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Post by Silver on Mar 2, 2021 21:15:34 GMT -5
GL Pease Blackpoint in a smallish Bacchus meer. My only meerschaum not from Missouri.
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Post by Professor S. on Mar 2, 2021 21:26:36 GMT -5
C&D Professor in my Tom Eltang blasted bent Danish Dublin. What's that Professor like, John? It's one (of too many!) I've had my eye on.
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Post by Professor S. on Mar 2, 2021 21:31:00 GMT -5
Last minute changes of plans necessitated some frantic emptying of our dressers and moving my 400# desk downstairs. After giving one dresser to our neighbors, the other to Goodwill, and a quick trip to the storage unit, I'm relaxing (in the haggis coat) with MacBaren's Scottish Mixture in my Grabow freehand. All my calories for the day are spent, so it's water to drink.
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Post by taiguy66 on Mar 2, 2021 21:38:25 GMT -5
Working on some SG FVF while regripping my neighbour’s clubs. I have 3 tins of this in the cellar. Sitting on them for a while. This is some nice tobacco. Absolutely! If you like FVF you’ll love St. James Pete. It’s not as sweet as FVF but I think it’s more robust. Cheers pal.....
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Post by johnlawitzke on Mar 2, 2021 21:51:39 GMT -5
C&D Professor in my Tom Eltang blasted bent Danish Dublin. What's that Professor like, John? It's one (of too many!) I've had my eye on. It’s a really good mild English blend. As with the majority of C&D blends, I recommend a minimum of 12 months of age. It’s in the same neighborhood of other mild English blends such as MM965, EMP, C&D Good Morning, and 3 Noggins. Professor is Va with a touch of Latakia and a wee bit of Orientals. The official description doesn’t mention Orientals. However, I thought I could detect some and confirmed it while smoking a pipe with Jeremy Reeves at a pipe show. Another C&D blend in the same neighborhood and not well known is Yale Mixture which is Va with a touch of Latakia. Kinda Professor without the Oriental. Yale Mixture is both bulk and tinned.
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Post by johnlawitzke on Mar 2, 2021 21:54:06 GMT -5
2012 Leo in my T. Cristiano Signature oval shank bent Rhodesian.
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Post by Silver on Mar 2, 2021 22:14:36 GMT -5
I have 3 tins of this in the cellar. Sitting on them for a while. This is some nice tobacco. Absolutely! If you like FVF you’ll love St. James Pete. It’s not as sweet as FVF but I think it’s more robust. Cheers pal..... I try to pick up some tins whenever there's an SG/GH drop. St. James goes so fast, though. I've had better luck with Sam Gawith FVF, CH and Sam's Flakes; and GH Best Brown #2/Chocolate/Rum Flakes. I've never gotten very interested in the heavy Lakeland blends, or those containing Latakia. But, I would like to try Squadron Leader or Skiff Mixture, just cuz. I will fill the larder a little at a time.
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Post by Silver on Mar 2, 2021 22:19:23 GMT -5
Another bowl of GLP Blackpoint, this time in a Charatan's Make Perfection straight Bulldog. I have 8 pipes (Dunhill/Charatan/Sasieni) that are dedicated to English/Balkan blends. I think I've smoked 4 of them today. This is the most use they've seen in some time.
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Post by taiguy66 on Mar 2, 2021 22:26:28 GMT -5
Pete (Silver), yes... give Sqn Leader a try! Very enjoyable smoke. I’m also partial to Grousemoor. Even though it’s listed as an aro the blend is mainly Virginia with a wonderful floral, fruit combination. Not sure if you remember “Thrills” gum but this blend has the same floral aroma. It’s one of my go to smokes.
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Post by Silver on Mar 2, 2021 22:44:09 GMT -5
Pete (Silver), yes... give Sqn Leader a try! Very enjoyable smoke. I’m also partial to Grousemoor. Even though it’s listed as an aro the blend is mainly Virginia with a wonderful floral, fruit combination. Not sure if you remember “Thrills” gum but this blend has the same floral aroma. It’s one of my go to smokes. Ted, I've never heard of Thrills gum, so I looked it up. The description from Amazon states that it tastes like soap. Now, I'm curious about Grousemoor.
