if it is not top secret…where do you live? I live here: 49°13’39.212"N, 17°40’18.988"E
I live in southeastern Connecticut. A little town outside of Mystic, Ct.
SouthEast Kansas
I live just off Rathgar Road in Dublin 6, Ireland. Everything you need is in walking distance.
I’m in Illinois. Northwest of Chicago. @mipasma Your location looks top secret to me. I had to use my Little Orphan Annie decoder ring to figure it out!
I live in rural Cornwall, England. Jamaica Inn and Bodmin moor are nearby.
Rochester, New York. Pretty much across Lake Ontario from Toronto.
Marquette, Michigan. Biggest city (at around 20,000 people) in an otherwise pretty rural region, the Upper Peninsula. It’s often mistaken for Canada and so am I when I talk sometimes because if I don’t take care I end my statements in eh.
Southern Ontario, Canada
narnia or some other mythical place I assume. As for me I live in the home of student cloneing a.k.a. state college PA. Seriousily if you don’t think humans have been cloned already then live here for a while. Many of the twits here act like they grew up in a vat.
London, UK
ok…I live in Zlin, Czech republic…neighboring countries are Germany, Austria, Poland and Slovakia
Detroit
South Puget Sound area in Washington State, US.
Central Ohio
Cape Cod
Southern Idaho, US It’s not much, but it works for me
people live in Idaho. Mkes me wonder what other lies I’ve been feed my whole life.
Billings Montana
NYC
I live in The Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire, UK. Right on top of a hill, so great times to be had enjoying snuff whilst gazing over to the Black Mountains…
Walthamstow, East London, UK.
@bob And we’re not all potato farmers either Our city just landed the western region Chobani Yogurt plant, so that will help our local economy quite a bit. More demand for dairy, more demand for feed, etc, etc, etc. It’s possible that it cause a price battle for crop contracts between dairies and Budwieser/Coors. 60% or more of our farms are contracted out to large factories and such. It will be good for us.
Southwestern Ontario, Canada. About an hour east of Detroit.
Wilmington, Delaware, USA, a medium size city in the middle of the northeast’s urban belt. Philadelphia is less than 1 hour northeast and Baltimore is less than one hour southwest. Washington, DC is less than 3 hours southwest and New York City is less than 3 hours northeast. Atlantic Ocean is 2 hours away, Appalachian Mountains are 2 hours away. Chesapeake Bay and Delaware Bay are much closer. Hurricanes: infrequent. Tornadoes: rare. Earthquakes: very rare. Floods: rare. Landslides: never. Volcanoes: never. Summers are hot and humid with frequent brief thunderstorms, but also frequent drought. Winters are moderately to very cold with occasional blizzards. Autumn and Spring are nice, though it rains a lot. The city was founded in 1638 making it one of the oldest permanent settlements in the US. It was founded by Sweden in a short lived colonial venture. The Swedes brought Finns with them who built the first ever log cabins in North America. In 1654 Dutch (somewhat forcefully) absorbed all of New Sweden resolving a longstanding dispute. We still have a fair amount of Swedish (and Finnish) and Dutch surnames here. The area eventually passed to British control not long afterwards. The area is origin to the original Scotch snuff in the US: Levi and/or W.E. Garrett on the Red Clay Creek (the city is at the confluence of 4 significant creeks and the Delaware river, making for an ideal spot for milling, shipping and shipbuilding). Snuff was still being made there, under other names, until the 1950s… On another creek, the Brandywine, was founded the world famous (infamous?) gunpowder turned chemical company, DuPont. In later years the city’s economy has focused around banking, due to the state’s lucrative tax laws (something like Switzerland). Here is a picture of me there, right in the middle of everything like I told you. Look close, I am the one waving: 
@bob And we’re not all potato farmers either Our city just landed the western region Chobani Yogurt plant, so that will help our local economy quite a bit. More demand for dairy, more demand for feed, etc, etc, etc. It’s possible that it cause a price battle for crop contracts between dairies and Budwieser/Coors. 60% or more of our farms are contracted out to large factories and such. It will be good for us.
Farmers, man more civilized then I was told. I heard it was mostily vikings hunting wooley mamoths and evil monkeys. Guess the school system here sucks.
I reside east of bob and a little north west of xander . Limerick Pa. in the shadow of the nuclear power plant. Someday knowned as ground zero, when it fails. If I hear the siren it is already too late. Just enough time for one last snuff
West Central Georgia here.
Budapest, Hungary.
Uhersky Ostroh, Czech Republic
I live in Felsőpetény village, Hungary, but I’m commuting to Budapest - driving 150 painful kilometres a single day.
Hull, Yorkshire.
Bossier Parish, Louisiana
Chesterfield, Derbyshire, England. Stefan
@bob A local ordinance in 1997 stopped that kind of shenanigans. They forced us out of the dark ages. Although they almost repealed it in the great mammoth stampede of 2002.
