Well if you ever get any tobacco that has aged a number of years I suggest you not actually smoke it when you first open the tin. Wait a week or two at best before firing it up! Kind of like wine tobacco loves oxygen so let that new air have time to help it! Jar it and just give it a little time to adjust!Greetings all. My name is JB and I have just this week decided to take another plunge into the pipe world. Over ten years ago I was preparing a sailboat to sail down to Mexico and beyond from Seattle, Wa. I had to stop in Port Townsend to replace the rigging on my boat and was docked next to a large yacht owned by the previous owners of a Seattle Newspaper. Apparently the Captain of the yacht had been watching me swinging on top of the mast in the high winds of the day, installing my rigging. I was a poor cruiser who wanted to and had to, do almost all work on my boat myself. Well this intrigued the captain and he invited me over for drinks that evening. The gentleman was smoking a pipe and during our amused exploration of how the other half lived, I mentioned that I had always been intrigued by piping as my grandfather had smoked a pipe. This well heeled gentleman gave me multiple ounces of different tobacco, saying many of the things I read in the beginner forum here and elsewhere on the net. He told me to go buy a cheap but decent pipe and give it a whirl.
I sailed off and tried to learn the pipe the best I could while sailing singlehanded. I remember a lot of gurgling and wet tobacco, a lot of bite, and generally not the best experience. My best bowl was as I sailed under the Golden Gate Bridge after a long interaction with a storm, but I could have been choking on foul ash and that still would’ve been a great moment to me.
Down to Mexico I went and the tobacco given to me was smoked and my pipe smoking just faded out as my attention was focused on numerous other interesting things.
Bam, into the present and I currently live in Montana, a town now, but have acreage inside a national park with unfinished house/shop that I will be moving into next year. I am not sure what sparked my interest again but I started watching some videos mainly from The Pipe Cottage, Spurgeon Piper and muttnchop. Needless to say my interest was piqued and the whole motivation and philosophy fits my life very well now.
I bought a new Savinelli 626, an estate Jon Vesterholm Zulu, the requisite tools and small amounts of the following: C&D Berries and cream, C&D Autumn Evening, 4th Generation Morning Blend, Pease Quiet Nights, Sillems Black, Savinelli 140, and Sutliff Dunhill 965. I took some advice about tobacco from some YouTubers and just picked a couple on my own. I remember the tobaccos given to me by the captain were very aromatic, blackberry was one I remember.
A rambling introduction but there it is, really excited about my journey with pipe smoking and meeting and interacting with other pipe smokers.
Greetings from Texas! That's one heck of an introduction. Glad you made it here!Greetings all. My name is JB and I have just this week decided to take another plunge into the pipe world. Over ten years ago I was preparing a sailboat to sail down to Mexico and beyond from Seattle, Wa. I had to stop in Port Townsend to replace the rigging on my boat and was docked next to a large yacht owned by the previous owners of a Seattle Newspaper. Apparently the Captain of the yacht had been watching me swinging on top of the mast in the high winds of the day, installing my rigging. I was a poor cruiser who wanted to and had to, do almost all work on my boat myself. Well this intrigued the captain and he invited me over for drinks that evening. The gentleman was smoking a pipe and during our amused exploration of how the other half lived, I mentioned that I had always been intrigued by piping as my grandfather had smoked a pipe. This well heeled gentleman gave me multiple ounces of different tobacco, saying many of the things I read in the beginner forum here and elsewhere on the net. He told me to go buy a cheap but decent pipe and give it a whirl.
I sailed off and tried to learn the pipe the best I could while sailing singlehanded. I remember a lot of gurgling and wet tobacco, a lot of bite, and generally not the best experience. My best bowl was as I sailed under the Golden Gate Bridge after a long interaction with a storm, but I could have been choking on foul ash and that still would’ve been a great moment to me.
Down to Mexico I went and the tobacco given to me was smoked and my pipe smoking just faded out as my attention was focused on numerous other interesting things.
Bam, into the present and I currently live in Montana, a town now, but have acreage inside a national park with unfinished house/shop that I will be moving into next year. I am not sure what sparked my interest again but I started watching some videos mainly from The Pipe Cottage, Spurgeon Piper and muttnchop. Needless to say my interest was piqued and the whole motivation and philosophy fits my life very well now.
I bought a new Savinelli 626, an estate Jon Vesterholm Zulu, the requisite tools and small amounts of the following: C&D Berries and cream, C&D Autumn Evening, 4th Generation Morning Blend, Pease Quiet Nights, Sillems Black, Savinelli 140, and Sutliff Dunhill 965. I took some advice about tobacco from some YouTubers and just picked a couple on my own. I remember the tobaccos given to me by the captain were very aromatic, blackberry was one I remember.
A rambling introduction but there it is, really excited about my journey with pipe smoking and meeting and interacting with other pipe smokers.
Welcome from Ohio!Greetings all. My name is JB and I have just this week decided to take another plunge into the pipe world. Over ten years ago I was preparing a sailboat to sail down to Mexico and beyond from Seattle, Wa. I had to stop in Port Townsend to replace the rigging on my boat and was docked next to a large yacht owned by the previous owners of a Seattle Newspaper. Apparently the Captain of the yacht had been watching me swinging on top of the mast in the high winds of the day, installing my rigging. I was a poor cruiser who wanted to and had to, do almost all work on my boat myself. Well this intrigued the captain and he invited me over for drinks that evening. The gentleman was smoking a pipe and during our amused exploration of how the other half lived, I mentioned that I had always been intrigued by piping as my grandfather had smoked a pipe. This well heeled gentleman gave me multiple ounces of different tobacco, saying many of the things I read in the beginner forum here and elsewhere on the net. He told me to go buy a cheap but decent pipe and give it a whirl.
I sailed off and tried to learn the pipe the best I could while sailing singlehanded. I remember a lot of gurgling and wet tobacco, a lot of bite, and generally not the best experience. My best bowl was as I sailed under the Golden Gate Bridge after a long interaction with a storm, but I could have been choking on foul ash and that still would’ve been a great moment to me.
Down to Mexico I went and the tobacco given to me was smoked and my pipe smoking just faded out as my attention was focused on numerous other interesting things.
Bam, into the present and I currently live in Montana, a town now, but have acreage inside a national park with unfinished house/shop that I will be moving into next year. I am not sure what sparked my interest again but I started watching some videos mainly from The Pipe Cottage, Spurgeon Piper and muttnchop. Needless to say my interest was piqued and the whole motivation and philosophy fits my life very well now.
I bought a new Savinelli 626, an estate Jon Vesterholm Zulu, the requisite tools and small amounts of the following: C&D Berries and cream, C&D Autumn Evening, 4th Generation Morning Blend, Pease Quiet Nights, Sillems Black, Savinelli 140, and Sutliff Dunhill 965. I took some advice about tobacco from some YouTubers and just picked a couple on my own. I remember the tobaccos given to me by the captain were very aromatic, blackberry was one I remember.
A rambling introduction but there it is, really excited about my journey with pipe smoking and meeting and interacting with other pipe smokers.