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Post by Silver on Mar 3, 2021 1:05:44 GMT -5
Watched a couple more Sherlock Holmes episodes (The Greek Interpreter and The Norwood Builder) and smoked Mac Baren Navy Flake in my Christmas 2020 Peterson B10 Dublin/Calabash. Now smoking the last half of a bowl of Haunted Bookshop in a MM Great Dane Spindle. May not be done for the night. Have a good night to anyone who still may be up.
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Post by Gypo on Mar 3, 2021 1:16:22 GMT -5
King's Ransom in Comoy's sandblasted 270
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Post by Silver on Mar 3, 2021 1:35:08 GMT -5
Three Friars in a MM Great Dane Spindle. Last of the night for me.
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Post by CrustyCat on Mar 3, 2021 2:33:11 GMT -5
Working on finishing up some Wessex Burley Slices from last night in a Scottie Bing. Might be time to give this pipe a rest. I think it has been in active service for a few weeks now. I know it's so hard giving up the pipe you love smoking so much
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Post by lizardonarock on Mar 3, 2021 7:25:12 GMT -5
GLP Embarcadero in a Micoli.
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Post by mrlunting on Mar 3, 2021 8:23:41 GMT -5
Squadron Leader in my meer to start the day. Happy hump day everyone, eh!
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Post by Goldbrick on Mar 3, 2021 8:35:56 GMT -5
Stirling Bridge /Amphora B.C. in a carved prince by Brebbia, hot hazelnut coffee on the side.
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Post by just ol ed on Mar 3, 2021 9:19:16 GMT -5
greets & adding happy HumpDay to those affected. Walks done, no-band 5x50 for company. After the Ed is fed, SerJac Rowlette "scoop" filled with Abingdon & continue with the papers. More wifie related things to do thruout the day.
33, overcast, windy for now
Ed Duncan, Batavia, NY pipe/cigar since '62
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Post by taiguy66 on Mar 3, 2021 10:41:43 GMT -5
Pete (Silver), yes... give Sqn Leader a try! Very enjoyable smoke. I’m also partial to Grousemoor. Even though it’s listed as an aro the blend is mainly Virginia with a wonderful floral, fruit combination. Not sure if you remember “Thrills” gum but this blend has the same floral aroma. It’s one of my go to smokes. Ted, I've never heard of Thrills gum, so I looked it up. The description from Amazon states that it tastes like soap. Now, I'm curious about Grousemoor. I loved that gum as a kid and not because it tasted like “soap.” It is indeed very floral and review by A. Morley below: Grouse-Moor is a very often maligned tobacco and this is simply not fair. It is a carefully produced blend of the finest ingredients and a consistent blending tradition going back over two hundred years. I would proffer that the reason so many would thumb their noses at it is because it is the sort of blend that we serious pipemen are told to shy away from because it is not laden with manly amounts of Latakia or smoky stoved Virginia. For my part, Grouse-Moor is one of my favorite tobaccos, representing, as it does, the pinnacle of one of the most venerable traditions in the realm of tobacco, that of the English Lakeland. Only the finest steamed and stoved bright Virginia is employed, cut into deliciously long ribbons that pack easily and are perfect for slow, relaxed puffing. It is the top casing that truly defines Grouse-Moor, and the sauce used is the very best blend of essences of any that are employed for Lakeland-style aromatics, managing to be floral and herbal and fruity in delicate balance all at the same time. The essence used by Samuel Gawith is a secret blend of all natural components known only to one employee of that historic blending house. I can recall the time that I visited the factory in Kendal and the reverence with which the bottle of Grouse-Moor essence was brought out to be sprinkled onto a batch of leaf to fulfill my request for a pound of Grouse-Moor direct from the factory floor. Oddly, to me, at least, it is the extra flavoring that people seem to dislike in this blend. The few people that like Grouse-Moor here have attempted to justify it by saying that it has been around for so long that it must be good. I believe there is more to it than that. The floral essence of a Lakeland aromatic is, in my opinion, one of the greatest innovations in the realm of pipe smoking. The specific flavor notes of Lakeland aromatic essences serve to heighten and exemplify the nuances of a fine Virginia and even cut out some of the excessive sootiness to be found in many examples of the leaf, as opposed to German and American style aromatics which only cover up the true tobacco flavor. Consider Earl Grey, among the most popular tea blends in the western world: the oil of bergamot with lavender notes with which the basic Ceylon/Assam blend is laden helps to better marry and mellow the invigorating bitter-sweet flavor of the tea. This is the same sort of relationship of taste that is to be found in Grouse-Moor and so many other fine tobaccos of the Lakeland tradition. Forgive my rabbiting on for so long, but I have enjoyed this sort of tobacco for years and became tired of listening to a lot of brutes and cads guffawing and casting it aside for 'serious' tobacco. Grouse-Moor is serious tobacco. The Virginia leaf is not only of the finest quality, but also quite strong. The affect of the top dressing is perfect if approached with an open mind. This is a tobacco for real men, and by that I don't mean John Wayne and Mike Hammer, but guys who truly deserve the title like William Wordsworth and Thomas Hardy.
