This is interesting and makes me wonder if the words 'cachimbo' (pron. 'catsimbou') and 'cachimba,' used in Portuguese and Spanish languages for 'pipe,' aren't etymologically related.There is another word, a neutral one, in Greek "τσιμπούκι" ("tsimbouki") - sounds like "cheemboukee". This comes from the Turkish "çubuk", Greeks have lived under (together with) the Turks for 400 years, and hundreds Turkish words are used in Greek. But "çubuk" in Turkish does not mean smoking pipe, it means a wooden stick or a tree branch. This makes sense if you think of the very long pipes of the Ottoman Empire era (as presented in paintings and drawings). Anyway, this second word ("tsimbouki") is seldom used anymore, everybody say "pipa".
I will post the full instructions later today. @hoosierpipeguy can attest, it’s very tasty.
Boy, now that is too cool! I'm thinking in order to drill that stem you might use a heated coat hanger that you have taken apart and repeatedly heating it in a fire or via a torch and working your way down. Just a guess.Three examples (one out of the book "Ye Smokiana: Historical Ethnographical - Pipes of all Nations" by R.T. Pritchett first published 1889/1890 . . . a disappointing book with no pipes made of briar despite briar pipes having been around for a good thirty tears before the book was published)
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... and speaking about wooden sticks and tree branches
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