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Brothers of Briar

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Welcome to the Brotherhood!

Wow, 49 years on the pipe. Things must have changed a lot. You've seen it ebb and wane a couple of times. Always manage to find a good blend to keep your pipe warm I assume.

Do you go to an online store nowadays and just cancel out of frustration and go back to the old standby or are you tempted to play the field?

--Alex
 
Sean68":t1t266p3 said:
Sir, I am quite partial to helicopters myself. I have been in the Military Aviation industry my entire adult life. Airplanes are graceful, helicopters are aggressive. Suits me better, methinks...
Yeah, I can't argue with that!
 
Sean68":lyv7dp48 said:
Sir, I am quite partial to helicopters myself. I have been in the Military Aviation industry my entire adult life. Airplanes are graceful, helicopters are aggressive. Suits me better, methinks...
Quote from the fixed wing pilot world: "There's just something unsettling about an aircraft that doesn't have its wings firmly attached." :lol:

That being said (in humor), I always regretted not getting my rotocraft rating. Same can be said for my floatplane and glider ratings... suitable additions to my bucket list, I think.
 
awoodby":w8pru86q said:
Welcome to the Brotherhood!

Wow, 49 years on the pipe. Things must have changed a lot. You've seen it ebb and wane a couple of times. Always manage to find a good blend to keep your pipe warm I assume.

Do you go to an online store nowadays and just cancel out of frustration and go back to the old standby or are you tempted to play the field?

--Alex
Some things have changed somewhat, particularly approaches to the briar. For example, when I started, conventional wisdom was to break in a new briar by rubbing saliva into the bowl, filling it about a quarter full, and smoking it to the bottom; repeat about 8-10 times before stepping up to half bowl, then eventually to full bowls. This was to build up cake from the bottom up. Another recommendation was to strip any varnish, lacquer, or other such sealant from the bowl and shank, replacing it with an oil based rub, the preferred one being to rub the pipe against your nose, once on each side pipe/nose, every time you smoke. This was to build up the oil finish using your natural oils, and based upon the premise that sealed briar didn't allow the pipe to properly breathe. Another was to avoid tobaccos with sugar casing because they would make the pipe bitter. Don't know how prevalent those practices are today, don't hear them being offered to newbies, so I'm guessing they have fallen by the wayside.

As far as buying tobacco today, there are no B&M stores around my part of the state, except the ones catering mostly to cigarettes and some cigars. Very slim pipe tobacco pickings. The online stores provide a much needed and valued service, carrying wide varieties and choices, and delivering with generally excellent service. BTW, there are MANY more blends available to today's piper than there were when I started. Biggest difference is the entire attitude change against smoking; today we pipers are tossed into the general bin with the cigarette fanatics. When I picked up the pipe, pipe smokers were held in high esteem, generally viewed as thoughtful, well educated gentlemen (ladies didn't smoke pipes then). Nowadays, we know we are like that; everyone else just don't know the truth. :) OK, stepping off the memory bus and soapbox... Thanks for asking....
 
Welcome to BoB and enjoy your time here. Oregon is a beautiful place as is Washington. I definitely enjoy my time spent there smoking, geocaching, and wandering aimlessly amongst the waterfalls.
 
Checotah":qim7ym6e said:
Sean68":qim7ym6e said:
Sir, I am quite partial to helicopters myself. I have been in the Military Aviation industry my entire adult life. Airplanes are graceful, helicopters are aggressive. Suits me better, methinks...
Quote from the fixed wing pilot world: "There's just something unsettling about an aircraft that doesn't have its wings firmly attached." :lol:

That being said (in humor), I always regretted not getting my rotocraft rating. Same can be said for my floatplane and glider ratings... suitable additions to my bucket list, I think.
Another brilliant quote: "To soar is heavenly, to hover is divine".
 
Yes, even in the mid/late 80's when I last was smoking a pipe, there were several fairly well appointed pipe shops in the small city I lived near. Now it's down to one. Cigar shops are every mile though it seems.

For sure, the quantity of different blends is overwhelming online! I'm a few weeks in and already have like 25 blends, barely a drop in the bucket. I've now decided... I don't need to find the "perfect blend", I have plenty for a while and like all of them lol.

I still follow the "don't smoke sugar blends in briar", and smoke them in a couple of venturi or "the smoke" um, plastic pipes when I want to smoke them.

Anyways, thanks for joining, do share some of that wisdom to us newbies!

--Alex
 
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