oh and I have to ad a good quote for some exes is Good bye to Good rubbish.
Lol sometimes I wonder if your significant other of over a decade is in fact imaginaryoh and I have to ad a good quote for some exes is Good bye to Good rubbish.
One's a soap and so is the other. What's the difference? ?I think you mean Ennerdale; Emmerdale was a British TV Soap...
one gives you cancer and the other is tobaccoOne's a soap and so is the other. What's the difference? ?
Popular = what the lemmings who previously believed tobacco made in Kendal UK all tasted like urinal cakes and granny’s panties have been told to buy.Sure none of the popular ones, but there is brown flake aromatic/scented.
I don't swallow my soap.one gives you cancer and the other is tobacco
I didn't know that. What bloody snobs! Now it sells this:Dunhill, for one, advertised that they didn’t use a shred of Commonwealth leaf, thus justifying the higher price of their blends on the U.K. domestic market.
Good point. Actually one trusted reviewer noticed the significant menthol flavour coming through from blends packaged in the tins with the green labels. This might help narrow it down tooJust thinking maybe if you remember or partially remember what the tin looked like? Square or Round and any colors from the label? Prob won’t narrow it down with all the blends out there but every detail will help dudes help you lol.
Totally agree with all of the above. In fact when I factored in shipping costs to the furthest reaches of the commonwealth down under, I’d invariably order my GH/SG from the motherland as the access to the full catalogue was worth the marginal price difference (unless of course one was after the 500g boxes...then everything is bigger and cheaper from Texas)Popular = what the lemmings who previously believed tobacco made in Kendal UK all tasted like urinal cakes and granny’s panties have been told to buy.
If you look at Boswells offerings and cross reference them with even the confused reviews at Tobacco Reviews, you can come up with a wide range of “typical” flavors.
Prior to 1985 and the changes in pipe tobacco manufacture regulations that Margaret Thatcher introduced, there was an approved list of ingredients that could be added to tobacco and what methods could be used to add them. I believe the late Rusty posted this list on Christian Pipe Smokers, but it is no longer there. The only thing “typical” about Lakeland flavorings is that they were on this list. GH today uses virtually the whole gamut, usually more than one in a given blend. The combinations are potentially almost infinite.
GH leaf tends to lean more toward various air cured, fire cured and darker flue cured leaf than is typical today, which to be palatable to many, requires flavorings. This was known colloquially as “Commonwealth“ leaf due to its origins in the then UK colonies in Africa and India. Such leaf could at various times be imported under Commonwealth trade preferences, thus at lower cst than tobacco from the US. Dunhill, for one, advertised that they didn’t use a shred of Commonwealth leaf, thus justifying the higher price of their blends on the U.K. domestic market.
Wow 950 bucks. Now that's a stealI didn't know that. What bloody snobs! Now it sells this:
I think they use #7 It in a number of things. Cant ever be sure, but I bought two ounces from the January drop, smoked most of it, and bought 500 g this last appearance.Kendal #7 is available at SP.com right now. I believe they use this blend as the base for many of their Lakeland blends. It's available in Bulk so you could try an ounce for starters....
Just saying....
Coniston cut plug is a more subtle Lakelands but a strong tobacco blend. It's pretty delicious....
The pipe tobacco ads I have seen dated circa the 1930’s.I didn't know that. What bloody snobs! Now it sells this: