Welcome to The Pipes Magazine Radio Show Episode 522! Our featured interview tonight is with pipe maker Jason Patrick. Jason is from the Chicago area, and he started making pipes in 2019. Some of his earliest memories are of his grandfather smoking a pipe. He started pipe smoking in his early 20’s, and soon decided that he wanted to make them. He started with standard shapes, and then branched out into Danish-style freehand designs. He likes to listen to our show while kayaking. In Pipe Parts, we will have an Ask the Tobacco Blender segment with Jeremy Reeves. Jeremy is the Head Blender at Cornell & Diehl, which is one of the most popular boutique pipe tobacco companies in the USA. Sit back, relax with your pipe, and enjoy The Pipes Magazine Radio Show!
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The Pipes Magazine Radio Show features interviews with pipe makers, tobacco blenders, pipe and tobacco aficionados, collectors, and more. Episodes air every Tuesday.
Our show is sponsored by SmokingPipes.com, Cornell & Diehl, Missouri Meerschaum, Savinelli Pipes and Tobaccos, Peterson Pipes and TinBids. Please give them some consideration when making your next pipe or tobacco purchase.
We hope you enjoy our 1-hour show produced just for you—the pipe smoker and collector.
Great question, and comprehensive answers from both Jeremy and you. I’m often entertained by some of the “expert” pipe tobacco reviewers on the internet. Some of the bovine scat that passes for scholarly opinion, from people in the pipe hobby for only a few years, makes me want to reach for the large polo mallet.
A wonderful conversation with Jason, whose very full life and commitment to family, community, and his art is commendable.
You’re right, you can’t dislike Huey Lewis and the News. Good tune.
I’m in complete sympathy with you in dealing with the medical establishment’s rigmarole.
Good show! Thanks.
Dino
Real good show. Not sure I can buy the explanation on identifying good leaf. It seems to me as many times as I saw the Lucky Strike commercial (“Sold American”) it looked to me like the buyers just walked through and “determined” what was good and what was not. These guys somehow could tell. Of course my recollection from 65 years ago could be in error.
I really liked Jason Patrick. He seemed like a real good person with a solid foundation. Of course being in his 40’s with a wife and six kids he would have to be.
Your rant was spot on but you didn’t really offer a solution to it. It would be nice if the paperwork was simple but with all the people who are trying to cheat the system including doctors, big Pharma, and the patients, etc, it’s tough. The reason for all the paper work isn’t for us but rather all the cheaters in the system. And they still get away with billions.