My Grandparents heated their small house with a coal stove in the front room. At the end of the day, Grandpa would pile ashes over the coals. He called it banking. In the morning he would stir it up and put more coal in and the fire was still lit.
It dawned on me that this is what I'm trying to do when I smoke my pipe. The goal is to keep the tobacco just smoldering rather that open burning. And it doesn't take much fresh air to maintain a smolder once you get some heat built up. So, I'm thinking I need to draw hard enough at first to get a good burn started and build up a layer of ash on top. And then, just nurse it and tamp lightly to barely keep it going.
And, if it goes out, I need draw hard enough when I re-light to get the heat built up again before going back to sipping.
Does that make sense?
It dawned on me that this is what I'm trying to do when I smoke my pipe. The goal is to keep the tobacco just smoldering rather that open burning. And it doesn't take much fresh air to maintain a smolder once you get some heat built up. So, I'm thinking I need to draw hard enough at first to get a good burn started and build up a layer of ash on top. And then, just nurse it and tamp lightly to barely keep it going.
And, if it goes out, I need draw hard enough when I re-light to get the heat built up again before going back to sipping.
Does that make sense?