Cadence and dry tobacco, no relights needed and cool smoke.
My biggest discovery with regards to pipe smoking has been this incredible forum and some of the guys in it.Yes, finding the right bowl size is an important factor.
I like a group 4 no wider than 20 mm diameter.
Also, finding that I really like Dunhills and Ashtons has definitely upped my appreciation of smoking a pipe.
Northern Briars are good too.
My other pipes have kind of relegated themselves out of my rotation.
Aged doesn’t always mean better.
Yes.Your taste for blends evolves. Blends you don't like should be jarred and tried again in a year or two; you may find them wonderful with age and with your own evolution in taste.
My grandfather [who lived through the Great Depression] once advised "There's no such thing as bad beer son. There's good beer and then there's better beer."In modern context, there is no such thing as "Bad Tobacco".
The difference between those of us who are fast puffers and those who "can smoke a bowl for hours", is that the latter tend to be those who smoke one bowl a day while fast puffers smoke several, generally speaking of course. [And I suspect that most 'fast puffers' also inhale]I learned that I' m a fast to very fast puffer and that only Latakia mixtures, Kentucky and European brown tobaccos help me with slowing the cadence. It must be a temperament thing, in fact I think I' m just a poseur pipe smoker that after 30+ years of pipe smoking can't get it right. Don't get me wrong, I know how to pack, light and enjoy a pipe with minimum relights but I envy all the pipe smokers that can smoke one bowl of Virginia for hours.
You don't have to be older or 70 or 90 to enjoy good tobacco. Either you like it or you don't like it. You can doubt when you start the first months. You can't doubt one year after anotherThe difference between those of us who are fast puffers and those who "can smoke a bowl for hours", is that the latter tend to be those who smoke one bowl a day while fast puffers smoke several, generally speaking of course. [And I suspect that most 'fast puffers' also inhale]
Speaking for myself, I've treated stress and depression with cigarettes from a very young age [before I switched to a pipe over 11 years ago]
It's an ingrained habit. The ritual of smoking calms me so a pipe is very much like an adult pacifier.
An unlit pipe gives me something to do with my hands.
I've not got the temperament to sit quietly sipping on a pipe for hours. [Which I'm sure is quite meditative and relaxing] Maybe when I'm really old and highly medicated but until then, I'll enjoy doing it my way.
As long as one gains positive benefit from and enjoys the experience, there's no such thing as right or wrong.
Ha ha, well, I am one who says this. But not because "I" think pipe smoking is hard, but because after being on here for almost a decade it is obvious that with the hundre3ds of questions posted a week that either... most new members are morons (which I do not believe at all) or it is far more difficult than cigars. How many questions are required to fire up a pre-rolled stick? And, in comparison look at how many people ask about; packing, lighting, burning their tongue, burning their pipes, relighting, cleaning and care of the pipe... then we go into pipe styles, chamber dimensions, lengths, weights, and then add in the thousands of questions about types of tobaccos.I'm in the "we make pipe smoking waaaaaay to difficult" camp. The ppl who say "cigar smoking is for noobs, pipe smoking is hard" are clueless IMHO. I F'ed up more cigars than I have pipe tobacco, that's for sure.