Any Regions in the USA that Could Grow Briar Trees?

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Adebisi's hat

Lurker
Sep 19, 2020
8
11
EDIT: Fixed Capitalization in Title (See Rule 9)

Are there any pockets of American soil that could support the plant that gives us our pipes?
 
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mso489

Lifer
Feb 21, 2013
41,211
60,638
I'm sure people have considered the possibility of growing briar in the U.S., especially during WWII when the war stopped briar harvesting in most of the traditional places. Apparently, it is a fussy plant that grows well in a few places and resists being farmed/forested. The closest U.S. plant that actually works well as tobacco pipe material is Mountain Laurel. Perhaps because it doesn't have the striking visual grain of briar, it was used during World War Ii, and rare carvers actually still use it, but it is not harvested much commercially. The only carver I know who uses Mountain Laurel on a regular basis, and does not sell online, is Jerry Perry of Colfax, N.C. He sells his pipes at the N.C. State Fair Village of Yesteryear in October, and at the TAPS pipe show at the Fairgrounds in April. I think briar takes years to become developed enough to make good pipe material, and it is fussy and only grows in specific climate and soil conditions. Harvesting it is heavy labor, not a retirement business for old guys.
 

cachimbero

Starting to Get Obsessed
Apr 9, 2019
244
289
56
Cordoba, Spain
As far as I know, Erica arborea grows almost everywhere. But it does not grow a burl (which is the part used for making pipes) unless it is in a certain environment; the shrub suitable for making pipes grows near the sea and needs a very dry climate and a not very rich soil.
 
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