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Post by pepesdad1 on Mar 3, 2021 10:45:02 GMT -5
Usual butternut burley in a straight grained bent Dublin by BSP.
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Post by fadingdaylight on Mar 3, 2021 11:06:41 GMT -5
Started off with Natural Dutch Cavendish in the Nording Valhalla on the way in this morning
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Post by pepesdad1 on Mar 3, 2021 11:44:30 GMT -5
Squadron Leader SR in a Georg Jensen pipe.
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Post by taiguy66 on Mar 3, 2021 11:53:55 GMT -5
Great minds think alike Walt. Preloaded Sqn Leader and Vanilla Custard to hold me over while at the office later today. Have a great day sir. 😁
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Post by exbenedict on Mar 3, 2021 12:14:54 GMT -5
Margate in a newish Peterson I'm still breaking in. excuse the mess....maids day off...
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Post by mgtarheel on Mar 3, 2021 12:23:10 GMT -5
CB Copper in a Horace Dejarnett "wax drip" billiard
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Post by Gypo on Mar 3, 2021 12:26:26 GMT -5
HH Latakia Flake in ring grain Sav. Pot 115ks
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Post by Silver on Mar 3, 2021 13:07:52 GMT -5
Ted, I've never heard of Thrills gum, so I looked it up. The description from Amazon states that it tastes like soap. Now, I'm curious about Grousemoor. I loved that gum as a kid and not because it tasted like “soap.” It is indeed very floral and review by A. Morley below: Grouse-Moor is a very often maligned tobacco and this is simply not fair. It is a carefully produced blend of the finest ingredients and a consistent blending tradition going back over two hundred years. I would proffer that the reason so many would thumb their noses at it is because it is the sort of blend that we serious pipemen are told to shy away from because it is not laden with manly amounts of Latakia or smoky stoved Virginia. For my part, Grouse-Moor is one of my favorite tobaccos, representing, as it does, the pinnacle of one of the most venerable traditions in the realm of tobacco, that of the English Lakeland. Only the finest steamed and stoved bright Virginia is employed, cut into deliciously long ribbons that pack easily and are perfect for slow, relaxed puffing. It is the top casing that truly defines Grouse-Moor, and the sauce used is the very best blend of essences of any that are employed for Lakeland-style aromatics, managing to be floral and herbal and fruity in delicate balance all at the same time. The essence used by Samuel Gawith is a secret blend of all natural components known only to one employee of that historic blending house. I can recall the time that I visited the factory in Kendal and the reverence with which the bottle of Grouse-Moor essence was brought out to be sprinkled onto a batch of leaf to fulfill my request for a pound of Grouse-Moor direct from the factory floor. Oddly, to me, at least, it is the extra flavoring that people seem to dislike in this blend. The few people that like Grouse-Moor here have attempted to justify it by saying that it has been around for so long that it must be good. I believe there is more to it than that. The floral essence of a Lakeland aromatic is, in my opinion, one of the greatest innovations in the realm of pipe smoking. The specific flavor notes of Lakeland aromatic essences serve to heighten and exemplify the nuances of a fine Virginia and even cut out some of the excessive sootiness to be found in many examples of the leaf, as opposed to German and American style aromatics which only cover up the true tobacco flavor. Consider Earl Grey, among the most popular tea blends in the western world: the oil of bergamot with lavender notes with which the basic Ceylon/Assam blend is laden helps to better marry and mellow the invigorating bitter-sweet flavor of the tea. This is the same sort of relationship of taste that is to be found in Grouse-Moor and so many other fine tobaccos of the Lakeland tradition. Forgive my rabbiting on for so long, but I have enjoyed this sort of tobacco for years and became tired of listening to a lot of brutes and cads guffawing and casting it aside for 'serious' tobacco. Grouse-Moor is serious tobacco. The Virginia leaf is not only of the finest quality, but also quite strong. The affect of the top dressing is perfect if approached with an open mind. This is a tobacco for real men, and by that I don't mean John Wayne and Mike Hammer, but guys who truly deserve the title like William Wordsworth and Thomas Hardy. Maybe a tin of Grousemoor will satisfy my curiosity regarding the Lakeland essence. The reviewer clearly is a fan.
