Featured Pipe Smoker: Brad Donovan

Profession: Supervisor for an oilfield heating company.

Location: Grande Prairie, Alberta

Years smoking a pipe: 5

Favorite blends: Because pipe tobacco is very expensive in Canada I buy my yearly ration when I visit the states. My favorite blend is the Cavendish blend from Sturmon’s Smoke Shop in Boise, Idaho. It is a dark, smooth and tasty tobacco.

Favorite pipe smoker: My favorite pipe smoker would be CS Lewis, followed by General MacArthur. Two of the manliest men for sure.

How did you start smoking a pipe? I have been smoking pipe for five years. It all started when a friend and I went for a drive from Grande Prairie to Jasper for the weekend. He smoked pipe, and I had a pipe, so we smoked the whole way down. Two hours of hotboxing later, I was a confirmed pipesmoker.

What’s the best thing about smoking a pipe? One of the funny things about smoking a pipe is that everyone wants to do it. I have converted pretty much everyone at work to pipe smoking. Pipe smoking is manly, glorious, heavy. God is a smoker too. Look at all the burnt offerings in Leviticus. God consumes the smoke, and it is a pleasing aroma. Being made in God’s image by God means I smoke like God does. Take that, sanctimonious teetotalers!

Featured Pipe Smoker: Kit Howden

Behold our first Featured Pipe Smoker from o’er the pond!

Kit Howden

Profession: IT chap, general techno wizard

Location: Hertfordshire, England

Website: http://peter-is-my-religion.blogspot.com/ (sweary, ranty, obscure, bears no relevance to reality)

Years smoking a pipe: 2 years

Favorite blends: Alsbo Black, Captain black’s, Alsbo Gold, I’m a mild chap…

Favorite pipe(s): Peterson Spigot

Favorite pipe smoker: Albert Einstein, “I believe that pipe smoking contributes to a somewhat calm and objective judgment in all human affairs.”

What’s the best part of smoking a pipe?
The relaxation and the craft and the care of your materials.

What’s manly about smoking a pipe?
Pipe smoking is the very incarnation of what it means to be a man. A choice of culture and status, a step outside of convention and into manhood.

How did you start smoking a pipe?
I had always had an eye for pipe smoking, the smell, and look, I think it was a natural progression from hanging in pubs, drinking real ale and having an interest in classic cars.

What was your most interesting moment as a pipe smoker?
I guess every time I go to buy tobacco, as I’m relatively young (27) for a pipe smoker round here, I get a good deal of raised eyebrows when I purchase a tin of Erinmore flake rather than the more usual 20 Lambert & Butlers (hateful cigarettes at best)!

Miscellania you’d like to add:
Writing this has given me desire to have a nice bowl of flake in the pub garden…

Featured Pipe Smoker: Dan (DDime1)

Dan with his favorite pipe, a Balkovec Nose Warmer.

Dan, aka ddime1 (YouTube)
Profession: Preventive Maintenance Coordinator at a large hospital.

Location: Boston, MA

Website: fasttracktopoverty.blogspot.com, www.youtube.com/user/ddime1

Years smoking a pipe: About one.

Favorite blends: Solani Aged Burley Flake, Frog Morton, Boswell’s Chocolate Cream, and Solani Aged Burley Flake (so good I had to list it twice).

Favorite pipe(s): Balkovec Nose Warmer. Check out Mark’s pipes if you haven’t already. Great guy; great pipes.

Favorite pipe smoker: Papa! Ernest Hemingway.

What’s the best part of smoking a pipe? 
The relaxing time that usually accompanies the smoke. For a parent of small children, any time spent in quiet is a blessing, and with a pipe added, it’s damn near heavenly.

What’s manly about smoking a pipe?
All that is manly in other activities is contained within pipe smoking.

How did you start smoking a pipe?
As a child, I always wanted to be Sherlock Holmes. While that didn’t happen, I did manage to get around to the pipe smoking part. I purposely skipped the deerstalker headgear.

What was your most interesting/funniest/compelling/whatever moment as a pipe smoker?
My time as a pipe smoker has been filled with interesting, funny, and compelling moments. The camaraderie that exists among pipe smokers is unbelievable. Smoking a pipe has put me in touch with many like minded individuals; those who do not smoke a pipe would not believe that a small chunk of carved briar could be the cause of such bond building and merry making.

Featured Pipe Smoker: N. Ortolano

N. Ortolano

Profession: Photographer and writer, and co-owner of Orleans Apothecary, a vintage shop with my wife.