Durham, NC - which was once at the heart of tobacco country, first with the popular Bull Durham tobacco blend in the 19th century, and later with the Dukes owning the American Tobacco Company, to which many other major tobacco companies in the US merged in 1890. After an anti-trust suit in the nineteen-teens, the American Tobacco company was broken up and four companies emerged - Liggett & Myers, Lorillard, R. J. Reynolds & American Tobacco Company. L&M and American Tobacco stayed in Durham, so apart from hundreds of tobacco warehouses and manufacturing plants, you see plenty of old signs and water towers for Chesterfields, Lucky Strikes, Pall Mall, etc, which were made in Durham. It’s neat to see all the tobacco history around you when you go downtown, and nearly all of the old shut down buildings have been re-purposed, and downtown is pretty vibrant again after a good decade or two of pretty rough economic times when the tobacco industry left. What always cracks me up now is that Durham’s current motto is “the city of medicine…”
Here’s a jpeg image instead
@bob A local ordinance in 1997 stopped that kind of shenanigans. They forced us out of the dark ages. Although they almost repealed it in the great mammoth stampede of 2002.
That is just sad. Really really sad.
Lexington, KY
@Willymac They should make medicated snuffs just to keep with the new motto.
Brighton, England.
Springfield, Missouri
portsmouth the uk one
Kalispell, Montana, USA, bout 20 miles or so west of Glacier Park. AWESOME country!!!
Salt Lake City, Utah, The City of Saints (haw)
@stogie hell yeah it is. I love glacier park. Took some amazing photos when I went hiking with a few friends back in 1999.
Orlando, Florida Home of Mickey Mouse, Harry Potter, Shamu, and Jesus. Way too hot most of the year. We have 2.5 seasons: Fall/Spring (Mid October - April) and Summer (May - Early October). The city isn’t that bad, has an interesting mix of ignorant rednecks, good country people, a thriving hispanic population, a small asian population, a growing gay community, city dwellers, suburbanites, and everyone in between. We also have the largest university in the state: UCF. The city is on the verge of having a MLS soccer team, we already have an NBA team, and an 80 year old football stadium in the middle of the projects.
Kalispell, Montana, USA, bout 20 miles or so west of Glacier Park. AWESOME country!!!
@stogie is it wrong that part of me is hopeing someone trys to start a fight here about Missoula is better then Kalispell. Or is it understandable?
@cstokes4 I spent a few years in Orlando. I lived in Hunter’s creek right down the road from Gatorland. I used to drink at a bar called the Big Bamboo in Kissimmee, I don’t know if it’s still there but I’m sure you have seen it. I went to school at Motorcycle Mechanics Institute and worked at Orlando Harley Davidson for a spell. Made a lot more money working at Sunshine hydroponics down on OBT right before you get into the rough part of town. Orlando is an enigma but I must say I have fond memories of the place. Best Fishing I have ever experienced. Due to the transient nature of it’s population, due to Disney, it probably has some of the worst drivers in the United States! I do miss those thunderstorms and the heat I actually got used to. The winters are to die for. Crystal clear blue skies with big puffy clouds and you only need a sweatshirt most of the time. It’s a groovy place.
Sadly, Big Bamboo ate it during the 2004 Hurricanes (Charley, Jeanne, Francis). The place was iconic. I know a few folks that went to MMI, it’s a pretty popular destination for people. You are 100% right about the transient population, terrible drivers. I also love the summer thunderstorms, always fun to grab a drink and watch the buckets come down. The place isn’t that bad, I suppose it’s all what you make of it. Seems like it’s a place that people come to for a “reset” in their life, sadly it just doesn’t work out for most.
Syracuse, NY. Head east from Rochester. Stop when you hit the toxic pool that used to be a lake. Turn left. Drive through the neighborhoods where everybody’s shooting at each other. Don’t worry, their not shooting at you. You see that grocery store over there, past the gigantic ditch? Yeah, I live behind that.
@cstokes4 I know Charley had some health issues and always wondered how he was doing. He is one of the coolest guys I have ever met. We would all get totally wasted and he would let us sleep in the bar until we had school the next morning. I have seen some crazy stuff go down at the “boo”. That place didn’t come alive until after closing time, I’m sure you have seen the photo album that charley kept behind the bar. Doesn’t surprise me that it got eaten up by the hurricanes seeing as it was probably held together by all the crap on the walls. You are totally correct about Orlando being a reset destination. It was the place I went to at a time in my life to begin the process of “coming unglued”. A very strange time in my life for sure but that’s what happens sometime in your twenties.
st paul minnesota, but i will also claim bismarck nd and Basingstoke England home as well.
Home of the Kentucky Derby and fine bourbon whiskey.
I live in DeFuniak Springs, Florida. Exactly at the link listed below. http://goo.gl/maps/IMWFw It would be super cool to have google map of all members cities and or locations.
@bob Very interesting you should say that. Although I currently live and work in Kalispell, Missoula is where my kids live and where my house is. Both are fabulous places, but frankly my heart is in Missoula!!! a totally unique place…
Kennedy, New York. Not the airport where all of our packages swallow into, the town. I’am in the little corner of New York know as Western NY. About 1.5 hours south and to the west of Buffalo. None of yous better try and steal my snuff.
they put something in the water i Missoula. It’s where David Lynch spent most of his growing up and Reggie Watts is from there.
Cranford, NJ. A small town in central Jersey.
I live in Trier for around 10 years now. It is the oldest city in Germany. The romans build it some time before Christ (yeah, it is more then 2000 years old - so what? ^^). It is a decent with around 100.000 people. We got a university so you see a lot of young folks (even more on the weekends). I live in the city center so everything is near me. Bad point is, there are always a lot of people around you. Well, i think about going to the north of Germany and live in a more rural area. We will see… The picture shows the old town gate.
