I own a half dozen nice meerschaum pipes, a whole lot of cobs, and a couple of clays. I enjoy all of them, there are no bad smoking ones, and when I smoke those I never think wow, this meer or this cob or clay is an outstanding, over the top good smoker. They seem all the same delicious, satisfying smokers, although I think there’s slight differences between meers, and cobs, and clays, as to types of pipes.
I keep one truly bad, awful smoking, malaise era Kaywoodie Magnum to prove truly awful tasting, wet and hot smoking, horrible briar pipes are real. But it’s a unicorn.
The other hundreds of briars are all good smokers, some outrageously good smokers, some better than others smokers, but there are detectable differences in the smoking quality of briars, at least for me.
Sitting here playing with my watches it dawns on me, that a watch is supposed to keep perfect time, and none do (let’s not count atomic clocks).
My quartz watches have an error rate measured in seconds per year, and the others have an error rate measured in seconds per day.
Maybe meers, cobs, and clays have a tiny error rate.
And when we salivate over our favorite briar, that briar is the least bad of our bunch.
Our best briar has the fewest smoking faults.
It’s either that or briar helps out the tobacco, in some way.
Let me fire up some Buoy and ruminate some more on this burning riddle.
I keep one truly bad, awful smoking, malaise era Kaywoodie Magnum to prove truly awful tasting, wet and hot smoking, horrible briar pipes are real. But it’s a unicorn.
The other hundreds of briars are all good smokers, some outrageously good smokers, some better than others smokers, but there are detectable differences in the smoking quality of briars, at least for me.
Sitting here playing with my watches it dawns on me, that a watch is supposed to keep perfect time, and none do (let’s not count atomic clocks).
My quartz watches have an error rate measured in seconds per year, and the others have an error rate measured in seconds per day.
Maybe meers, cobs, and clays have a tiny error rate.
And when we salivate over our favorite briar, that briar is the least bad of our bunch.
Our best briar has the fewest smoking faults.
It’s either that or briar helps out the tobacco, in some way.
Let me fire up some Buoy and ruminate some more on this burning riddle.