and eventualy my nose.
I’ve got a kitchen drawer that I keep them in. Problem is, the ones in top rotation keep migrating to the coffee table in the living room. Putting them back can be a slightly traumatic experience.
It’s like choosing which child you love the most (or in my case, which pet).
@cstokes4 Exactly! Peeked into the drawer and the Punjabi fellow on the box of 5 Photo seemed to be shouting “Why am I stuck in here today, while a faceless box of Mild Lemon gets to hang out next to the Frog candle and your Tea?” Emotional attachment to Snuff could be a whole new thread, but I do feel quite a bit of it.
I feel you. No matter what snuff I grab in the morning, I always wish I would have grabbed something else!
I keep it all on a shelf. I’m laid-back concerning snuff storage, it would seem. My two bulk favorites are tightly packed into glass jars with rubber gaskets, and I doubt they will deteriorate very much. I use a tiered system (bulk storage, smaller container, snuff box) and I don’t worry about it. The thing with snuff…if it gets all dried out and shitty, its still an enjoyable product, after re hydration if need be. I also feel that just because old snuff is much different than fresh snuff, this is not always a bad thing.