Lick me crazy, but the same thing will happen with wine, whiskey and many other distillates. Quality will go down, and this industry will be museum history. I hope I am wrong.This makes me nervous about quality going down.
There aren’t that many. There are just a half dozen companies who make all the different pipe blends under different names. Losing Mac Baren presumably means now STG will also make the Sutliff blends, the Newminster line, Presbyterian, Capstan, etc. It’s just more homogenization in our little hobby.Considering that pipe smoking is kind of a niche thing anymore, I was really surprised that there are as many different manufacturers as there are. I wouldn't have thought there were enough pipe smokers to support them.
If it's good for milk, it must be great for pipe tobacco!It’s just more homogenization in our little hobby.
If it's good for milk, it must be great for pipe tobacco!
Never change, my friendIf it's good for milk, it must be great for pipe tobacco!
I was wondering about this so that's good to know.The acquisition will have to pass muster with Danish, EU and US antitrust regulators, but yeah: bad news all around.
I didn’t realize they allowed production on the original sites for blends they acquire. I was envisioning huge corporate vats of generic Virginia, Burley, etc. going into everything they make.Well that's a little sad, but historically from what I recall when STG has acquired other companies they usually just let the company keep doing what they're doing producing the same blends on the same machinery; the only difference being a minor change of text on the label. This does add some more context to Per Georg Jensen's recent departure from Mac Baren though, and if there does happen to be any change in the quality of their blends over the coming years that would be the reason I'd be more likely to point to.
Please give some examples?Well that's a little sad, but historically from what I recall when STG has acquired other companies they usually just let the company keep doing what they're doing producing the same blends on the same machinery
Nonsense! Everything they bought up in the US, they took back to Denmark. Once a Viking, always a Viking...Well that's a little sad, but historically from what I recall when STG has acquired other companies they usually just let the company keep doing what they're doing producing the same blends on the same machinery; the only difference being a minor change of text on the label. This does add some more context to Per Georg Jensen's recent departure from Mac Baren though, and if there does happen to be any change in the quality of their blends over the coming years that would be the reason I'd be more likely to point to.