The French colonial briar industry in Algeria ended about sixty years ago, with Algerian independence.
After independence the People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria forbid briar exports and the Europeans who had managed it left the country. While there still is some local pipe making, and perhaps now some briar exports, the glory days of Algerian briar are long, long gone.
But when Algerian briar was a staple of world briar markets, it was graded.
The most expensive would have been pretty straight grained pieces like this:
This pipe has a fill on the shank, but it’s hard briar, fully polished, and as beautifully straight grained as briar gets.
Contrast that grade with the grade used by Marxman to make a pipe for the American Automobile Association to boost membership rolls.
Or this big Marxman Benchmade with 17 puttied fills and four gouge type carvings used to hide flaws.
I learn something new about pipes, nearly every day.
I think the softer, more spongey, nearly unusable Algerian briar is by far, far and away the best smoking.
My straight grain, or birdseye or cross grain, polished and pretty Algerian briar pipes are all good smokers.
My ugly ones that color brown while you watch it happen, are full of flaws and fills, and soft enough to scratch with a fingernail, are each and every one dynamite smokers, the kind that tempts me to not smoke anything else.
Am I alone believing if you marry an ugly Algerian pipe you’ll be happy all your life?
Or does everybody else chase only the pretty ones?.
After independence the People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria forbid briar exports and the Europeans who had managed it left the country. While there still is some local pipe making, and perhaps now some briar exports, the glory days of Algerian briar are long, long gone.
But when Algerian briar was a staple of world briar markets, it was graded.
The most expensive would have been pretty straight grained pieces like this:
This pipe has a fill on the shank, but it’s hard briar, fully polished, and as beautifully straight grained as briar gets.
Contrast that grade with the grade used by Marxman to make a pipe for the American Automobile Association to boost membership rolls.
Or this big Marxman Benchmade with 17 puttied fills and four gouge type carvings used to hide flaws.
I learn something new about pipes, nearly every day.
I think the softer, more spongey, nearly unusable Algerian briar is by far, far and away the best smoking.
My straight grain, or birdseye or cross grain, polished and pretty Algerian briar pipes are all good smokers.
My ugly ones that color brown while you watch it happen, are full of flaws and fills, and soft enough to scratch with a fingernail, are each and every one dynamite smokers, the kind that tempts me to not smoke anything else.
Am I alone believing if you marry an ugly Algerian pipe you’ll be happy all your life?
Or does everybody else chase only the pretty ones?.
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