I've been smoking a pipe for going on 40 years now and even with 5 kids I'm no grandpa yet, but here's a story for you. My great grandfather (my mom's grandfather on her mother's side) used to live with my grandparents, and as a kid I spent lots of time with my grandparents. My great grandfather was an Italian immigrant, a brick layer by trade. He always smoked a pipe and I can remember sitting on his lap while he spoke to me in Italian (I didn't understand a word he was saying) while he puffed away on his pipe. I can remember the sight in my mind's eye as if it was yesterday. Same goes for that wonderful smell. Fast forward to around 1981. I was a medical resident at the time and was attending a pathology lecture given by the head pathologist. In my early medical career you could smoke a pipe anywhere in the hospital (except for the operating room!) and many doctors did so with wonderful aromas surrounding me. I settled in for the lecture and the pathologist started off by lighting his pipe. After a few minutes the aroma of his pipe reached where I was sitting and I was immediately taken back to that wonderful smell of my great grandfather's pipe. I had been smoking a pipe for several years at the time and this was the first and only time since that I smelled that same pipe aroma. I was determined to find out the blend. After the lecture, and when time permitted me, I walked by the pathologist's office. There he was, seated at and peering into his microscope, puffing away. Again, that same wonderful smell. I didn't want to disturb his train of thought so I didn't enter. However, after passing by his doorway a portion of an adjacent wall that wasn't at first visible to me came into view. There must have been at least 100 50gram round tins of Flying Dutchman. I certainly didn't need to ask what he was smoking! I smoked FD a few times prior to this encounter and it always fried my tongue. I was determined to try it again. With a lot of perseverance and patience I managed to tame the Dutchman; but as you well know the baccy never smells the same to the smoker while smoking it as it does to the non smoker in the room. Only on rare occasion did I get that elusive whiff (and unfortunately very fleeting) that all started on my great grandfather's knee. The smelling mechanism in our brains is very close to (and connected with) our limbic system. Part of the limbic system is where memories are stored. No wonder smells can allow us to recall past experiences with such an acute vividness, transporting us back to, as in my case, a time and place long gone...it can be a wonderful experience and I am grateful to God for that!