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tobacco Anonymous
hai /hr/, I roll my own cigarettes. Let's get some good tobacco pictures up here.
>> Anonymous
Well that's proved something. Until now, I'd never heard of anyone who actually had to use those little rolling devices.

Just roll your own, it's not actually hard. It's like buying a machine with five levers to make a sandwich - not really much point.
>> Anonymous
smooth, wtf?
>> Anonymous
I've always preferred a small wood pipe with a lid that slides over the bowl. Less waste.
>> Anonymous
>>436765
I got one for weed, works like a charm, minimizes waste, not incredibly hot like a glass pipe, and looks way less crack-heady than a glass pipe
>> Anonymous
Much less cracky & hardcore. I love a bong but hate the next day smell.
>> Bat Guano
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An old tobacco cutter.

Anyone have old pictures of tobacco harvesting/curing?
>> Anonymous
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The Lancaster County PA Amish use drying barns. They look pretty kewl.
>> Bat Guano
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R.J. Reynolds, Jr. in 1946, in good health at age 40. A Lieutenant-Commander in the Navy in WWII, he was navigator for a task force in the Pacific. He smoked since his teens, first Camels and later Winstons.

He was the son of R.J. Reynolds, who founded the tobacco company in 1875, and began manufacturing Camel cigarettes in 1913. He died in 1918 of cancer of the pancreas, after a lifetime of chewing tobacco -- the same product which established his fortune, and earlier, his father's. He married at age 53, and died at age 67, when his eldest son, RJ Reynolds, Jr., was only 12. As a result, R.J. Jr. would never spend much time working in the tobacco business, nor would any of R.J. Jr.'s 6 sons.
>> Bat Guano
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R.J. Reynolds, Jr., in 1962, age 56, terminally ill with emphysema, caused by his lifelong smoking habit, holding an oxygen bottle. A photographer caught Dick during bitter divorce proceedings against his third wife, Muriel Marston Reynolds, outside the courthouse in Darien, Georgia. When this was taken, Dick had, he believed, only a short time to live - and would now spend some of it in a courtroom, doing battle with a woman he hated. When the divorce was at last final, he remarried Annemarie Schmidt, and died less than a year later, in Switzerland in December, 1964. Muriel fought on; the divorce would be overturned only to be later reinstated.
>> Seafire !1ixiiX/lyc
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>>436720
In my humble opinion, you get better cigarettes if you roll them by hand. And it's not hard once you learn it, actually much faster than with a roller.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gy2t9FHQOO4
>> Bat Guano
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An actual tobacco leaf was plated in gold, and presented to Patrick Reynolds (son of the above R.J. Reynolds, Jr.) as a wedding gift by a German who invented this process, on the occasion of Patrick Reynolds first marriage, held in Germany.
>> Bat Guano
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Ecuadorian Connecticut shade tobacco for making cigars, draped and aged in an old bourbon barrel.
>> Bat Guano
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>> Bat Guano
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Georgetown Kentucky farm tobacco barn.
>> Bat Guano
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Kentucky tobacco?
Serve with Kentucky bourbon, shown here in the tempting form of a Woodford Reserve mint julep.
>> Anonymous
gratuitous advice from a 50 year smoker....still

avoid nonfiltered cigs
cut down on tar & nicotine. Carltons filter out almost everything but you adjust to them. They one thirteenth the strength of Winston/Newport/Marlboros.
you'll become a social pariah in many circles and they cost almost as much as grass.
>> Bat Guano
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Carolina tobacco shack.
>> Bat Guano
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Here are some old cast iron tobacco cutters:

This one by John Finzer and Brothers, Louisville, KY.
>> Bat Guano
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A cast iron Enterprise Buzz Saw Tobacco Cutter, patented April 13, 1875.
>> Bat Guano
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A cast iron tobacco cutter by R. H. Co. 'Standard Tobacco Knife' (Reading, PA).
>> Bat Guano
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tobacco farmer
>> Anonymous
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Here's what i smoke. This is premium tobacco, full flavour, none of that weakling stuff.
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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Sir Walter Raleigh and his followers were the first to bring tobacco back to England. Before they beheaded him they let him smoke one last pipe of tobacco.