Monday, February 3, 2020

spit it out!




One of the rooms I was in today had a can of Zyn nicotine patches on the desk, which got me wondering. Who invented snuff?

Technically speaking the stuff on the desk was chewing tobacco, not snuff, and there IS a difference.

Snuff is made from tobacco leaves that have been ground into a fine powder. Pre-Columbian American inhabitants were the first known snuffers. It's been used in Europe since the 1500s, mostly among the aristocracy, both for enjoyment and for its perceived medicinal properties. Use has declined sharply over the last hundred years, but the stuff is still around.

Typically, it is placed between the thumb and the forefinger and inhaled. Modern snuff comes in a variety of flavors. It is sniffed quickly into the nostrils, where it produces a stimulating burn — and a heady nicotine buzz — without the tobacco smoke that's been banned from many public locations.
The U.S. Surgeon General will not recommend dry snuff as a safe alternative to other tobacco products, and tins sold in this country bear the same warning stickers as oral snuff and other forms of smokeless tobacco.

Snuff is much cheaper than cigarettes. While a pack of 20 smokes can set you back $7, dry snuff costs between $2 and $5 for a pocket-size container of about 7 grams. One such tin can last a regular user several weeks


Chewing tobacco, on the other hand, is typically placed between the gum and the jaw line, or placed in the mouth and chewed. Unlike dipping tobacco, it is not ground and must be manually crushed with the teeth to release flavor and nicotine. Unwanted juices are then expectorated (spat) – which is why many offices in the early part of the 20th century had cuspidors.




Chewing is one of the oldest methods of consuming tobacco. Indigenous peoples of the Americas in both North and South America chewed the leaves of the plant long before the arrival of Europeans, frequently mixed with the mineral lime, in the same way as coca leaves.

The southern United States was distinctive for its production of tobacco, which earned premium prices from around the world. Most farmers grew a little for their own use, or traded with neighbors who grew it. Commercial sales became important in the late 19th century as major tobacco companies rose in the South, becoming one of the largest employers in cities like Winston-Salem, NCDurham, NC, and Richmond, VA. Southerners dominated the tobacco industry in the United States; even a concern as large as the Helme Tobacco Company, headquartered in New Jersey, was headed by former Confederate officer George Washington Helme. In 1938 R.J. Reynolds marketed eighty-four brands of chewing tobacco, twelve brands of smoking tobacco, and the top-selling Camel brand of cigarettes. Reynolds sold large quantities of chewing tobacco, though that market peaked about 1910.

There are four main types of chewing tobacco – loose leaf, plug, twist, and chew bags, all of which are further defined in the article below.


In the early days of baseball, it became popular because it kept the players’ mouths and gloves moist on the dusty fields they played on. Chewing tobacco, however, had a nasty side affect – oral cancer.
Bill Tuttle was a Major League player who made a big name for himself both through baseball and his anti-chewing-tobacco efforts. Tuttle was an outfielder for the Detroit TigersKansas City Athletics, and the Minnesota Twins. He was an avid tobacco chewer; even his baseball cards pictured him with a bulge in his cheek from the tobacco. Nearly forty years after he began using smokeless tobacco, Tuttle developed a tumor in his mouth so severe it protruded through his skin. A few years before he died, Tuttle had many of his teeth, his jawbone, his gums, and his right cheekbone removed. He also had his taste buds removed. Tuttle dedicated the last years of his life to speaking with Major League teams about not using chewing tobacco where television cameras could see the players so that children could not witness and be influenced by it. He also dedicated time to the National Spit Tobacco Education Program, which was being run by friend and former Major League player, Joe Garagiola. Tuttle died July 27, 1998, after a five-year battle with cancer.]
Babe Ruth, perhaps the most famous player of all time, also died of throat cancer. In the mid-1940s, Ruth was diagnosed with nasopharyngeal carcinoma (cancer of the upper throat). The top two causes of this disease are alcohol and tobacco; Ruth was a heavy user of both.
In 1965, 42% of the American population smoked cigarettes. The number has decreased ever since, and today is 14% - and is even less for teenagers. As a result, lung cancer rates have also decreased dramatically as well.
Smokeless tobacco products, like Juul, have recently become more popular. However, due to the health issues related to the product, they are now banned for use by anyone under the age of 21.


I’ve long enjoyed a good cigar, and used to smoke about one a week on a Saturday afternoon when I was washing the cars or cutting the grass. Today, it’s usually a maximum of 3 a year – Father’s day, on my birthday, and one other day when the mood strikes me.

I’m pretty sure that I tried chewing tobacco at some point in my life, but it literally has been decades since I’ve done so. If you’ve got a hankering for chewing tobacco, here’s my advice:

Spit it out.






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