Alright I smoked my sample! Notes to follow, but first a big thank you to Clickklick. :worship: Goodwill and generosity seems in short supply these days and I'm delighted to find a place where folks are enthusiastic to share things. This was a lot of fun and I'm grateful for the opportunity.
I don't have a lot of time to write but I wanted to get my impressions out now rather than put it off any longer. Bear with me if this seems a bit of a stream of consciousness.
I typically smoke small pipes, usually size 1-3 the widest of which has a 18mm bowl. Having gone a few weeks without smoking a shred of latakia and also having a sav 320 recently arrived, I thought this might be a perfect opportunity to see what a wide bowl can do with an english blend. The 320 ingested roughly 3/4 of the sample leaving just enough to fill the bowl of a belgique later just to form a basis of comparison.
As I mentioned, the bag note shares a similar aroma to emp but the similarities end there. I tend to largely ignore bag notes and the appearance of tobacco. I know some folks really enjoy this aspect of exploration but I find them to often be red herrings, which was the case here.
It's a broken flake. However some of the strands are unusually long and thick which I think has a lot to do with the unusual flavor profile of this tobacco. The opening note was barnyard, peat, pine pitch of cyprian latakia. I braced myself for a bare knuckle brawl. But it was not to be.
A sweetness emerged, (sweetened black cav, I assume) and took the edge off the latakia. As soon as I was getting used to the idea of smoking a sweet english, a creamy nuttiness began to develop (burley?) shifting the whole flavor profile to something more akin to an american english. I really enjoy that category of tobaccos, though it's something new to me. Up to this point, this blend was reminiscent of St John, from the Owl Shop albeit with a lot more sweetness.
Toward the end, I picked up on a flavor I can't recall ever associating with tobacco before, strawberry.
This was a very unusual and complex smoke. At all times it was remarkably creamy, rich and delightfully full on the palate. The flavors seemed to unfold (pop might be a more apt descriptor) one at a time, but once know, they all seemed to build on each other. I smoked hal o the wynd a bit later and found the difference in smoke volume and fullness to be readily apparent. I found latakia, burley, and black cav. The virginia component didn't stand out nor did any oriental notes.
Right, here comes the hard part. I would definitely recommend this to someone looking for a complex yet easy to smoke sweet english. That said, I probably would not look to add any more as it exceeds my (very low) tolerance for sweetness. I know my tastes in tobacco tend to vary wildly depending on weather, diet, phase of the moon, to the point that making a numeric ranking on something this subjective isn't really worthwhile. That said, I can see how this blend could be someone's perfect 10.
Thanks again for including me. This is probably something that I wouldn't have tried and am very glad I did!