Highland Hills
Highland Hills cigars are named after real Montana peaks and ranges whose stories reflect the same principles behind fine tobacco: patience, resilience, and the steady work of time.
The Tobacco Root Mountains earned their name because early Native tribes and trappers smoked the "tobacco root" plant long before commercial tobacco arrived. Their steep valleys and more than fourty peaks over 10,000 feet were shaped by glaciers over centuries - slow, layered change, much like the aging of well-crafted tobacco leaf.
Hollowtop, the highest point in the Tobacco Roots, rises above the Jefferson and Madison Rivers and is known for its long, clear overlooks - the kind of summit where reflection comes naturally.
Black Butte, the volcanic crown of the Gravelly Range, stands as a reminder that some things endure because they were formed with substance and depth from the beginning.
Elk Horn Peak, a 9,418-foot summit in the Elkhorn Mountain Range, has long been a point of reference for hunters, ranchers, and wilderness travelers - a place where solitude sharpens the mind and where compfire gatherings have connected people for generations.
These mountains, time-tested and quietly powerful, shape the spirit behind every Highland Hills cigar. Whether enjoyed alone or shared among friends, these cigars carry the character of the places that inspired them.