LOL I think I'll pass on that, but thanks for the suggestion.New youtube video idea?
LOL I think I'll pass on that, but thanks for the suggestion.New youtube video idea?
I’ve tried both matches and a lighter. I admit that I’m still new to pipe smoking and I’m sure part of the problem is in packing. I’ve studied the issue, as newbies do, but I just think other tobaccos are more forgiving when it comes to this question. I know I haven’t got the hang of it perfectly. Most tobaccos remain soft and crispy as they’re dried out so they’re forgiving. I think overly dried, hard-as -rock SGs, aren’t forgiving when packing. They aren’t malleable. Maybe I got frustrated and impatient. I’m going to put them on hold and then start from the beginning with them down the road. As I said before, something like Peterson Flake is much easier as it remains very soft and flammable when dry. Anyway, I feel like I’ve tested everyone’s patience with this question. I really do appreciate the attention to the problem. It did frustrate me and burn by mouth more than once with relighting.It's hard to imagine that too dry could make it harder to light, but perhaps it's possible...
Are you using matches, or a lighter of some kind? I'm still trying to figure out why, but matches seem to work better for me. I suspect a lighter allows me to apply the flame for too long, and so too much moisture builds up from the combustion and it actually starts to get too wet again. I've had SG tobacco refuse to light AND start to sizzle! So if a match doesn't get it going somewhat easily, I set the pipe down and give it more time to dry out.
I'll re-iterate, make sure you aren't tamping it too hard. Maybe even put away the tamper and use your pinky for a while to make sure you're doing no more than touching the ash from time to time. Looser is probably better until you find the right balance with this stuff.
I had the exact same experience sans the horse shit.The first time I tried smoking FVF I found it disgusting, just flavorless, difficult to keep lit, tasting more like stable hay after the horse had shit in it. A member here advised me to give it about 5 hours of drying time, which a did, and the difference was amazing.
This is exactly what I was thinking as I read through this thread. I have had trouble with other cube cuts becoming very hard in my pipe and the problem was overtamping. With flakes and cube cuts, I’ve learned to pack it very loose and to not tamp, allowing the tobacco to expand in the chamber.I'll re-iterate, make sure you aren't tamping it too hard. Maybe even put away the tamper and use your pinky for a while to make sure you're doing no more than touching the ash from time to time. Looser is probably better until you find the right balance with this stuff.
This is something for me to think about too.This is exactly what I was thinking as I read through this thread. I have had trouble with other cube cuts becoming very hard in my pipe and the problem was overtamping. With flakes and cube cuts, I’ve learned to pack it very loose and to not tamp, allowing the tobacco to expand in the chamber.
That’s how we roll here…I can’t help feeling that you are grossly overcomplicating what should be a very simple act.
What's the best way to rehydrate Drexel VIII? My previous experiment failed miserably.My recent fixation w Drexel VIII has made me a lot less afraid to take my tobacco to the crispy zone - at least for Virginias, VaPers, flakes, etc. FVF is definitely no exception, imo.
Science.Just musing:
Gawith tobaccos are packed wet as we all know. And our friends there are adamant that they do not produce tobaccos that are meant to be stored. They produce tobacco as they always have which is meant to be bought and enjoyed right away.
Given those things, could this not be why they are packed so wet? The formula a hundred years ago was that you’d walk into a shop on the high street and buy a tin, open it, and the flakes would ride around in the opened tin for a while until you finished them. They never would have been sealed at all in those days. So the wetness they were packed with may have been meant to keep them from getting too dry in an unsealed tin for as long as they’d need to survive.
But today, we store the tins years for age, open them up and jar it all, and then pull wet flakes for smoking and have to contend with the moist condition. But this was not the way in the beginning.
This is just a post-bowl hypothesis, but maybe if we use the tobacco in the same way one did in days gone by, the result calibrated by our friends at GH will be achieved?
Perhaps I’ll open a tin and just leave the tin out on my desk and have a bowl each day until it’s gone to see how it goes.
What's the best way to rehydrate Drexel VIII? My previous experiment failed miserably.