So when I have 8 oz or so to prepair I turn into a ropemaker exraordinaire. No sooner do I get one batch prepaired that I start on the next. I get into a kind of rope frenzy. With a few batches done I positively enjoy it.
You better post pictures or the group will start getting mad.So when I have 8 oz or so to prepair I turn into a ropemaker exraordinaire. No sooner do I get one batch prepaired that I start on the next. I get into a kind of rope frenzy. With a few batches done I positively enjoy it.
Nope it's a lot less safe for work then any of that.Is he talking about boating? Being a hangman? Repelling? It's just so hard to picture it without pictures.
Pictures would’ve helped you sound less insane.I'm all grown up; that is, there are certain things that I will no longer do, nor take seriously that I should do, like posting illustrative pictures. In a little less than a month I will be 69.
An important part of the peace of old age is picking things about which to no longer care.
Thus I claim patriarchal exception to picture posting, though, feeling your loss, will give you more words:
1) Start peeling the outer layers Ready a jar and cut a 6-12" segment of the rope
2) Unravel the outer layers, usually whole leaf of some type different than the inner.
3) As you penetrate into the inner portion you will find sub-ropes, if you will, all of them twisted themselves and all of them twisted together to form the rope proper.
4) So the task is to untwist any part of the rope that has been cylindrically twisted, teasing the tobacco into a flat sheet as far as you can.
5) Air dry overnight
6) Tear all the flattened pieces into smaller pieces, and grab bunches to be rubbed out.
Something I do care about: Ordering 500g of Black Rope.
Pictures would’ve helped you sound less insane.
That’s not complicated enough.I will lay my cigar cutter down flat on a table, insert a rope end down touching the table through the cutter, and slice. I just cut a whole rope section into slices in one setting and then dry it. I get nice thin slices that way, which rub out into almost a shag. But, that depends on the design of the cigar cutter.
I will lay my cigar cutter down flat on a table, insert a rope end down touching the table through the cutter, and slice. I just cut a whole rope section into slices in one setting and then dry it. I get nice thin slices that way, which rub out into almost a shag. But, that depends on the design of the cigar cutter.