Hello and Happy New Year,
I am looking for troubleshooting advice regarding a set of cherrywood Churchwarden pipes I recently purchased from MacQueen. They are "Lord of the Rings" inspired designs and I was very excited to use them but I've been having issues with burnout and fissures which I am not used to. I was hoping someone with more experience or knowledge would be able to help me out. I apologize in advance for the amount of details but I'm trying to narrow my problem down to the root cause. If anyone would like more particulars to help answer please ask away.
I have owned a number of ordinary briarwood pipes over the years and while I've had the occasional issue with burning or charing, I've never had it to this extent. These are the first cherrywood pipes I've ever purchased so it could very well be user error but I'm not sure how.
Up to this point I feel like I've tried every trick in the book for breaking in a pipe, including smoking them as gently and coolly as possible, not smoking the tobacco all the way down to the bottom, applying honey to the bowls ahead of time and even using pipe mud to patch up any forming burns. I also try to not let them get too hot, which can be difficult because by the time I feel the heat through the bowl it's usually too late.
Is cherry that much more difficult to smoke than briar or am I truly just too dense to get this right? I've read advice from multiple sites where people say they just "smoke normally" and have never had any problems.
None of this is to besmirch MacQueen; they have very positive reviews for all their pipes and I was hoping to make these ones last a while but I'm basically at my wit's end.
If anyone has any insight into cherrywood pipes or even these particular ones I would love to hear what you have to say. Many thanks ahead of time.
I am looking for troubleshooting advice regarding a set of cherrywood Churchwarden pipes I recently purchased from MacQueen. They are "Lord of the Rings" inspired designs and I was very excited to use them but I've been having issues with burnout and fissures which I am not used to. I was hoping someone with more experience or knowledge would be able to help me out. I apologize in advance for the amount of details but I'm trying to narrow my problem down to the root cause. If anyone would like more particulars to help answer please ask away.
I have owned a number of ordinary briarwood pipes over the years and while I've had the occasional issue with burning or charing, I've never had it to this extent. These are the first cherrywood pipes I've ever purchased so it could very well be user error but I'm not sure how.
Up to this point I feel like I've tried every trick in the book for breaking in a pipe, including smoking them as gently and coolly as possible, not smoking the tobacco all the way down to the bottom, applying honey to the bowls ahead of time and even using pipe mud to patch up any forming burns. I also try to not let them get too hot, which can be difficult because by the time I feel the heat through the bowl it's usually too late.
Is cherry that much more difficult to smoke than briar or am I truly just too dense to get this right? I've read advice from multiple sites where people say they just "smoke normally" and have never had any problems.
None of this is to besmirch MacQueen; they have very positive reviews for all their pipes and I was hoping to make these ones last a while but I'm basically at my wit's end.
If anyone has any insight into cherrywood pipes or even these particular ones I would love to hear what you have to say. Many thanks ahead of time.