Some yes, some no. The real question is (we've all witnessed the water flush controversy) are briar pipes SPONGEABLE?
Are you sure you're that it's tobacco you're smoking?And, if pipes can communicate between each other, by some process we cannot be aware of, would those chunks of old briar fashioned into smoking pipes be arguing between themselves which was best, or would they be swapping stories about how some guy dug them up and then after that they get stuffed with burning leaves, and they must be in some sort of briar hell.
I love that something gets lost in translation, but I can still tell that you are having a great time. I keep my fishes in the freezer too, but not the pipes. Those are better off in an aquarium with little fake plants and a deep sea diver that makes bubbles in the water.It is best to keep the pipes in the freezer. Along with the fishes............I think it is the most fungible..................It's the only way to spit out the evil spirit, of a possessed pipe.............It's because of Halloween, right?
The google translator is an engineering masterpiece. I'm thinking of reopening Purgatory................I love that something gets lost in translation, but I can still tell that you are having a great time. I keep my fishes in the freezer too, but not the pipes. Those are better off in an aquarium with little fake plants and a deep sea diver that makes bubbles in the water.
I believe it is an allegory.Never heard of of the briar used in pipes being poisonous.
I just looked on Google and found nothing relating to poisonous pipe briar ?
WTF? Ha ha, You must choo choo through the break in, or is it these lower than Lee pipes made with poisonous poorly graded briars?To innocent bystanders, the smell of burning briar, is worse than the most Latika rich blend extant.
My briars, I can smell and taste the aroma of still, and some are more than 100 years old. This is why I prefer briar to all of those lesser quality materials pipes. (JK about lesser)some new briars require a dozen smokes or more to quit tasting briar.
During the postwar period, Kaywoodie and Dunhill were priced the same, in the American market, assuming the same grade.My briars, I can smell and taste the aroma of still, and some are more than 100 years old. This is why I prefer briar to all of those lesser quality materials pipes. (JK about lesser)
To me, it is the warmed briar aroma that gives pipe tobacco it's pipe-y smell. And, it is at it's most beautiful on it's first smoke. When folks talk about poor quality briar, my mind jumps to those green DR. Grabows, and all of these cheap pipes you collect, so... YMMV
Now, if you are actually burning the briar, and smelling the smoke of incinerating wood, then you are smoking in a style very different from me.