Thank you guys for so many comments…that was the aim of the discussion…to find out that wonderful people live EVERYWHERE…
I live in Barcelona a coastal city northeast quadrant of Spain (Approx. 1.600.000 inhabitants) in the shore of the mediterranean sea, pretty much old too as 7 th century b.c. according to the legend founded by Heracles but more cientifical theory says that were the romans that stablished the first city walls.
I live in Barcelona a coastal city northeast quadrant of Spain (Approx. 1.600.000 inhabitants) in the shore of the mediterranean sea, pretty much old too as 7 th century b.c. according to the legend founded by Heracles but more cientifical theory says that were the romans that stablished the first city walls.
your city got some history on the back too. a loveley city it is. i hope Spain will do more well soon again
I live in the City of Brotherly Love. 9 blocks north and 10 blocks west of the spot where this nation declared itself independent.
Minnesota here! Specifically Mankato MN, about a half hour from @uncle_squinty
Orlando, Florida Home of Mickey Mouse, Harry Potter, Shamu, and Jesus. Way too hot most of the year. We have 2.5 seasons: Fall/Spring (Mid October - April) and Summer (May - Early October). The city isn’t that bad, has an interesting mix of ignorant rednecks, good country people, a thriving hispanic population, a small asian population, a growing gay community, city dwellers, suburbanites, and everyone in between. We also have the largest university in the state: UCF. The city is on the verge of having a MLS soccer team, we already have an NBA team, and an 80 year old football stadium in the middle of the projects.
Looks like were neighbors, I’m probably about 50-70 miles from you, I’m over on the space coast.
Here in the heart of Europe we have 4 seasons…but it seems to me they are all in one currently…
@mipasma I agree, today I mowed the lawn in shorts and t-shirt. Quite uncommon activity and temperature at the end of October. As I heard on the radio, this weekend we can expect snow…
We are living with snow here in Kalispell, Montana. 3-4 inches last night and expecting more tonight. Seems a bit early biut who knows…
I live in Felsőpetény village, Hungary, but I’m commuting to Budapest - driving 150 painful kilometres a single day.
What are you driving?
Gadsden Alabama
@DocCherry a Ford Focus Mk2 wagon. Why do you ask?
@b4xter Just wondered if it was old or new really. 150km is a long way to commute. For some reason I was imagining you commuting in a 80s Fiat or something.
I live in the mission district of San Francisco
@DocCherry the problem is not the car, but the traffic jam… By the way, a 80’s car is a white raven here. Despite the bad times, everyone owns a relatively new car in the region. This is why I can’t believe in this so-called recession.
NE Michigan USA. about 3 hour drive north of Detroit
Chichester, UK, near Rolls Royce Motor Cars @cstokes4 I lived for a few years in Orlando, Waterford Lakes, I was there for the hurricanes, interesting place.
@Mozwik You’re quite near me. Is there a decent tobacconist in Chichester?
@Justin not really, there is one that has run of the mill pipe baccy and some pipes and the only snuff they have is Wilsons SP No.1 (although one my favs) It’s more of a paper shop with more tobacco than the usual. It’s a shame as Chichester thrives on old fashioned boutique shops. There is a better one in Bognor and probably better ones near you in Brighton.
@jpsavage in 1974 I lived in Alpeena. You anywhere near there. Beautiful country even if Alpena itself was a pit at the time.
@Mozwik: I work about a mile north of Waterford, the Central Florida Research Park.
Lancaster,PA. Land of the Amish.
Gotta be some good plug around there @Kaiser_Wilhelm The Amish do love there Bacci.
Yeah, near Oscoda
is it just me or does PA have a lot of reps here?
I’m almost in PA. I can spit to it from here, then again, DE is so small, if you trip and fall you can land in another state. Here is the tri-corner stone where Delaware, Maryland and Pennsylvania all meet, and me pointing it out to you:
Any PA residents checked out the Weyerbacher brewery? I would if I was in the area, they sell some stuff that isn’t distributed-sounds neat.
I live in beautiful Auburn, Alabama; home of Auburn University. Born in Dover, Delaware. Have lived in: Milo, Maine Nashua, New Hampshire Groton and Boston, Massachusetts Schaumburg, Illinois Austin, Texas
I live in Mount Sterling, Ohio USA. Just south of Columbus, where I grew up.
I live in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada–population: ~700,000. It’s located in the centre of Canada near the North Dakota border.
20.760254 N , 156.45068200000003 W
Richmond, Virginia, which is a pretty decent location. We’re about three hours away from the mountains, the beach and DC, depending on which direction we travel. I moved here from central Florida
I live in Hedingen, a small rural village south of Zürich, Switzerland. If you tear down the Alps, I would have a direct view on the Mediterranean … My neighbours are cows, foxes (in my garden), deer (ditto), hedgehogs (ditto), a badger (ditto), some Swiss bankers (not ditto) and a mountain spirit residing in my Mongolian ‘Ovoo’ (a large pile of stones and a pole with blue silk scarves attached). The Spirit is fed with free vodka, cigarettes and snuff. In turn, he protects my home from destruction by landfall (the Mongolian Spirit Mafia, collects protection money).
Itapecerica. A Brazilian town with about 25,000 people. Born in the end of century XVII and located in the Midwest of Minas Gerais, the city was the tenth county created in the state of Minas Gerais. The main historical and cultural monuments are the urban center, where there is still a colonial-style houses. The city is known for the classic Carnival, Gastronomic Festival and the Winter Festival.
