It should be ok, but the jar should keep the smells contained so you could bring it inside. Here I'm using the pipe in a jar to keep the smells of a half-smoked pipe from stinking up the car when I didn't feel like dumping out the unburnt tobacco and cleaning the pipe and removing the ash and pipe cleaners from the car to keep it from stinking.
If your cob starts to get sour or smell, you can give it a sun bath, but don't leave it out all night or let the sprinklers get it. If it has a vulcanite stem, remove it before giving it a sun bath.
I keep most of my pipe tobacco in my closet in Mason jars and mylar bags. I have a little selection next to my chair in the living room and a ready service jar that floats around. Right now the ready service hangs out with the pipe in the garage. I use that particular jar for whatever concoction I come up with or to dump leftovers that don't make it into the bowl right away and I'm too lazy to return to the proper container.
If you leave your tobacco in a place where the temperature changes a lot it can cause what I call dead spots in the tobacco. Inside a jar the moisture is contained; however, said moisture can be moved around due to heat. If the jar gets hot you’ll notice it sweating on the inside. That’s moisture coming out of the tobacco. That moisture also carries flavor. As it cools back down that moisture will settle in the bottom along with the flavor it carries. What happens is the tobacco that’s on top and exposed loses that moisture and the tobacco on the bottom soaks it up. You end up with tobacco on top that is the dead spot I mentioned. Gravity can also play a factor in the same way but It takes a great deal more time. Every so often I go through and flip my jars and tins that are stored to keep things evened out.
@Rdp77 said: If you leave your tobacco in a place where the temperature changes a lot it can cause what I call dead spots in the tobacco. Inside a jar the moisture is contained; however, said moisture can be moved around due to heat. If the jar gets hot you’ll notice it sweating on the inside. That’s moisture coming out of the tobacco. That moisture also carries flavor. As it cools back down that moisture will settle in the bottom along with the flavor it carries. What happens is the tobacco that’s on top and exposed loses that moisture and the tobacco on the bottom soaks it up. You end up with tobacco on top that is the dead spot I mentioned. Gravity can also play a factor in the same way but It takes a great deal more time. Every so often I go through and flip my jars and tins that are stored to keep things evened out.
Excellent information that would not have even thought of. Thank you.
Best to keep your tobacco on an inside-wall closet, if possible.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HfKJqZn_EHs
Interesting piece
Sorry I can’t listen to this clowns voice. 😂😂
Well, at least he doesn't have an accent.
Not so much a tip but I found the tobacco trivia on this pipe catalog page interesting.
From https://pipedia.org/wiki/Gefapip.
Stolen from another site. Hope this helps.
1792 - SG 1792 Flake 5100 - McC 5100 Red Cake tobacco 965 - Dunhill My Mixture 965 B&M - Brick & Mortar store BBF - SG Best Brown Flake BC - Butz-Choquin Pipes or Black Cavendish BCF - GH Bob's Chocolate Flake BFP - C&D Bailey's Front Porch BLB - Mac Baren Burley London Blend BPC - LJ Peretti Burley Plug Cut BRB - Blue Room Briars BST - Briar Sweat and Tears (pipemaker) C&D - Cornell & Diehl Tobacco Co. CAO - A brand of Meerschaum pipes and a tobacco brand Cav - Cavendish, a method of processing tobacco CB - Captain Black CBK - H&H Classic Burley Kake CG - MM Country Gentleman CH - Carter Hall Tobacco CM - Chatham Manor CPCC - Chicagoland Pipe Collectors Club CRF - C&D Carolina Red Flake D&R - Daughters and Ryan DDNR - Dunhill Deluxe Navy Rolls DBE - GH Dark Bird's Eye DFU - Dark Flake Unscented DGT - Delayed Gratification Technique DH - Dunhill DLF - Dunhill Light Flake DLNR - Dunhill Deluxe Navy Rolls DSF - Peter Heinrichs