Or just buy a Ropp! Smokingpipes currently has 28 Algerian ones.
View attachment 277107View attachment 277108View attachment 277109Many of these pipes display a different color. Presumably they are all treated the same by who harvests them and Ropp. What do you make of that?
To be usable, the burl must be graded, then boiled, cured, cut, and graded again.
This chart describes it.
There are a couple of brothers selling Algerian briar, today.
That might be recently (as in harvested 15 years ago and cured for 10 years) middle grade Algerian briar. Or it could be from a rotting old warehouse in Algeria where it’s lain since 1954.
Ropp likely made my Jon’s Special, a fairly modern machine fraized pipe made in France.
My grandfather was born in 1880 and graduated with a college degree from Weaubleau Christian College in 1901, and went to the Pacific Northwest and as a project engineer earned enough money harvesting thousand year old Douglas for trees to never sweat another day in his life, until he died at 92 after he finshed his last Camel:
The thousand year old Douglas fir trees were cut and pullied and winched down to the sea a century ago. They won’t be back soon.
The two to four hundred year old Algerian burls were mostly gone before 1954.
But there’s lots of hundred year old burls over there in the mountains, too young to harvest in 1954.
Try Algerian briar. The light tan Ropp pipes are most of what was used before 1954.
It’s all good, some gooder than others.