DO:

  • Get an inexpensive corn cob pipe ~10 USD. The trusted famous brand is Missouri Meerschaum.
  • get a well loved “codger blend” like Carter Hall or Prince Albert
  • watch some YouTube videos on packing and lighting; keep it simple (3 step packing)

DON’T

  • buy an expensive pipe to start with
  • get frustrated with learning curve - patience

Tobacco Types

  • wealth of info at tobaccoreviews.com
  • aromatics (broadly, smell good but no taste)
  • virginia / burley: core tobacco leaf types (notes of bread, hay, leather)
  • latakia: smoke cured (campfire smokey smells)

Try them all. See what you like. (But va/burley is the best!)

Image source: https://www.flickr.com/photos/miguellopezmallach/15365251481/in/photostream

  • Dr. Wesker
    link
    41 year ago

    I was just straightening up my storage unit this weekend, and found a jar of Squadron Leader that has to be aged by 6 years by now. I cracked the seal, and it smelled soooo good. Haven’t smoked a pinch yet, saving the experience for my upcoming birthday.

    • Cid
      cake
      OPM
      link
      21 year ago

      If one must smoke latakia, SL is my top recommendation. Subtle balanced smokiness that harmonizes alongside the natural tobacco notes. Happy future BD!

    • EthanolParty
      link
      21 year ago

      I’m a big fan of Squadron Leader, nice taste and and an easy smoke. I have literally nowhere to smoke now, so I’ve got a jar I’m kind of aging out of necessity

  • Rev
    link
    fedilink
    English
    21 year ago

    I tried to get into pipe smoking around 2004. Three of us did. We all bought cheap pipes and would sit around trying to smoke them. The internet was not the same back then for content discovery so we didn’t know what we were doing. I don’t think anyone from that group still smokes a pipe.

    Around the same time I tried to get into cigar smoking. I remember the sampler I got being terrible. Again the internet was not as useful back then.