Happy New Year Pipe Pal

Happy New Year Pipe Pal

Make no mistake, this was a fairly good year. So many pipes and so little time. Which forced Pundit to deal with an unruly herd of pipes. The past, always a good forecast of the future, has always been go big or go home for the Pundit. This year was time to do a little cowboy corralling, lassoing, and cutting the herd so new additions could be considered in this new year.

There were so many good year-end tobacco blends from which to choose, the Pundit was in a maze of confusion and indecision. Uhm, no, that’s not too unusual. But, my goodness, there were some hard choices from fresh Christmas blends to updates of old favorites. There are not too many Virginia, English, and smooth aromatic blends that Pundit doesn’t enjoy.

Yes, it’s been a very good year for pipe smokers. And from what I have seen carousing some of the online pipe shops, we are in for another outstanding year. Per cutting back the herd.

I’m a sucker for Christmas tobacco blends. Let a new Christmas delight show up, and the Pundit is on it, like a kiddie ripping open a wrapped present beneath the tree.

Ok, I get it, Christmas is over and let’s move on.

I’ve got something of a seasonal story to tell you. Date evades me, but I was riding down an old country road on a bright spring day some years back when I spotted an older gentleman sitting on a tombstone. He was sitting and resting atop a tall headstone in a country church cemetery and staring off into the cemetery. The old memorial stones were baked in a faded gray look, with many names and dates faded into shadows.

Naturally, I stopped to see if he might need help or something. He was puffing his pipe and just looking off.

I said hello and asked him if all was okay.

“Yes,” he said. “I’m just having a chat with Naomi.”

Naomi, he told me, died a few years back right before Christmas, just after Thanksgiving and he was telling her how his Christmas was. He took another puff on his pipe.

I asked him how long the two had been married.

“All our lives,” he told me.

Translated, the name Naomi means “gentle,” or “pleasantness,” according to a Google search.

He puffed a bit more. I reached for a handkerchief to manage a tear, and then pulled out my pipe. We chatted a bit more before I left him to his thoughts of Naomi and his pipe.

The New Year is not only a good moment for pipes, but as with Naomi, the year is also a time to reflect. To find the gentleness in life, especially while relaxing with your new pipe.

I’ve thought about the gentleman and Naomi many times over the years since I interviewed him. And not to become too mushy but after that chance meeting, I thought of my pipes in a different light.

They not only bring pleasure, especially with new purchases and new tobacco blends, but also pipes give me time to reflect on the past, present, and future, much like Scrooge in Charles Dickens’s classic, A Christmas Carol.

If you recall that story—and, ahem, if not it’s time to read it for its many lessons when the ghosts of past, present, and future visit Scrooge.

As for the New Year, the present, I’ll add more pipes to the herd, after the culling is over, the past. It will also be a New Year, the future,  of major tobacco additions to the cellar, especially from that master blender Jeremy Reeves of Cornell & Diehl.

I’m always amazed at how Jeremy gets to the essence of a blend. His talent is that of a gourmet chef. Just sayin,’ Jeremy is in that league of top blenders, in Pundit’s view.

Now, it’s time for some Pipe Smokers of the Past:

Carl Sandburg was born Jan. 6, 1878, in Galesburg, Illinois; and died July 22, 1967, in Flat Rock, N.C.

Sandburg was a poet, journalist, and a Pulitzer Prize winner for his biography of Abraham Lincoln. In addition, he won two more Pulitzers for his poetry.

And if you have ever wondered where the “Good Morning, America,” phrase originated, you might consider his 1928  book, Good Morning, America, which some sources say is the origin of the expression.

As for pipes, it is reported that he was rarely seen without his pipe, stuffed with plug tobacco. Now, that takes a strong constitution to smoke plug tobacco all day. Maybe that’s why he won three Pulitzers. He “plugged” away at it.

Ok. On to another Pipe Smoker of the Past.

John Ronald Reuel ( J.R.R.) Tolkien, an old favorite, was born Jan. 3, 1892; and died Sept. 2, 1973.

Yes, Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit, that J.R.R.

Courage is found in unlikely places― J.R.R. Tolkien

And if you need an outstanding read on the famous author and pipe smoker, see Chuck Stanion’s superb piece in his Aug. 27, 2021, Pipe Line column on Tolkien at SmokingPipes.com.

A Parting Thought: My New Pipe, My New Year Pal

Pipe Pals for a New Year from left-right: The MacArthur 5-Star Natural Straight Cob from Missouri Meerschaum, made to order by the General himself; and the ever-classic Eagle’s Claw meerschaum for relaxing times. (Photo: Fred Brown)
Pipe Pals for a New Year from left-right: The MacArthur 5-Star Natural Straight Cob from Missouri Meerschaum, made to order by the General himself; and the ever-classic Eagle’s Claw meerschaum for relaxing times. (Photo: Fred Brown)




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