Gawith Hoggarth Dark Birds Eye

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Mar 13, 2020
2,790
27,049
missouri
Exactly. I haven’t done any scientific comparisons, but my guess is if you weighed how I pack it it wouldn’t be more than about 2/3 of how tight I would pack most everything else. Once you get those long thin strands burning, and tamp lightly, you can easily keep it lit with a VERY slow cadence. I think most people who have trouble with it pack too tight and puff too hard.

DBE was the very first GH blend I smoked, a sample given to me by the late Tom Coldwell at a pipe show circa 1985. Once the room stopped spinning......
Thanks for this. I will try packing it lighter
 
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alaskanpiper

Enabler in Chief
May 23, 2019
9,438
43,996
Alaska
I'm convinced the African leaf in strong bodied Gawith blends makes all the difference. I wish American tobacco could taste this good.
You may be on to something there. I typically much prefer blends with a burley/DF presence from Gawith than any American producers.

Certainly a bit of a generalization, and as usual extraneous variables abound, but the profile does seem different to me.
 

rushx9

Lifer
Jul 10, 2019
2,299
17,245
43
Shelby, NC
DBE has been around forever, hasn’t changed to my taste. Whether the burley component is the same as what is now being ubiquitously marketed as DFK is something I am far from sure of.
The way the description reads, it's a blend of fire-cured Dark Virginia with Dark Kentucky "birdseye" which I assume is, contrary to popular belief, not fire-cured.
Lotta folks read Dark Kentucky and automatically assume DFK.
 

spicy_boiii

Part of the Furniture Now
Aug 5, 2020
592
2,739
Bay Area, California
Haven't had it but I'm a huge fan of the dark fired that GH uses in their blends. Very nice complexity and flavor. I like it in the dark flake aromatic and Kendal Flake.

Don't plan on buying much of anything with any substantial latakia or dark fired ever again though, with my cellar and how much I smoke the stuff I have a lifetime supply.
 

alaskanpiper

Enabler in Chief
May 23, 2019
9,438
43,996
Alaska
Haven't had it but I'm a huge fan of the dark fired that GH uses in their blends. Very nice complexity and flavor. I like it in the dark flake aromatic and Kendal Flake.

Don't plan on buying much of anything with any substantial latakia or dark fired ever again though, with my cellar and how much I smoke the stuff I have a lifetime supply.
I am moving ever closer in this direction as well. The occasional bowl of either is great, but more and more I tend to prefer them both used condimentally at most.
 

logs

Lifer
Apr 28, 2019
1,877
5,088
Yeah the ropes are pretty strong. I used to think they were unique until BROBS mail-bombed me with a tour of GH blends I'd never tried. Now I find that GH has a slew of super-strong but tasty blends where the lakeland essence is mostly just window dressing. I've never been a fan of nicotine blasts but GH has so many amazing blends. It's worth the danger.
 

BROBS

Lifer
Nov 13, 2019
11,765
40,041
IA
Yeah the ropes are pretty strong. I used to think they were unique until BROBS mail-bombed me with a tour of GH blends I'd never tried. Now I find that GH has a slew of super-strong but tasty blends where the lakeland essence is mostly just window dressing. I've never been a fan of nicotine blasts but GH has so many amazing blends. It's worth the danger.
Don’t tell people that I’m nice it will skew my image on the forum with a few coots
 
Oct 7, 2016
2,451
5,213
Yeah the ropes are pretty strong. I used to think they were unique until BROBS mail-bombed me with a tour of GH blends I'd never tried. Now I find that GH has a slew of super-strong but tasty blends where the lakeland essence is mostly just window dressing. I've never been a fan of nicotine blasts but GH has so many amazing blends. It's worth the danger.
Cadence is everything. Tom Caldwell could smoke bowl after bowl of DBE, didn’t phase him in the least. He was the quintessential English professor, tweeds and all. Doubt he weighed 150 pounds. But the only way you would know he was smoking a pipe would be that he occasionally opened his mouth to let the smoke escape. Maybe this is what is called the breath method, maybe whoever coined the term has something else in mind, but tobacco just plain is better behaved when it is barely smoldering in the bowl. I think that translates to making the nic hit manageable as well as just plain tasting better.