Location: NW Florida.

Website: ortolano.tumblr.com, orleansapothecary.tumblr.com

Years smoking a pipe: One year with a pipe, close to ten with cigars.

Favorite blends: My preference is usually English, or a mix of Burley and Virginia Bits with a pinch of Virginia Flake and Latakia. Epitome in my hometown of Biloxi, MS has a perfectly blended cherry vanilla that I enjoy when I want an aromatic. It’s the most public-friendly tobacco I’ve found.

Favorite pipe(s): I have about eight briars in my rotation, all Calabresi and all babied. I have a Missouri Meerschaum Country Gentleman that’s my work-day pipe. I don’t take the best care of it (I abuse it, actually) but surprisingly, it’s also my best smoker.

Favorite pipe smoker: Honestly, Mark Twain. His stance on tobacco usage was brilliant. Google “Nicotine Nannies” if you’re unfamilia with it.

What’s the best part of smoking a pipe? It’s a toss-up, I’d say, between being incredibly inexpensive in comparison to cigars or cigarettes, and infinitely more enjoyable. Once you learn how your face-furnace works, there’s nothing quite as relaxing. It’s also nice that, while most people are starting to rally against cigarette smokers as a whole, I get nothing but compliments for my pipes.

What’s manly about smoking a pipe? What’s more manly than knowing how to keep a fire going? Aside from the physics behind it, to choose to smoke a pipe is an exercise in the sort of patience only a true gentleman exhibits. It takes time to pack a pipe. It takes time to enjoy it. But, in the end, the reward is far, far greater than anything else.

How did you start smoking a pipe? I was tired of smoking cigarettes, and wondered what pipe smoking would be like. Started researching the hobby, and fell in love.


What was your most interesting/funniest/compelling/whatever moment as a pipesmoker? Sitting in my truck in a parking lot, lighting my pipe, a police officer walked past my open window and did a double-take. He was shocked to see that it was, in fact, tobacco. I think being 24 years old at the time is
what really threw him off. A close second is the time my best mate, whom I’d recently converted to pipe smoking, bought a new pipe Zippo and filled it with a bit too much fluid. He went to light his pipe and instead, lit his entire hand on fire.

Featured Pipe Smoker: Gregg (Buzz)

Gregg (Buzz)

Profession: Truck Driver/Delivery

Location: Rhode Island

Website: on facebook. Also on facebook “Good Taste” (Gentlemen of Good Taste)

Years smoking a pipe: one

Favorite blends: Yellow Jacket, Mike’s Blend, Sambuca

Favorite pipe(s): my Kriswill bent

Favorite pipe smoker: “Old man at the game” (see compelling moment below)

What’s the best part of smoking a pipe? Knowing that at that moment you have no care or worries. That time with my pipe is cherished and my mind drifts away from stress and work and puts me into a place I’d like to visit more often.

What’s manly about smoking a pipe? It screams “Classic Gentlemen”.

How did you start smoking a pipe? I always loved the smell, look and history of pipe smoking and always wanted to try. It took a camping trip with friends one October to try it and I guess the setting and experience was too perfect to look back.

What was your most compelling as a pipesmoker? I’d have to say it was back when I was probably 8 or 9 years old and at Red Sox game with my father and sister and sitting in front of us was the “classic” old man. Round build, white hair and beard, flannel shirt with his eye glass case stuffed in the breast pocket….suspenders and all. I just remember smelling the aroma from the pipe he was smoking and instantly loving it. I found myself losing interest in the game and focusing on this man. Maybe I though he was Santa Claus, (but at 8 or 9 I think I knew better). At the end of the game he stood up to leave and gave me a smile and nod and it always stuck with me,

Miscellania you’d like to add: Soon to be daddy for 1st time!

Featured Pipe Smoker: J. J. Alvarez


Jeremiah Weisman Alvarez

Profession: Barber (propitiator of a good shave)

Location: The Great Desert of Arizona

Website: on facebook.

Years smoking a pipe: 9

Favorite blends: Royal Viking, Fox & Hound, Irish Creme

Favorite pipe(s): My Bjarne Viking Matte, my Savinello Doppio Filtro

Favorite pipe smoker: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Albert Einstein

What’s the best part of smoking a pipe? The Manliness, rich culture, and of course the fine smoothness of a nice smooth smoke.


What’s manly about smoking a pipe? It’s a time lost art dominated by the dapper male

How did you start smoking a pipe? I spent a lot of time wishing for a handlebar mustache and reading Americana literature…it was bound to happen.

