It's funny how it happens sometimes ain't it? I just saw a random ad once. Boom. I'm going to be a pipe smoker. And here we are.Here’s a funny story. On September 11, 2011 I landed in Louisville KY and drove to Lexington for a week long seminar.
When I drove by the tobacco barns I thought they were cigar tobacco barns. I knew zero about tobacco.
Took a crash course. Read a bunch and on September 13, 2011 became a pipe smoker.
Now I still don’t know much, but my wallet isn’t as thick.
Congratulations! You win a thumbs up emoji.I'd guess burley since it's air dried. Is there a prize?
For the last week or so, yes. At the beginning, when it's off-gassing ammonia, not so much.I bet the inside smells great!
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My father in law took this pic 2 years ago on our way home from a pumpkin patch in the fall. Anyone have any idea what leaf this might be? My guess is Burley.
Very cool. Excellent insight. Thank you for this.Dark Fired in TN comes from Northern Middle TN, it's basically what pipe smokers call Kentucky. If you are 20 miles north of Nashville in the fall, near Clarksville, the land smells of wonder. These barns are always tall and rectangular.
The one in the picture above is what I am used too, an air dry set up. The humidity in the Midsouth makes this area the perfect environment for such curing as the leaves rehydrate at night, after drying during the hot days and vs other areas where it never rehydrates to the degrees necessary for certain micro curing processes.
I've reclaimed some wood from some of these types of barns that have fallen over. It always smells like Bruton Snuff my great grandmother dipped when you cut, plane or burn it....