Sometimes, (I've found) some things can be much more enjoyable when they find themselves behind the 'thin blue line'. Smoke on, you rebel.Greetings from the ''Outlaw Greek Pipe Smoking Team"
Epos Green River.
There's some zen wisdom.. I like to cook like that. If I end up with something good then I'm forced to just enjoy what I have while it lasts.Once it's gone, it's gone forever.
This might help you, https://pipedia.org/wiki/Dr._Plumb'sCan anybody please help me with info on this estate pipe I bought. Tried pipepedia, no info.
Its a DR Plumb GT, on the back of the bowl it`s stamped GT3.
I was thinking, nice pipe, Bob. Didn't know you had anything beautiful like that, but then I discovered @Knucklehead gave it to you and it all made sense.I grabbed some tobacco of several varieties (VA Red Cavendish, Little Yellow Cavendish, Krumovgrad), didn't measure anything, and just shredded and blended it. I didn't write down the ratios. It was just fun to make up something that felt right. It came to about 2 ounces. Once it's gone, it's gone forever.
Aroma and flavor are full, with a medium-to-full nicotine. Burn is okay. Very nice for a fleeting blend.
At the moment, I'm smoking it in the wonderful poker, sitter that @Knucklehead made for me some years back. The wood grain of the sides is mostly birdseye (with perfectly straight grain on the bottom of the bowl). [Does a sitter pipe sit on its tush?]
I should probably dust my pipe stands and polish all the bits, before capturing them for eternity in a photo.
Bob
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