What was your most interesting/funniest/compelling/whatever moment as a pipesmoker? Being admired at a young age for mastering the art of packing/smoking a good pipe, the ol’timers at the VFW love it.


Miscellania you’d like to add: whether you spend $20 or $200, take care of your pipe and it will take care of you. Pipe smoking was a lost art that I truly believe is getting a second wind.

A Primer For The Young Pipester: Part 2

This is the second of a two-part post guest written by Cody Deitz. Cody is a student at Cal State Northridge, and thoroughly enjoys Camus. I do not enjoy Camus, and yet we are brought together by our appreciation for the pipe. 

Now that you know a little about what’s in pipe tobacco, it’s time to decide what you’re going to be taking home with you, and this is where I think many experienced pipe smokers unintentionally guide newcomers down the wrong path. Nine times out of ten, an experienced pipe smoker will recommend an aromatic as the first blend for a beginning pipe smoker. The most common reasoning behind this advice is because aromatics tend to smell more pleasant, and I think that’s missing the point. As a new pipe smoker, you’re not going to have developed the ability to puff slowly and will be almost guaranteed to burn your mouth. Most aromatics tend worsen this situation. As a beginning pipe smoker, I picked out things that smelled sweet and proceeded to puff my mouth into a charred mess, causing me to put the pipe down and go back to cigarettes. This is not what we want. Since non-aromatics do not have the extra sugar and additives that tend to burn hotter, the result is a much cooler smoke, and what better for a new pipe smoker?

So with that knowledge, I say get both. Grab an aromatic that smells good to you and ask
the tobacconist for a non-aromatic that’s not overwhelming. Again, don’t be afraid to ask
questions. Most tobacconists are usually thrilled to usher a young guy into their world.

All you need now are a few small but important things. You’ll definitely want to get a
package of pipe cleaners. Remember those things you used to make art in the 2nd grade? Yes,
they’re actually used to clean pipes. You’ll also need a pipe tool. A good choice is a Czech 3-
pronged pipe tool which has a tamp, a miniature scoop, and a thin prong to aid in cleaning. Oh,
and a box of matches. Unless you’re a purist, your average plastic lighter will work fine. Now
with your pipe, two tobacco blends, pipe tool, pipe cleaners, and matches/lighter, you’re ready to
get started.

When it comes to actually smoking your pipe, there are many varying methods and styles
of doing things. Figuring out your preferences is one of the enjoyable things about the hobby, so
don’t worry about whether you’re doing things “right.” As far as packing the pipe goes, a good
place to start is the 3-pinch method. Take a generous pinch of tobacco from your pouch or tin
and pack it in the bowl with the same firmness that you would grip a baby’s hand. Now take a
second pinch and pack it in the bowl with the same firmness that you would use when squeezing
a woman’s hand. Then take a third pinch and pack it in the bowl with the same firmness you
would use when squeezing/shaking a man’s hand. With this method you’ll get a decent pack that
will work just fine until you can figure out exactly how you like to do it.

Lighting the bowl is pretty straight-forward. Most smokers perform what’s known as
a “charring light.” Since tobacco expands from the heat of the flame, a post-lighting tamp is
usually necessary. So with your first match you want to liberally light the entire top surface of
the tobacco (while trying not to torch the rim of the bowl itself). You’ll see the tobacco move
and rise slightly. Now take the tamp on that Czech pipe tool you picked up and tamp down the
tobacco firmly, but not too firmly. You should still be able to feel the sponginess of the tobacco.
If you don’t have your tool then a finger works just fine. Be mindful of the burning embers in the
bowl when tamping with your finger.

Now that you have your pipe, tobacco, and all the accoutrements, you’re ready to see if
this hobby’s for you. The best advice I can give to the new pipe smoker is, above all, PUFF
GENTLY AND SLOWLY. Avoiding a burnt tongue and mouth is pretty easy if you’re mindful
of what you’re doing. With that being said, pipe smoking is all about enjoyment. Don’t get
caught up in following the “rules.” All the rules discussed by older pipe smokers and on forums
are just guidelines. Above all, do what you enjoy. Experience will teach you how to get the
most enjoyment from your pipe adventures. Cheers!

A Primer For The Young Pipester: Part 1

This is the first of a two-part post guest written by Cody Deitz. Cody is a student at Cal State Northridge, and thoroughly enjoys Camus. I do not enjoy Camus, and yet we are brought together by our appreciation for the pipe. The second part will be posted on Wednesday.

