Peter Stokkebye's English Oriental Supreme is quite tasty. Stokkebye's are bulk blends so you can buy an ounce or two to try and not have to commit a lot of money.
The black part of the horn is actually a sheath that comes off, sort of like compacted hair and unfortunately not thick enough to make a stem. The underlying horn bleaches white with age like the skull does.
Cabbage gives me gas when I smoke it in a cob; maybe Dagner's have engineered a pipe that will bring back the good old days of smoking cabbage to impress the ladies.
The work great for holding bait when ice fishing. Have a couple I store wire snares in; otherwise general hardware storage. I try to keep 1 tin of everything I've smoked for some future display project.
I suppose you could add water and freeze into an oversized hockey puck for us old timers.
This is a strange thread to read thru. I've bought several tins from Pipestud and will continue to do so. As a relatively new pipe smoker my cellar doesn't have much age in it. Pipestud's offerings gives me the opportunity to try some aged blends that I would normally have to wait 5-10 years...
Quando omni flunkus moritati....when all else fails play dead
If the women don't find you handsome they should at least find you handy.
Duct tape; the handyman's secret weapon.
Half and Half is an interesting case. The old recipe had deer tongue in it but that was removed in the 80s. Current recipe is cased/topped in a poor attempt to replace the deer tongue flavor. So in my opinion old Half and Half wasn't an aromatic but the current version could be considered one.
The tin art alone puts Mixture 69 in a class of its own. It made a great Secret Santa gift to a forum member. Peck, I think, is the one who hoards the complete run of this blend. He has the 69 all to himself.
Reading the article the worry is that the red swamp crawfish will out compete the native crawfish of Michigan. There seems to be some erosion concerns about this species since it digs a deeper burrow than the native species do. Here in Minnesota our crawfish tend to be a green brown color and...
Comics are a business. They depend on new readers to survive so need new story lines to get peoples attention. If people were buying the traditional titles writers wouldn't be exploring alternate heroes.