If you could scent a snuff what would it be?

@Mr_O I mean the smell of cedar when you freshly saw a log in half and put your nose to it. I also think Birch would be a good one too, probably more so than cedar. I have Santo Domingo, its not bad, I havn’t used it very much and i’m not exactly sure what scent I get from it, but I wouldn’t say it’s cedar. @Faust I’ll put it in for my next order and see how it is :slight_smile:

Sweet potato!

Vito445- maybe, just maybe, one of the available oils would come close. They say the SD has cedar, sandalwood, and…I forget… OK this is patent-pending, but I’m gonna be working on a vanilla-chai tea scent…

Here’s mine, with possible brand names: Isle of Harris: new tweed and woolens Charing Cross Road: Old bookshops Parson’s Pleasure: Country church smell - just a hint of incense, not too musty or damp Clubland: cigars, antique leather, persian carpets Sandringham: gun oil (latakia), with a hint of grass, game/stuffing

failure

Cranberry Sweet Birch

Mahogany

Ether

I recall a review that claimed Santo Domingo smelt like a South American harbour, i,e Humidity, diesel and questionable sanitation. Unfortunately the snuff did not live up to this description.

Unrelated there is a code book for icd-9 that has a great typo. On the code for huffing ether it’s labeled as either. I don’t know about you guys but that’s funny.

Desert sage, early in the morning just after the rain maduro or habano cigar tobacco leaf fresh mown hay cinnamon roll

Amaretto Fresh baked cinnamon rolls sounds real good @stogie

Unrelated there is a code book for icd-9 that has a great typo. On the code for huffing ether it’s labeled as either. I don’t know about you guys but that’s funny.

@bob, I am familiar with icd9 and I do find that funny

Toscano Cigar.

I would do a Leather snuff. Not a fredericks of hollywood leather but a fine Corinthian leather like an Italian sports car, I love that new car smell.

I wonder might this spark a discussion? from npr: “There’s a new smell in town. Scientists have created an olfactory odor equivalent to white noise” Basically add any smell to it and it will smell the same! http://www.npr.org/2012/11/23/165754328/whats-that-smell-olfactory-white

I’d love a snuff that’s scented like burning San Pedro cactus or sweet grass. Buttered and salted mashed potatoes, or the scent of meat on a bbq.

@nosemboss this does bring to light the art of balanced scenting verses scents that cancel out one another.

Wild!

pheromones