As I put flame to the tobacco in my bowl, I almost always turn heads. A twenty-one year old Californian college student smoking a pipe is an uncommon sight to most. Even though many Californians tend to be anti-tobacco (L.A. is particularly vehement), I get positive comments about my pipe the majority of the time. If you have the ability to get past the initial awkwardness that comes with being a young pipe smoker, you won’t be unpopular.

Unfortunately, many young guys completely miss out on this opportunity, either because they’re lured in by the convenience of the cigarette, or because they feel like it’s something “old guys do.” So for all those young gentlemen like myself who feel drawn to the pipe for whatever reason, I’d like to give you a bit of an introduction into the rich world and almost infinite pleasure of pipe smoking.

Like most hobbies, there’s no better way to get into pipe smoking then to jump in. Go out and buy yourself a decent pipe. I got lucky and had a friend who was generous enough to shell out a few dollars to get me a nice starter, but most guys will probably go out and buy their own pipe. With this first pipe, price is an important factor. You don’t want to buy a hundred-dollar pipe only to find you don’t particularly care for the hobby, but you want to give yourself the opportunity to truly enjoy your first foray into pipe smoking. The ideal price range for your first pipe is between $20 and $50. If you have the ability to spend $50 without breaking your budget, then go for the $40-$50 range. If you’re like me, then $50 is a good amount of cash. You at least
want to spend more than $20 to ensure you get a decent piece of briar. And that takes us to our
next topic.

Pipes are made out of all sorts of materials, from the iconic Corn Cob pipe to the Dutch clay pipe. The preferred material for most American and European pipe smokers is briar wood, which is derived from the root of Erica arborea. For this first pipe, briar is a great way to go. It’s sturdier than clay and corn cob, and generally less expensive than other materials such as meerschaum.

Now on to where you can locate this first piece of briar. The best place to go is a legitimate tobacconist. I’m not talking about the discount cigarette store around the corner that has a couple pipes in their case. I’m talking about a real tobacconist. Depending on where you live, a tobacconist may be hard to find, in which case your best bet might be locating a reputable cigar shop. Many cigar vendors will have at least a few pipes to choose from, and they’re usually of decent quality. When you track down a legitimate tobacconist you want to physically walk in.

Few things can kill the magic of choosing your first pipe than picking something from the internet. You want to walk in to the smoky shop, meet the tobacconist himself, and tell him what you’re doing. Most tobacconists will be more than happy to guide you on your baby steps into the world of pipe smoking. Even if this tobacconist doesn’t specialize in pipes, I’ve never met an old cigar shop owner who disapproved of a fresh pipe smoker.

If you’re the type of person who likes to do things themselves, there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that. In this case, you want to walk in and make a B-Line for the “basket pipes.” They are named such because many shops will (or used to) keep their not-so-expensive pipes in a basket on the counter. Whether they’re on the wall, in a case, or in a basket, these are the pipes you want to look at. Many of these pipes will not be hand-made, but they are generally made with briar and turn out to be good smokers. Most of my pipes are under $40 and there’s not a bad smoker in the bunch.

The key thing here is to take your time. This is something that’s going to be with you for a long time. It could last forever if you take care of it. Don’t let your lack of experience scare you into making a rushed decision. Just be patient and look through their selection. More than likely you’ll be attracted to one or two pipes based on their shape or color or both. This is one of the most enjoyable aspects of pipe smoking, the pipes! Pick something you like.

Now that you’ve chosen a pipe to get started, now comes the interesting part: the tobacco. There are countless blends to choose from. Before you just point to something and walk out of the store, you should know a little about what you’re buying.

There are two major types of pipe tobacco, aromatic and non-aromatic. An aromatic is a blend that has some sort of flavor added to the tobacco itself. This flavor could be vanilla, rum, whiskey, or even things like cherry and blueberry. Vanilla is probably the most common flavor added to aromatic blends. On the other side of the spectrum are the non-aromatics. Making up this category is basically everything without (or with very little) flavoring added to the tobacco.

Past these two main categories are the different types of tobacco itself. Like there are different kinds of apples, there are different strains of tobacco. The most common of these different types are Virginia, Burley, Oriental, Latakia, and Perique. Cavendish is commonly thought to be a type of tobacco as well but the term refers to a cut and method of processing tobacco rather than a distinct type. Exploring more about these different kinds of tobacco is one of the enjoyable aspects of the hobby, so I won’t spoil that for you.