All right, class. I will be your substitute teacher today, as your regular teacher is out with what we call the “Monday Blues”. Someone needs to call the CDC, because that seems to be an epidemic. Anyway, my name is Ethan and I will be leading class today.
Now, I know that you have recently been discussing the particle theory of light, but we are going to discuss something far more interesting, and certainly more relevant: pipes!
I am sure you are all wondering the same thing right now: But, Ethan, how would I choose my first pipe? Well, class, I am going to help you make that all important decision.
The first choice you really have to make is what type of pipe you will purchase, and you have three primary choices: briar, meerschaum, or a corncob.
First let me state that you cannot make a wrong choice in this department. There are those who insist that a new pipe smoker should always get a briar or always get a corncob, and most of those same people will say that a meerschaum should never be one’s first pipe. I disagree on all of these counts and let me tell you why.
You are picking up a pipe for pleasure, to make yourself happy. All three of these mediums for pipes create cool, quality, delicious smokes and each one can lead to a successful first experience with pipes. For this reason, you should choose whatever style pipe makes you happy.
Now, let’s go through your choices one by one. You’ve just walked into your local tobacconist, after managing to find one, and you spy a pearly white dragon claw holding an egg; the thought of seeing smoke drifting out of that egg, as if a newly hatched dragon had recently crawled off, is simply too much for you to resist. And who could blame you?
There is one all important thing to remember when selecting a meerschaum pipe: make sure is it block meerschaum. What this means is that the pipe was carved from a solid piece of meerschaum and not from scraps, known as pressed meerschaum.
Sometimes this can be difficult to do when buy from a physical tobacconist. So, you have a couple of choices: buy online from a reliable retailer who tells you that it is block meerschaum or try to make this determination while at a tobacconist. You can do this by buying well-known brands, such as IMP, or simply looking at the price: if it is over $50, it is probably block meerschaum. Other than that rule, pick whatever design and size makes you happy.
Some people object to using meerschaum pipes for first pipes because they are ‘more difficult’. I disagree entirely. While it is true that meerschaum is a more fragile material, it is simpler in a number of ways: you don’t have to worry about correctly forming a cake, as you in fact don’t want to form any cake, and you can smoke as much out of it a day as you want. This is much simpler than briar, which has a number of rules that it is suggested one follow. Therefore, this complaint against meerschaum is invalid.
What about the corncob? Some people swear by the value of a corncob as a starter pipe, and it is easy to see why. They are cheap, durable, require next to no work on the part of the pipester, and provide delicious, cool smokes consistently. You can pick up a good Missouri Meerschaum for less that $10 and be off and running!
So, where’s the downside? The downside, as far as I can tell, is purely visual. While the point of the pipe is not always its appearance, it is important for someone who is starting off with a pipe to feel confident and enjoy his new-found hobby. Corncobs, though wonderful, give off the impression of a farmer or a country gentleman, which is not necessarily a bad thing, but it might not be the image that a city-slicker or college student wants to have.
That being said, a pipe is designed to make you happy, not to appease those around you so that you can fit into a particular stereotype. If you are a corporate executive in New York City and you want to smoke a corncob for your first pipe, then you should smoke a corncob. It’s as simple as that.
Finally, we reach the briar. For as many advocates as there are for corncobs as a starter pipe, there are scores more for briar. After all, it is the predominant medium for pipes, the classic image of a pipe, so why not get comfortable with it early on? Of course, there are more rules to be followed with a briar than with a cob or a meerschaum, but that ritual is part of the beauty of pipes.
There are some important things to consider when choosing that fine wooden pipe, however. A number of older articles have been written about how to pick out a pipe shape that best compliments your facial structure and body shape, and that that is the pipe shape that you should buy. These rules included bigger pipes for bigger people, smaller pipes for smaller people, slender pipes for slender people, etc. While this may geometrically have some validity, it is the least important thing that one should be thinking about when picking out a pipe.
If you are a short, rotund person and you see a tall billiard that makes you drool, then that is the pipe you should snag. Don’t second guess yourself by being concerned about whether “this pipe will make me look fat”. Your trip the the tobacconist is not for a shirt or tie or pants, it is for a pipe, for something strictly for yourself. Find one that makes you happy — is this mantra sounding familiar yet, class?
While your happiness is key, there is one rule that I suggest in order to ensure that happiness: avoid the bargain bin or “basket pipes”. While these pipes can be good knock-around pipes, there are not what you want to start with. Go ahead and drop fifty to sixty on your first pipe.
What was that? Yes, you in the back row. Ah, good question. I don’t know if everyone heard him, but he asked why he should spend that much money on something he might not end up enjoying. Well, it’s kind of hedging your bets. If you only spend $15 on a briar pipe, the chances are you won’t enjoy it: it will probably burn hot, taste awful, gurgle, and be difficult to keep lit. While it is not impossible to find a basket pipe that smokes very well, you simply increase your chances of finding a pipe that smokes well by crossing the fifty dollar mark. That extra forty or fifty dollars will help to ensure you are quality smoke and enhance the probability that you will enjoy your pipe. Don’t bet against yourself by going cheap.
All right, now that we’ve picked out our first pipe, it’s time to move to tobacco –
BRIIIIIIIIIIING
Oh, that’s the end of class, everyone. If I get to teach you all again, we will pick up on the subject of pipe tobacco next time. In the mean time, go home and do your homework! And enjoy yourself!