Some more pics:
Is that true @Juxtaposer? Cool
Estherville, IA I have smoked 2 packs since January… which is what I used to smoke in a day.
Wavertree, Liverpool, UK.
I live just off Rathgar Road in Dublin 6, Ireland. Everything you need is in walking distance.
A friend of mine used to live near there in Rathmines, I know what you mean about everything being walking distance.
I live just over the boarder in North Wales, UK, not far from Chester and half way up a mountain. I am originally from London, UK.
Wavertree, Liverpool, UK.
@bish777 I work in Liverpool, used to live on Aigburth Drive opposite Sefton Park and on Faulkner St before that near the Philharmonic
I live in Daleville, IN right in between Anderson and Muncie. About 30 minutes or so north of Indianapolis, home of the Indianapolis 500. Although I’m not a fan of racing.
Larose in Lafourche Parish, Louisiana, USA
near Annapolis, Maryland, USA. Between Baltimore and Washington, DC.
Berkshire, England, about ten miles from Windsor Castle. Yes, I know the Queen.
I live in Kent, Washington… 20 minutes south of Seattle.
Cool, I’ve got a cousin around there somewhere.
i live near New Paltz , NY , but can be found anywhere in the Hudson valley , depending on what im doing
New Iberia, Louisiana. I live about 5 miles from Avery Island, home of Tabasco! I was grown in Cincinnati, Ohio. I married a girl from New Orleans, we’ve lived here for 16 years.
Kent, Washington. 20 minutes south of Seattle. Grew up and spent most of my life in Seattle, and turned into a suburbia gal about 14 years ago.
@SnuffinClown only a couple of hours from me in St Paul Minnesota
Cros- you ever go to the Golden Leaf on W7th, or the Blue Door Pub?
@Mr_O love the Blue Door, great tater tots! havent been to the leaf on 7th, and its been a long time since ive been to the one in uptown
I libe in the UK, in the county of Hampshire. Not all of it, just a me-shaped bit of it.
Libe? Should read Live. There must be an edit button somewhere’s round here…
@HR_pufnsnuff If you hover your mouse pointer over your post you will see at the top right of the dark grey bar that has your name and number of posts is a little cog graphic. If you click on that you get a small menu that says “Edit” and away you go. I had precisely the same problem when I first posted here.
@HR_pufnsnuff If you hover your mouse pointer over your post you will see at the top right of the dark grey bar that has your name and number of posts is a little cog graphic. If you click on that you get a small menu that says “Edit” and away you go. I had precisely the same problem when I first posted here.
Mwahahaha - with this special power the world is mine! Er, I mean thank you. :">
I live in Zurich, beautiful Switzerland. I’m from the UK but don’t plan to leave Switz. I love it here.
Cros- cool, I’ve just been once (I live in Mpls) but I liked my burger, and the beer selection was great. I keep meaning to get there again. The Golden Leaf in St Paul is a bit different, fewer cigs, usually no snuff, but a nice selection of bulk pipe tobacco, some tins, and a pretty nice walk in humidor.
las cruces new mexico
aren’t there like map apps online for this sorta thing? we should do one, but i’m too lazy to start,
las cruces new mexico
Nice! I loved NM! Actually I’ve only been to Santa Fe and through Albequerque (darnit- how do you spell it?). But it was really nice…
High Wycombe, U.K. its just outside London. But originally for Burnley, UK North of Manchester in Lancashire. Studying down south at uni at the moment
I live in Wasilla, Alaska. We have everything here- Wal-Mart, several gas stations, and even a Wendy’s. But if you drive past the Wendy’s and go through the next two traffic lights there isn’t another fast food resturant for like 500 miles. So the is like the last stop for stuff like that. This is the fastest growing area of our state. When I was kid, this was just a dying little train depot and a handful of bars. Directions to my house include the words “turn off the paved road.” I am not far from town but I live a a pretty cool trailhead to state-owned landed where you can drive you monster truck, four wheeler, hunt, trap, cut free firewood, and do stuff like that. I have lived in several parts of the US, but this is the first place I choose to be.
Why the Beautiful Kent Island in Maryland! Old School rules while the world steady grows and no one is so busy that they can’t stop and say “Hey”
From enumclaw Washington, live in eugene Oregon
I’am afraid of towns that have people names. Like Tyrone for example. Unless it’s a full name like Jim Thorpe.
I’am afraid of towns that have people names. Like Tyrone for example. Unless it’s a full name like Jim Thorpe.
Or Chevy Chase after this ‘method’ actor! But must say Jim Thorpe’s reply at 1912 Olympics to the King of Sweden who congratulated him bein the greatest athlete in the world, ‘thanks, king!’, is the best ever!
Dallas, Texas. Anyone know any retail stores that sell snuff? I haven’t found any in the area.
Michigan. The State of high taxes, low paying jobs, poverty, home foreclosures, and Prisons. Combine those with 9 months of no color and lots of precipitation… you get a wonderful Paradise.
Sounds like most states these days except for the forecast
Jeez, if you climb those towers in your picture you have my admiration, gives me the willies heights do.
I live in Matera, a very ancient city of Sout Italy. Matera is divided in new city and old city that is known in the world as “Sassi” of Matera, our pride. Here some pictures of Sassi:
beautiful city, @oldbigwagon
I love the architecture in the Med.
@OldBigWagon Breathtaking.
