Very nice! Beautiful work.Smoking Three Nuns in my very own handmade Apple Blossom pipe with a glass of Sazerac Rye. View attachment 281964
Very nice! Beautiful work.Smoking Three Nuns in my very own handmade Apple Blossom pipe with a glass of Sazerac Rye. View attachment 281964
Thank you sirVery nice! Beautiful work.
That’s a really cool pipe.In my eagerness to smoke the Mapacho last night, I was a bit hasty and only gave the tobacco ten minutes of drying time, which is about what I usually give commercial blends. I knew it was really too damp and the moist tobacco created more steam than I would’ve liked. I thought the Mapacho cut from the log might need days of drying because it was so damp.
After I smoked the “cautious” half bowl (fearing a severe nicotine hit), when I checked the leftover tobacco I had cut from the log that was in my tobacco tray, I discovered that an hour or two of drying would be about right and match the feel tobacco usually gets with my shorter drying time for commercial blends. I just need to plan ahead with this tobacco. The small amount I smoked didn’t affect me differently in any appreciable way, so today I’m going to do a full chamber.
Anyway, I’m going to have the Ecuadorian Mapacho (Nicotiana Rustica) in a Peruvian ceremonial pipe typically used for smoking Mapacho or Ayahuasca, made from Chonta (Bactris Gasipaes—also known as Peach Palm, a hard Amazonian wood often used to make weapons), decorated with cross sections of Ayahuasca vines.
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Lost recipe? How is this possible!??Delicious 2014 SG Bracken Flake in a 1922 Carlyle patent extra special. I just can’t get my head around the fact that SG stopped making this blend, it seems like an insane decision and apparently the recipe is now lost. View attachment 281854
What does Mapacho taste like?In my eagerness to smoke the Mapacho last night, I was a bit hasty and only gave the tobacco ten minutes of drying time, which is about what I usually give commercial blends. I knew it was really too damp and the moist tobacco created more steam than I would’ve liked. I thought the Mapacho cut from the log might need days of drying because it was so damp.
After I smoked the “cautious” half bowl (fearing a severe nicotine hit), when I checked the leftover tobacco I had cut from the log that was in my tobacco tray, I discovered that an hour or two of drying would be about right and match the feel tobacco usually gets with my shorter drying time for commercial blends. I just need to plan ahead with this tobacco. The small amount I smoked didn’t affect me differently in any appreciable way, so today I’m going to do a full chamber.
Anyway, I’m going to have the Ecuadorian Mapacho (Nicotiana Rustica) in a Peruvian ceremonial pipe typically used for smoking Mapacho or Ayahuasca, made from Chonta (Bactris Gasipaes—also known as Peach Palm, a hard Amazonian wood often used to make weapons), decorated with cross sections of Ayahuasca vines.
View attachment 281891
Sweet! What year, do you know? Man, any idea if they did this color, blast and stem in a Zulu?C&D Exclusive in an Ashton LX DublinView attachment 281874
What does Mapacho taste like?
I’ve been looking at getting me a claw pipe, what carver is that one? It’s very nice.
That’s seriously cool! I was looking at Mapacho, but have been leery as the few places I saw it on line listed it as more of an herbal amalgam than solid Brazilian NicRust.In my eagerness to smoke the Mapacho last night, I was a bit hasty and only gave the tobacco ten minutes of drying time, which is about what I usually give commercial blends. I knew it was really too damp and the moist tobacco created more steam than I would’ve liked. I thought the Mapacho cut from the log might need days of drying because it was so damp.
After I smoked the “cautious” half bowl (fearing a severe nicotine hit), when I checked the leftover tobacco I had cut from the log that was in my tobacco tray, I discovered that an hour or two of drying would be about right and match the feel tobacco usually gets with my shorter drying time for commercial blends. I just need to plan ahead with this tobacco. The small amount I smoked didn’t affect me differently in any appreciable way, so today I’m going to do a full chamber.
Anyway, I’m going to have the Ecuadorian Mapacho (Nicotiana Rustica) in a Peruvian ceremonial pipe typically used for smoking Mapacho or Ayahuasca, made from Chonta (Bactris Gasipaes—also known as Peach Palm, a hard Amazonian wood often used to make weapons), decorated with cross sections of Ayahuasca vines.
View attachment 281891
Thanks man,Sweet! What year, do you know? Man, any idea if they did this color, blast and stem in a Zulu?
I recently received a roughly two pound log of Ecuadorian Mapacho (Nicotiana Rustica), which can have up to nine times the amount of nicotine than common tobacco, so I’ll proceed with a relatively small amount to start; when I smoked three consecutive bowls of Sutliff Pipe Force V (which contains Rustica) during a Zoom call with a friend awhile back, I felt the nic hit big time at the end of three hours. I’m going to have the Ecuadorian Mapacho in a Peruvian ceremonial pipe typically used for smoking Mapacho or Ayahuasca, made from Chonta (Bactris Gasipaes—also known as Peach Palm, a hard Amazonian wood often used to make weapons), decorated with cross sections of Ayahuasca vines.
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@tfdickson
I’m curious to hear what you think of this stuff, as I know you also got a log of Mapacho.