the rustic charms of grandpa's wonder pine tar soap
The things curiosity will lead you to do…
About two years ago, my friend Sarah and I discovered a
Detroit-based blog called Sweet Juniper. Among the great photoshoots of the
author’s kids parading around Motown in homemade costumes (think Robocop as if
it actually was filmed in Detroit), there was a post with the intriguing title “An Attempt to Explain Why I Smell Like George Brett’s Gym Bag.” Seems he has a
friend who likes giving him unusual gifts—in this case, it was a bar of Grandpa’s Wonder Pine Tar Soap found in a garage.
The packaging depicts a trustworthy old-timey white-bearded gentleman.
Whether dispensing wisdom at a family gathering or helping the kids put on the
show that will save the local library, Grandpa is undoubtedly a pillar of
whatever community he produces his manly soap—in this case, suburban
Cincinnati. He’s made his acne-and-psoriasis relief aid since 1878, so it must
have satisfied a few customers over the centuries.
Despite testimonials from Amazon customers that Grandpa’s
white-lathering skin care aid smelled like everything ranging from “wet
railroad ties” to “beef jerky,” I decided I’d pick up a bar if I ever
encountered one. How could I resist something Sweet Juniper described as smelling
like “a pair of leather gloves you find under a kerosene lantern in the back of
an old barn”?
Besides, trying a bar of Grandpa’s matched Sarah’s mission
of weaning me off my traditional shower aid, a cheap bar of Irish Spring. She
achieved her goal: even after we split, I haven’t gone back to buying my old
standby. Experimentation rules—take my discovery of Dettol soap. Found in Asian
supermarkets around Toronto, the traditional Dettol soap smells exactly like
the antiseptic Mom dabbed onto childhood scrapes and scratches. The small bars
produce an aroma which will make the world think you’ve suddenly developed a
compulsive-obsessive cleaning habit. Even if your bathroom is as grotty as the
one in Trainspotting, Dettol will convince anyone you use five-star
housekeeping service.
Several months ago, after lunching at our favourite Thai restaurantin Metro Detroit, my sister and I wandered into a health food store in
Ferndale. After loading up a basket with exotic flavours of Blue Sky and Zevia
sodas, a package bearing a familiar trustworthy face caught my eye. One box of
pine tar soap made its way to the cashier.
Last week, I cracked open the Grandpa’s.
If the Dettol soap left my bathroom smelling like a
freshly-mopped floor, Grandpa’s Wonder Pine Tar’s aroma suggested a rustic
backwoods cabin in the dead of winter. The sort of item you’d want to match the
scent of a fireplace or wood-burning stove. A scent that makes you wonder why
you haven’t worn a checked-flannel shirt since the grunge era. While a
subtle trace of fragrance du lien ferroviaire wafts off the brown bar, it’s not as horrible as some
descriptions lead you to believe. Its rustic charms complemented the deep freeze
we experienced last week.
As one recent satisfied Amazon customer puts it, “This stuff
smells like a man should smell. Every girl I've gotten close to has noticed it
and liked it.” I wouldn’t be unhappy about that unexpected bonus.
Grandpa:
honourable gentleman, local pillar of wisdom, evoker of rustic cabins, potential
matchmaker.
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