Yes, no coincidence, here they make movies (recently The Passion by Mel Gibson for example) and advertising. Sassi are also UNESCO World Heritage Site for their particularity to be carved into the tuff mountain and not constructed as normal houses made of bricks. With the rest of the tuff excavated, they built only the facades of the houses. Sassi are introspective! Sassi are like a traditional real crib, in fact, for many years, here, they did the largest nativity scene in the world with real persons. Interesting link: youtube.com/watch?v=rPuS8AZdsj4
New York City.
@Robeandslippers The middle of downtown are you? Greenwich Village? Brooklyn Heights? The Bowery? The Bronx? Rockaway Point? Coney Island? Governor’s Island? Roosevelt Island? Riker’s Island??? You know its a vague address you are giving, right?
@Xander Sorry to be so obtuse. Def. not Riker’s Island: I’m on the Upper West Side: Morningside Heights.
All right then fellow “free” citizen. Now I have an idea. Welcome! (Not from NYC btw but spent some of my formative years there).
Kendal the home of snuff!
@SnuffySnuff Zurich eh, reminds me of the South Park episode about the worlds largest shit
Omaha, Nebraska Though I was raised in NE Kansas (Topeka area). Moved to Nebraska to earn my Ph.D. Family hails from Alsace Lorraine originally. We immigrated to the US in 1853 first living in PA before moving to the mid-west.
north side chicago
Mongolia.
God’s own county of Yorkshire, more precisely between Barnsley and Wakefield. It’s a former coal mining area and there are still a lot of old lads about who still chow and pinch as a throwback to working down the pits. There are two good tabaconists fairly close and a.couple of paper shops who sell McChrystals and chowing bacca.
I heard a lot of miners used snuff not only for pleasure but to help them clear their sinuses
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. You can’t buy nasal snuff anywhere here, though we finally have snus.
Bavaria in Germany ![]()
Nice digs @LittleSnuffY… lol
@MatheFox, a lot of it was down to the fact you get 'more for your money 'with bacca rather than snuff from what I’ve been told plus the fact you’re spitting regularly so it keeps the dust out and your mouth moist. It also depended what job you had as to wether you had time to pinch snuff such as on haulage or were working more manually. All the pit canteens sold bacca and snuff so they could take it down with them, from what I’ve been told they usually took an ounce a shift (of chowing bacca) with them.
Palm Springs, California
@SnuffySnuff Zurich eh, reminds me of the South Park episode about the worlds largest shit
100 Courics Fellow South Park fan here.
I know for a fact I’ve made the world’s largest shit. Just because I didn’t measure it in Courics (she’s got her just desserts since that aired) in Zurich doesn’t make it not so. Why is it they don’t concern themselves with shapes? I can make a different letter of the alphabet every day. I’ve done them all too, although “Q’s” are challenging.
There’s a famous scene in the book "Been Down So Long it Looks Like Up to Me
I was born in Buffalo NY and went to college there, and lived there for a bit after college. Love everything about it. I’ve spent most of my life in Charlottesville VA and that’s where I live now. It’s the town where UVA is. Population about 46,000 though when school’s in session this is about 15k higher. I live in a neighborhood called Belmont which is really cool and old, it sort of reminds me of parts of the West Side in Buffalo in a southern gothic sort of way. There’s a really nice documentary about it, “Still Life With Donuts”.
Bydgoszcz. Poland. It’s exactly near the Vistula knee. Catch some photos. First is the view from my window. Second - forth are the waterfront. The last is place near Old Square - on the left you can see old granaries, the same are on the second picture. They are almost as old (1795) as the USA (1776)
Wellsville OH. right along Ohio river. Can be in West Virginia or Pennsylvania in under 15 minutes
@Viertel So its always night time there? :-j
Berkeley, California. A cross between a well to do suburb of San Francisco, and a crazy college town. Beautiful weather, lots of interesting people, and good eats. Nice place to live but expensive real estate.
@Viertel So its always night time there? :-j
Always.
Chesterfield, Derbyshire, England. Stefan
St. Paul, Minnesota
Wolverhampton, England. A former industrial town (now has city status - for what it’s worth) from the days when England had any industry.
Castleside,Durham,England I live and work on a 20 acre horse rescue centre in the glorious english countryside I could’nt wish for more (saying that a day off would be nice haha)
On the north coast of New York in Rochester.
Nottingham, England. City of caves, associated with Robin Hood, home of imperial tobacco, boots (the chemists) and Gauntleys tobacconist, if you’re ever in the neighbourhood.
@peppernut1. As an old Errol Flynn fan, doRobin Hood and hisMerry Men still bother the Sheriff of Nottingham?
@BAS , I don’t think so. Health and safety rules the land, now and you could definitely have someone’s eye out with a bow and arrow. Just ask that guy on the bayeux tapestry.
@peppernut1. Thanks for clearing that up for me. I grew up in Sweden and we’re no longer allowed to carry battle axes and go longboating either. *sigh*. Progress.
i live near New Paltz , NY , but can be found anywhere in the Hudson valley , depending on what im doing
I married my wife in New Paltz, NY! Out in the middle of an open field on a beautiful October afternoon, when the leaves were all changing their colors. Great little town. However, I live in a small town outside Los Angeles, CA called Wrightwood. 5000 people, 6000ft elevation, and if you try hard enough, you can almost believe you’re nowhere near LA. LA sucks. Badly.
