Cigars with the boy
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Torpedo
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Never was a fan. I always inhaled.
Cool experience, though.
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Excellent!
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The Suntory looks nice, too, but I have to slop through the bottle of WhistlePig my wife gifted me.
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By the way, either that’s an outsized whiskey glass or a tiny bottle…
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I see them as half-way between a cigarette and a pipe, in that you don't look cool, but you don't look like an abject twat either.
I may be a little biased. I used to smoke them during many vain attempts to give up the cigarettes.
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It's been decades since I smoked a cigar. Even more decades since I smoked a pipe.
Never enjoyed a cigar. When I finished, I always felt like a freight train ran across my tongue. I suppose it could have been the cheapo cigar I smoked - no I don't remember.
However, a pipe never had the bite, and never offended anyone in the room. I rather enjoyed a pipe. I liked the ritual, the flavor and the "ambience" of a pipe. Granted, I'm going back 40 years, but...
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I enjoy the smell of a cigar much more than the actual taste/experience of it. That being said, it has been a few years but I do, in general, enjoy smoking a cigar and as I think back on the number of times I've done it, I mainly recall the WHO and WHERE... with my brother on a golf course, with my brother in law on my condo's rooftop. That's what makes it special... it slows down time. It facilitates a good, long, conversation with someone important to you. You experience culture, you pair it with a good drink, and it usually involves some refreshing nighttime breezes as you linger.
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@George-K said in Cigars with the boy:
@89th said in Cigars with the boy:
The smell is really hard to shake
(off topic)
You know what's even worse?
Anatomy lab. Really.
Do an autopsy on a floater.
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@George-K said in Cigars with the boy:
@Jolly said in Cigars with the boy:
Do an autopsy on a floater.
Nah, no thanks. But that's only one exposure. Do it 3 times a week for 12 weeks.
Never have. Comparative anatomy was interesting, though.
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As for floaters, it generally takes about three days for the smell to wear off. It's a great dieting tool, and that's a statement coming from a person who's been known to have lunch while assisting with a post.
The morgue is not quite as stringent on sterile fields.
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Reminds me of Sledge's experience in the Marines. The ground was so bloody, so littered with people pieces, that the ground would move in front of your eyes, because of all the maggots working the decay. He and his fellow Marines lost a lot of weight, because they simply couldn't eat. The stench was pervasive and nigh unbearable.