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#3 | ||||||
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The smell of rutting bull elk when you are easing thru the dark timber with a bow and arrow and you know he is close.
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Jim Beilke For Your Post: |
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#4 | ||||||
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To most any and all of the aromas listed I would add just the hint of a nice Burley or Virginia pipesmoke wafting in over it all.
__________________
It ain't what you don't know that gets you into trouble. It's what you know for sure that just ain't so. - Mark Twain. |
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#5 | ||||||
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a few times when i was in the cotton fields picking cotton i could smell rain coming our way and knowed i would soon be leaving that field......charlie
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| The Following User Says Thank You to charlie cleveland For Your Post: |
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#6 | ||||||
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Charlie, Picking Cotton ain't easy its sort of like priming tobacco, hot sweaty and with cotton at least you don't get the tar on you, but when I was in school 1.00 an hour was not bad for priming, The owner of the field would usually have a cold watermelon for us to eat before we went to the barn and climb them tier poles and hung the tobacco, first primings were the worst for the guy handing the sticks in the barn because of the sand on the leaves, brings back memories, sorry to high jack, gary
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#7 | ||||||
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My aroma would be the smell of a Connecticut Valley tobacco barn after it is just filled and it is first fired to start the cure. In the day, we would start the dry down with real wood lump charcoal, that was an amazing combination of smells. I drove the charcoal truck for Tryon Farm. The charcoal came in burlap feed bags recycled. That was before we used propane but even with propane it is still a great wiff.
For you cigar aficionados, it is like a like opening a Griffin Tubo and inhaling deeply to the tenth power. Hell, a tobacco barn in the CT Valley is a good wiff even in the off season. |
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