I don’t know if L.A. sucks I do know that the only city people didn’t make me want to visit when they talked about where they are from were Detroit and LA. They said the loved it the same way people who know their parents genuinely were not very good parents say they love their parents (it almost sounds like an apology. Then people who I’ve known who have money and lots of money always say I don’t get why people rip on L.A. so much it’s a nice town. Makes me think L.A. is a great town if you have the cash.
My brother and I are on two completely different sides of the spectrum. He lives in the heart of LA, in an area 99% of the world could not afford. He loves LA and would probably never move away. Me, I spend my time scouting around other parts of the world to see where the best migration destination is for me, and getting a plan together to make it happen. They are right; if you have the cash, LA is great. I guess it’s more like 2 different towns then.
Vancouver Washington, just across the river from portland Oregon. And yes, it rains all the time here.
As my handle here implies, I live right in the epicentre of Jakarta, the capital of Indonesia and, according to some calculations, the fourth largest city in the world. It’s pretty much a snuff desert, although I’ve found that an old acquaintance of mine, a guy called Graeme who lives in a city about eight hours away by car, is a major snuff enthusiast and was the founder of another, long-established internet snuff forum. In addition, I’ve been actively proselytizing amongst the Indonesian Pipe Club, in the hope of creating a demand for our local gray market tobacco dealer to start offering snuff as well as pipe tobacco.
North of Steamboat Springs, Colorado surrounded by the Routt Nat’l forest, about 45 miles south of the Wyoming border, in the new “old west”. Butch Cassidy was once in jail in town 20 miles north of here in 1890 something… Theres a big volcanic cone of a mtn, 10,000’ elevation, where in 1868 gold was found. It started a mini gold rush, resulting in the establishment of a town called Hahn’s Peak, named after a gold miner from Austria named Josef Hahn. He and a friend died along the continental divide, caught in a April snowstorm. He was found the following summer, dead with his companion, along the banks of Muddy Creek. The area has high mountain meadows, and cattle are grazed all around here. In fact, they regularly break through fences and come wandering across my land. This isn’t “snuff country”, like I imagine England to be. It’s more chewing tobacco country. In fact, I know of only 2 other people around here who use snuff, and thats just word of mouth. This is also heavy red neck land. The standard vehicle is a big pickup truck w/ a flat bed. I like it because its so remote. The closest interstate hwy is 70 miles away!
Norman, Oklahoma. To follow the @Dogwalla theme of dispelling stereotypes, I don’t live in a teepee.
From Farmington, MN and now living in Down Town Saint Paul, MN next to the Wabasha bridge, and four blocks from the farmers market.
I live in (or outside of) Bisbee Arizona USA. Xtreme SE Arizona. I am 3 miles from Naco Mexico. But…we are at close to 5K feet, in elevation so a little high desert goin on. 100 miles from Tucson Az. We have the Mule Mnts. the San Jose Mnts. the Huachuca Mountains, and the amazing Chiricahua Mnts. not too far away. Bisbee is an old mining town (copper) with some cool old buildings, but for some reason tries to bill itself as the most liberal town in Arizona. 30 miles from Tombstone Az. that is all…over…
San Antonio, Tx. You know, that Alamo!
@snuffysmiff & @saucy_jack glad to see that snuff is making a toehold in the American South West, I’m in Albuquerque, NM USA
Estado do Rio de Janeiro and Cornwall, England.
The land of Sonora, but soon to be up on the mountain, thank God [-O<
Portland, Oregon, USA.
NW Iowa
Living in central Ohio but Baltimore Maryland will always be my home city.
@BigJ I used to live in Portland. Great town with lots to do. Just became way to hustle/bustle for me. Much happier in Kalispell, MT!!! Quiet, beautiful serene…
@stogie Portland is definitely a wondeful place to live, but I often find myself wishing I was someplace more quiet and serene.
@Bigj, Portlandia makes me want to live there. I am in a very red state area of Iowa where fundamnetalist Christians abound.
@JohnnyFriday Portlandia is a pretty accurate exaggerated depiction of Portland. It’s a wonderful place to live that welcomes people from all over.
Hot Springs, AR here. Nice part of the world if you don’t mind the heat
Houston, TX
missouri west
Round Lake Beach, Illinois. About 45 minutes north of Chicago ( The Windy City ).
Wow it’s been forever…Nashville TN!!!
Alexandria, Virginia (VA) Lots of good places to eat, sparse tobacconists. Even the few who are around are not involved in nasal snuff.
@lunecat , if your snuff collection diminishes, i promise it wasnt me.
Lynn, MA … about fifteen minutes north of Boston
@MadMonk I spent my childhood in Saugus (back in the 50’s our road wasn’t even paved).
@mouse wow, its a small world i guess … made smaller by the internet it seems.
I live in Elkhorn Wisconsin. Its about 40 min south of Milwaukee and about 2 northwest Chicago
Phoenix AZ
Same as @WillieMac Durham, NC - which was once at the heart of tobacco country, first with the popular Bull Durham tobacco blend in the 19th century, and later with the Dukes owning the American Tobacco Company, to which many other major tobacco companies in the US merged in 1890. After an anti-trust suit in the nineteen-teens, the American Tobacco company was broken up and four companies emerged - Liggett & Myers, Lorillard, R. J. Reynolds & American Tobacco Company. L&M and American Tobacco stayed in Durham, so apart from hundreds of tobacco warehouses and manufacturing plants, you see plenty of old signs and water towers for Chesterfields, Lucky Strikes, Pall Mall, etc, which were made in Durham. It’s neat to see all the tobacco history around you when you go downtown, and nearly all of the old shut down buildings have been re-purposed, and downtown is pretty vibrant again after a good decade or two of pretty rough economic times when the tobacco industry left. What always cracks me up now is that Durham’s current motto is “the city of medicine…”
Hot Springs, Arkansas here
Heart of tobacco country— NC foothills
Grew up and still frequently visit Hyde County, NC. Right on Mattamuskeet Lake ( or the scenic route to the Manteo/Nags Head/Kitty Hawk area as most people know it). But now I live in the Northern Neck of Virginia, in Kilmarnock.
