Nope.is there any merit to this
I don't know why anyone would think otherwise. The name is just not very good.Nope.
Every briar pipe you smoke is dead root briar.
Ever look up the name origin of Dunhill? I've often heard it used in conjunction with not having a paddle.The name is just not very good.
So ... not dottle !Ever look up the name origin of Dunhill? I've often heard it used in conjunction with not having a paddle.
Once harvested and turned into blocks for carving and aged for years, very dead. The name is ridiculous as it's over implying the obvious.Tell me how I'm wrong.
Perhaps it simply means root that was harvested from a dead plant versus a plant that was living at the time of harvest?I'm no botanist, but the name does not sound probable to me. The root of a plant is alive as the rest of the plant until the plant dies for some reason, when the whole thing gets gnawed away by fungus, viruses, bacteria and bugs of various kinds. So I don't believe actual dead root material would be solid or workable. I think it could mean simply root material.
The videos I've seen of briar harvesting dealt with live briar plants and neither the limbs and leaves nor the roots appeared to be dead. The wood that is massive enough to harvest is the roots, but they are not dead. Okay. Tell me how I'm wrong. As I said, I'm no botanist, but there is logic here I don't understand.
Still, it's not the most clever name. Like saying a package of ground beef being called killed cow.Perhaps it simply means root that was harvested from a dead plant versus a plant that was living at the time of harvest?
No.Dunhill often used this term as a type of briar that produced a better smoke is there any merit to this over air dried, aged, oil cured ?