Well written piece.Enjoyed reading it.Didn’t agree with a lot of it though. I have quite a few bargain pipes and some smoke much better than some I’ve paid much more for. Too much in fact.
People have been smoking tobacco in pipes for hundreds of years quite happily in pipes made from all sorts of things. terracotta, ceramics, stone, metal, all kinds of woods, clay, corn, and I have only covered a few. What matters is enjoying the tobacco in the pipe.
And the pipe doesn’t have to be expensive. Just well made. With the draw hole at the bottom of the bowl,etc. And you don’t have to build up the indide of the bowl in a corncob etc.
Well you get my drift.
Oh, absolutely! I totally agree that it is possible to have a basket pipe that smokes very well, but I think that, when you pay more for a pipe, you typically pay more to increase your chances of getting a pipe that smokes well. I think that the price and quality of craftsmanship of the pipe tend to go hand-in-hand. Of course, there are those who make expensive and poorly made pipes and those who make affordable, brilliantly made pipes. But those are typically the outliers, wouldn’t you agree?
I must admit that I love to own food briars and meerschaums, and take a deligound in just looking at them, but I have made pipes from all sorts of wood, and found they smoke perfectly well,and cost me nothing but the price of the wood.
Not everyone can afford to pay high prices for a pipe, and that includes me, but some excellent estate pipes can be bought for a very small amount, and you take your chances when you buy them. But byenlarge, I have been lucky and have some great pipes at a small price.
I’m not getting at you, I think it is great you have written a guide for the new pipe smoker. Well done.
You make a very good point. Perhaps one of my piece in the “Back to Basics” series should be on selecting good estate pipes. There are so many fantastic deals out there on incredible pipes. I just can’t help but think that that is a rather difficult thing for the new pipe smokers to do…maybe the guide could help! What would your main advice be for someone selecting an estate?
I must admit that I love to own food briars and mechseraums, and take a deligound in just looking at them, but I have made pipes from all sorts of wood, and found they smoke perfectly well,and cost me nothing but the price of the wood.Not everyone can afford to pay high prices for a pipe, and that includes me, but some excellent estate pipes can be bought for a very small amount, and you take your chances when you buy them. But byenlarge, I have been lucky and have some great pipes at a small price.I’m not getting at you, I think it is great you have written a guide for the new pipe smoker. Well done.
THE MAKING OF A PIPE MANI got my start as a very’ young kid my grandpa and his cernios, nearly to a man, smoked pipes i have been associated with pipes and pipe men for almost as long as i can remember sitting in the barber shop on saturday morning listening to the old codgers’ swap lies while puffin’ at their pipes was like a magnet drawin’ a young kid to the magic of tobacco and briar when i turned ten (1954) my gramps passed away, and this youngster started making his own cob pipes, because he lived on a farm, and corn was the staple crop they weren’t fancy, in fact they were pretty awful i would sample (read that as steal if you must) some of Gramps’ remaining tobacco i knew he wouldn’t mind he’d never smoke it again in this life the way i had it figured; he left it for me and would want me to have it he had a couple pounds of Prince Albert left after he passed away that leaf was put to good use, and grammaw never checked his tobacco stash (or at least i never knew about her checkin’ it anyway) i had plenty of partners in crime; many of my grade school buddies were doing the same as i ((a bunch of us got caught with our cobs at school one day; but that is an entirely different story))at age 14 i bought my first briar, a Willard, as a premium attached to two pouches of Sir Walter Raleigh i still have the stummel, but the stem is long since replaced that pipe was just so-so, but i keep it for nostalgic reasons //a quick note here: at age 14 i was just a shade under six feet tall and weighed about 175 to 180 pounds, so i wasn’t challenged often when purchasing tobacco, even though they knew i was under age life was diffent in 1958// i worked in a grain store as a youngster, where many of the older guys smoked pipes they knew i was learning to be a pipe man, and they would offer me a bowl from their pouches it was an experience they weren’t being cruel, they were just checkin’ the kid to see how serious he was about smoking a pipe their tobacco varied some, but usually only one or two burley blends were used as a base in their mix:an OTC burley was the base, with a twist’ or rope’ (mickey twist in my area) cut into coins, rubbed out and added to said burley base some of those guys dried their chewing tobacco, both leaf and plug, and added that to their blend?’ many of these old guys grew their own leaf (i have absolutely no idea what variety, but if i were forced, i would guess it was burley) and this home grown product was added to their Mixture when i was first offered this brew i accepted, but i knew it would be a severe test, and that was exactly what it was meant to be talk about ruining a perfectly good day for a 15 or 16 year old kid BUT; after finishing the bowl i was seemingly accepted into their fraternity i still prefer to imbibe just one or maybe three favorite blends rather than have a huge tobacco rotation, and i also tend to smoke a few pipes rather than keeping a large number of pipes going my Grabows and Kaywoodies form the core of my modest assembly of pipes ((altho i must admit a heresy; my best pipe is Pete B5 bulldog))i am now one of those old codgers, sitting on the porch, puffin’ my pipe in the manner of the old school, just keepin’ memories alive but these days, more the pity, you just CAN’T’ smoke in the barber shop on saturday or any other day of the week!! May GOD have pity on those who would meddle in the lives of their fellow men