I live in (or outside of) Bisbee Arizona USA. Xtreme SE Arizona. I am 3 miles from Naco Mexico. But…we are at close to 5K feet, in elevation so a little high desert goin on. 100 miles from Tucson Az. We have the Mule Mnts. the San Jose Mnts. the Huachuca Mountains, and the amazing Chiricahua Mnts. not too far away. Bisbee is an old mining town (copper) with some cool old buildings, but for some reason tries to bill itself as the most liberal town in Arizona. 30 miles from Tombstone Az. that is all…over…
Crazy i went to high school in bisbee my freshman year and i’ve also live and worked in tombstone for while, and finished high school in sierra vista. I loved eating at Tachos taco on the way to naco…hello good eats. bisbee was pretty cool buncha hippies lol. i lived in warren couple of blocks from the high school there.
I live in tucson, arizona second largest town in az i believe lol probally just fell to third now that i said that. 1.2 mil in people something like that. love the area, town is kinda ghetto, but the mountains are killer. That’s all i got at the moment. taxed for time.
@cousinstuffy I’m north of Charlotte
The fabulous and world famous destination resort of Palm Springs. Swimming pools, movie stars, maids, gardeners and 120 degree Summer days.
Adelaide south Australia,originally from Co.clare Ireland
Here is the map where you can tag where you live: https://mapsengine.google.com/map/edit?mid=zphm5EZTGfrs.k4rigX0IXiIs
Vancouver Washington, just across the river from portland Oregon. And yes, it rains all the time here.
’ I’m in se Portland maybe we should grab a beer sometime I’m off like 82nd and Powell
Portland, Oregon, USA.
Me too
Leeds in Yorkshire, England.
Horizon, Texas at the moment, just outside of El Paso, but my hometown is Corona, California… -Kidnapper
Posted I think, I am terrible with this stuff at times.
Currently in Japan- as the profile pic implies. Just south of Tokyo and have been here just over a year. Before here I was in Virginia.
coconut creek, FL south FL
Blackburn, mid-sized former industrial town in Lancashire. An ok place but at least it isn’t in Yorkshire…
Greece, thessaloniki
Central Arizona. Between Phoenix and Tucson. However, spent the majority of my living in Southeastern Massachusetts. I recently moved to Arizona approximately Nine months ago.
@cloudyman Recently moved to Arizona from Massachusetts.
the mountains are killer.
I got to say as a recent transplant the mountains are my favorite part, maybe second to all the authentic Mexican food. Been doing a decent amount of hiking in the metro-Phoenix area: South Mountain, Camelback, ect. love it. The town I live in there are mountains on horizon that I can see from my house. Truly some awe inspiring stuff.
@peter77 whereabouts in southeast Mass? Mid-Cape area here.
@peter77 most excellent congrats on the move and getting to experience the mountains. the mexican food is also a plus. i would ask if you moved to apache junction cause of the mountains but since you’ve hiked camelback that might rule a.j. out but not completely. anywho the renaissance festival is kinda cool happening right now on south hwy 60 if you like good food good drinks and your occasional weirdo lol check it out but leave early cause traffic from phoenix area that way is terrible. well hope you enjoy az flagstaff is beautiful check it out and if you ever head towards tucson i can tell you tons of good eat places.
Thanks for the congrats, actual live in a town that is about 30 minutes south of chandler and that is approximately the same distance from Casa Grande, Maricopa, AZ. I definitely want to go towards flagstaff and Tucson some time. I will certainty will have to ask about some of the great place to eat down there if I am in the Area.
@Mouse Attleboro, MA.
Ah, I buy a lot of stuff from National Chain and Murphy’s Beads in Attleboro.
@viertel what is the line near me in northern england…?
I have no idea.
As a Bolton lad I shouldn’t mention the 4-0 drubbing we gave you last week. Ooops I just did! I like Blackburn a good Northern Soul scene, houses are priced well & you are on the edge of some fantastic country side.
Oh god, I’m no fan of Blackburn Rovers. Although I agree about how close I am to some cracking countryside, I spend most sundays cycling around the Forest of Bowland.
Minneapolis, MN here.
Charleston, SC.
In the Willamette Valley
Iowa… West of Illinois, East of Nebraska, South of Minnesota and North of Missouri
Lincolnshire England. Cold, grey, and flat.
Cold, grey, and flat.
Sounds like my ex.
Asheville, North Carolina, USA
Beautiful Dayton, Ohio! 
Milwaukee, Wisconsin - Home of beer, brats and cannibals! 8-X
Milwaukee, Wisconsin - Home of beer, brats and cannibals! 8-X
I want to ‘like’ beer and brats, but Dahmer? C’mon, this was a trick comment.
Olympia, WA
The new Islamic republic of Wokistan. We have the ““honour”” of having the first purpose built mosque in the united kingdom.