Dark Strong Flake EMP - Dunhill Early Morning Pipe EOS - PS English Oriental Supreme ERR - Edgeworth Ready Rubbed FM - McC Frog Morton FMC - McC Frog Morton's Cellar FMOTB - McC Frog Morton On The Bayou FMOTT - McC Frog Morton On The Town FVF - SG Full Virginia Flake GAF - Dunhill Flake GdO - Savinelli Giubileo d'Oro GE - MacBaren Golden Extra GH - Gawith, Hoggarth Tobacco Company GLP - G.L. Pease Tobacco H&H - Half and Half tobacco, or Hearth and Home, a P&C house blend HB - C&D Haunted Bookshop HCA - Hans Christian Anderson, a line of pipes made by Stanwell Pipes HOTW - Rattray's Hal o' the Wynd HOW - House of Windsor HUDC - HU Director's Cut KBV - Ken Byron Ventures KK - GH Kendal Kentucky KW - Kaywoodie Pipes LBF - PS Luxury Bullseye Flake LGF - Reiner Long Golden Flake (Blend #71) LRR - Lane Ready Rubbed LNF - PS Luxury Navy Flake LPF - GH Louisiana Perique Flake LTF - PS Luxury Twist Flake MCB - Middleton's Cherry Blend McB or MB - Mac Baren Tobacco Co. McC - McClelland Tobacco Co. MM - Missouri Meerschaum (corncob pipe maker) MMM - March Meer Madness NAC - North American Carvers NOS - New Old Stock ODF - Old Dark Fired ODFRR - Old Dark Fired Ready Rubbed OG - Rattray's Old Gowrie OGS - Orlik's Golden Sliced OJK - C&D Old Joe Krantz OTC - Over the Counter ("drugstore tobacco") OTR - Watch City Off the Rails P&C - pipesandcigars.com, an online retailer P&W or PW - Pipeworks & Wilke PA - Prince Albert tobacco PAD - Pipe Acquisition Disorder PG -- Propylene Glycol, a food-grade preservative and humectant used in tobacco blends POY or POTY - Pipe of the year PS - Peter Stokkebye PSD - Pipe Smokers Den PSLBF - PS Luxury Bulls Eye Flake PSLNF - PS Luxury Navy Flake PSLTF - PS Luxury Twist Flake PSO - Pipe-shaped object RDF - J.F. Germain & Son Rich Dark Flake RR - Ready Rubbed RRR - Rattray's Red Rapparee SG - Samuel Gawith Tobacco Co. SJF - SG St. James Flake SL - SG Squadron Leader SM - DH Standard Mixture SMS - A Meerschaum pipe brand SP - smokingpipes.com, an online retailer, or Smoker's Pride, an OTC tobacco brand SPC - smokingpipes.com, an online retailer, or Seattle Pipe Club SPBC - Smoker's Pride Black Cavendish SPRT - Smoker's Pride Rich Taste STG - Scandinavian Tobacco Group SV - Super Value, an OTC tobacco brand SWR - Sir Walter Raleigh SWRA - Sir Walter Raleigh Aromatic TAD - Tobacco Acquisition Disorder TR - tobaccoreviews.com UF - Peterson University Flake VF - Vermont Freehand WAYS - What Are You Smoking (thread on this forum) WCC - Watch City Cigars WOLOF - W.O. Larsen Old Fashioned YMMV - Your mileage may vary
Thanks for posting this list, Jeff @OutdoorsSmoke_21191
@ShawnOL I posted it as a new discussion in the social group section. If people can keep from commenting on it, it will stay there for easy reference
I don't know where the social group section is so I wont be posting in it. Lol
@ShawnOL said: I don't know where the social group section is so I wont be posting in it. Lol
@Rdp77 said: @ShawnOL said: I don't know where the social group section is so I wont be posting in it. Lol
@Rdp77 said:
?? The first two don’t show up for me on my phone OR on my computer. Can you @ me in there and see if I can find a back door into it
@OmgFrigginMike said: @Rdp77 said: @ShawnOL said: I don't know where the social group section is so I wont be posting in it. Lol ?? The first two don’t show up for me on my phone OR on my computer. Can you @ me in there and see if I can find a back door into it
@OmgFrigginMike said:
They didn’t show up for me either until I logged out and back in
Ok I’ll give that a shot.
Well now I can't log back in on my phone.
You have to do it @Yakster 's way. Also, only seems to work in "desktop site" mode. At least it did for me.
DON'T LOG OUT!
If you did, try my method in desktop mode.
I was able to log back in it just took some fiddling around
@OmgFiddlingMike!
Just try them. Really enjoy a cigar, esp. a churchill when brush hogging or spending longer periods of time on the tractor. The pipe however is so convenient on every day chores.