When I was a little kid, I remember a lot of the old codgers that hung out at the local dairy co-op would bang out their pipe on the sole of their shoe. Some estates I've seen, it looks like the original owner banged them out on a rock or something. This is clearly no good for the rim, and probably pretty hard on the shank-bowl junction, as well.
These oldsters were true blue been-there done-that survivors of the Great Depression. These guys would keep a hardware-store pocket knife until it had only a sliver of blade left from all the sharpening. They treated their tools like they were irreplaceable gifts from God himself. I've often heard many guys of that generation only owned one pipe at a time, which would also be in keeping with the frugality of Depression-era thought.
Does anyone know what would posess them to treat their pipes so horribly, when they treated eveythong else with such evident care?
These oldsters were true blue been-there done-that survivors of the Great Depression. These guys would keep a hardware-store pocket knife until it had only a sliver of blade left from all the sharpening. They treated their tools like they were irreplaceable gifts from God himself. I've often heard many guys of that generation only owned one pipe at a time, which would also be in keeping with the frugality of Depression-era thought.
Does anyone know what would posess them to treat their pipes so horribly, when they treated eveythong else with such evident care?