I am immortalized on the archive pages of snuffhouse.org. :-h Friends Welcome - Relatives by appointment only =))
I grew up in Boston, MA. Just moved to Berkeley Springs, West Virginia up on a ridge of the Blue Ridge Mountains.
Me too, although I did not grow up in Boston
Dallas, TX
Kailua, HI
DFW, Texas.
Hudson, Massachusetts about 25 miles west of Boston…
Copenhagen Denmark.
Copenhagen Denmark.
Condolences on Copes recent tragedy snuffHauler…
Thanks @snuffysmiff , i live about 500 yards from the café where the first attack happened. Yesterday the neighborhood was full of noises from police vehicles and helicopters. Today the city is unusually quiet and people has a thoughtful look on their faces!
I spent a bit of time in Copenhagen in the early 70s/ I really like your City and the people. Great spirit there/ Hang in there. Hej/
Massillon, Ohio in the heart of Football country about 10 minutes from Canton and the Football Hall of Fame… Of which I really don’t care about but find it is the easiest way to explain where abouts I live. Pretty much the buckle of the rust belt for this part of the world. But I lived in Ithaca NY for several years as well.
Everrot, WA US navy town and Boeing. Bless the Cascade mts.
I’m a proud Yorkshireman, born and lived most of my life in Sheffield. City of Steel, home of the world’s oldest football club, worlds oldest working snuff mill, the world’s largest working paternoster lift (in the UK’s tallest university building), and Europe’s largest listed building. Also the city with the largest ratio of trees to head of population in Europe. 61% of the City is green space. Now living 8 miles North East of Sharrow Mills, home of WoS and F&T.
Cappadocia/Turkey 
Life is good at 4900 feet in “the first valley west of the Rockies”, where the Gunnison joins the Colorado River on it’s thousand mile trip to the sea. High desert country where all snuff becomes high and dry if not carefully tended and leaving a tin on the dash becomes HDT in a matter if hours. Western Colorado, Grand Junction, I fell in love with the place driving from LA to Chicago in '58 and knew I wanted to live here … only took me 50 years almost to he day to get back here! Love the Western Slope, eastern part of the state … not at all. Regards.
Hour north of charlotte, nc
Amongst my recent sowing snuff (seeds) and rose buddy. YAY…
Rockford IL, once one of the most beautiful and gainfully employed cities in the midwest, now one of the most economically divided cities I have ever seen. East of the river, we have resorts, spas, five star resteraunts. West of the river, where I live, we have a higher homicide per capita rate than the south side of chicago, but we also have a budding local art scene and a growing flood of hipsters coming in from the Chicago area. I predict by 2025 we will be the next Soho @wiscsnuffer we are about an hour from each other.
Bologna, Italy.
add yourself to the Map https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=zphm5EZTGfrs.k4rigX0IXiIs
East Sussex, UK
@basement_shaman: done!
I live just off Rathgar Road in Dublin 6, Ireland. Everything you need is in walking distance.
When I’m not in London I’m in Kathmandu, where there’s everything you need in walking distance except Rathgar Road, Dublin 6.
Just checked the map for my location and just the four of us still up here in the PNW.
Four corners, Montana… Near bozeman
Live in Kalispell Montana, USA, but have my HOME in Missoula Montana. Work is jjust keeping me away from home.
In tobacco hating Washington state. Lakewood, WA USA
Northeast England not far from Whitby where Bram Stoker wrote Dracula
I live in Anoka, Minnesota.
Atlanta/GA/USA. Sadly, I’ve never met another snuffer here
Edgy!! Even back in 2014!
Leeds, West Yorkshire
South Dublin, Ireland
Koprzywnica near Sandomierz, Poland
Olbia, in east Sardinia.
Love Gunni! A little cold sometimes though
Now back home in Missoula. Yahoo!!!
Near Denver, Colorado, USA.
I currently live in Silicon Valley, San Jose, California
The southern part of Kent Island
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@Deez It’s the old black ladies at the piggly wiggly. You watch, they aren’t picking their nose they’re taking a pinch…or a thumbnail.
@clsmoothie Just got 24 pounds of ground beef out of Lockwood. I looks like the ranchers finally co-opted as Aspen Ridge Farms…But I haven’t spent much time on the Front range in a while.
@basement_shaman Brutal. If there ever was a good reason to be paranoid, that reason is Google.
Me, I’m in Farmington, NM. It’s either insanely apartheid or wonderfully integrated, depends on what time you go shopping.
True, but you’ve got to go WAY outside the city to get to a Piggly Wiggly or an Ingles.
I’m a hick, I can’t say I’ve ever stopped in Hotlanta sin the airport. So, I have now learned that piggly wiggly is not nearly as ubiquitous as I though.
Were it not for Ace Atkins I’d never have known that Piggly Wiggly or Dollar General stores existed.
To keep with the thread theme, I’ll add that I’m from Northern Ireland.
I didn’t expect to find fellow Cornish folk. Especially not within the first few posts (I appreciate that this started well over a decade ago)
I’m near Camborne, Cornwall UK
We are in Launceston - so not that far from you . I admit I haven’t visited this forum in a few years as I haven’t changed much in my snuff regulars
Southeastern Wisconsin
Tipton, West Midlands, former home town of the Tipton Slasher.
Born and raised in the west midlands 42 years in the making lol
La Porte, Texas not too far off from Houston.