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Post by Silver on Mar 3, 2021 13:09:46 GMT -5
Smoked Haunted Bookshop in a cob all morning. Will switch now to Match Victorian in another cob.
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Post by Ronv69 on Mar 3, 2021 14:47:12 GMT -5
Ted, I've never heard of Thrills gum, so I looked it up. The description from Amazon states that it tastes like soap. Now, I'm curious about Grousemoor. I loved that gum as a kid and not because it tasted like “soap.” It is indeed very floral and review by A. Morley below: Grouse-Moor is a very often maligned tobacco and this is simply not fair. It is a carefully produced blend of the finest ingredients and a consistent blending tradition going back over two hundred years. I would proffer that the reason so many would thumb their noses at it is because it is the sort of blend that we serious pipemen are told to shy away from because it is not laden with manly amounts of Latakia or smoky stoved Virginia. For my part, Grouse-Moor is one of my favorite tobaccos, representing, as it does, the pinnacle of one of the most venerable traditions in the realm of tobacco, that of the English Lakeland. Only the finest steamed and stoved bright Virginia is employed, cut into deliciously long ribbons that pack easily and are perfect for slow, relaxed puffing. It is the top casing that truly defines Grouse-Moor, and the sauce used is the very best blend of essences of any that are employed for Lakeland-style aromatics, managing to be floral and herbal and fruity in delicate balance all at the same time. The essence used by Samuel Gawith is a secret blend of all natural components known only to one employee of that historic blending house. I can recall the time that I visited the factory in Kendal and the reverence with which the bottle of Grouse-Moor essence was brought out to be sprinkled onto a batch of leaf to fulfill my request for a pound of Grouse-Moor direct from the factory floor. Oddly, to me, at least, it is the extra flavoring that people seem to dislike in this blend. The few people that like Grouse-Moor here have attempted to justify it by saying that it has been around for so long that it must be good. I believe there is more to it than that. The floral essence of a Lakeland aromatic is, in my opinion, one of the greatest innovations in the realm of pipe smoking. The specific flavor notes of Lakeland aromatic essences serve to heighten and exemplify the nuances of a fine Virginia and even cut out some of the excessive sootiness to be found in many examples of the leaf, as opposed to German and American style aromatics which only cover up the true tobacco flavor. Consider Earl Grey, among the most popular tea blends in the western world: the oil of bergamot with lavender notes with which the basic Ceylon/Assam blend is laden helps to better marry and mellow the invigorating bitter-sweet flavor of the tea. This is the same sort of relationship of taste that is to be found in Grouse-Moor and so many other fine tobaccos of the Lakeland tradition. Forgive my rabbiting on for so long, but I have enjoyed this sort of tobacco for years and became tired of listening to a lot of brutes and cads guffawing and casting it aside for 'serious' tobacco. Grouse-Moor is serious tobacco. The Virginia leaf is not only of the finest quality, but also quite strong. The affect of the top dressing is perfect if approached with an open mind. This is a tobacco for real men, and by that I don't mean John Wayne and Mike Hammer, but guys who truly deserve the title like William Wordsworth and Thomas Hardy.I ordered a tin on your recommendation. It had better be good!
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Post by pepesdad1 on Mar 3, 2021 17:11:07 GMT -5
Have a great day yourself, Ted...got a bowl of G&H Bob's Chocolate Flake with 5 years on it...in a small Rhodesian by Ron
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