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<blockquote data-quote="Natch" data-source="post: 572782" data-attributes="member: 45"><p>Carlos, that is hardcore! I used to hang out at an old Italian "dive" bar in Milwaukee years ago, there was this old guy, who barely spoke English, but he loved those cheap, dry-cured Italian cigars, (you know, the ones that look like black dog turds and are hard as a rock). When he got it down to a nub he did the same thing. But they were so damp and oily that in the pipe they would pop and crackle, and he went through a whole book of matches just to relight them each time. They smelled like wet oak leaves and rubber bands cased with kerosene. He looked like he was in his late 80s after a hard life, but he may have been half that age. Smoking those probably doubled his age. But then, when I think of what I smoked and put in my body back in the 70s, that explains when I look in the mirror each morning I see my grandpa on a really bad day. </p><p> </p><p></p><p>Natch</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Natch, post: 572782, member: 45"] Carlos, that is hardcore! I used to hang out at an old Italian "dive" bar in Milwaukee years ago, there was this old guy, who barely spoke English, but he loved those cheap, dry-cured Italian cigars, (you know, the ones that look like black dog turds and are hard as a rock). When he got it down to a nub he did the same thing. But they were so damp and oily that in the pipe they would pop and crackle, and he went through a whole book of matches just to relight them each time. They smelled like wet oak leaves and rubber bands cased with kerosene. He looked like he was in his late 80s after a hard life, but he may have been half that age. Smoking those probably doubled his age. But then, when I think of what I smoked and put in my body back in the 70s, that explains when I look in the mirror each morning I see my grandpa on a really bad day. Natch [/QUOTE]
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