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  • 5 weeks ago
Transcript
00:00It's one of our ancestors' crafts, so to be able to do this now after I could have
00:06been doing anything else and keeping our traditions alive is a very very
00:09beautiful thing for me. So now once we got the cut, it's what we're kind of
00:14looking for. So now you probably wonder, for some people may want to know what I
00:18do with the rest of that, all of the scrap tobacco. That's what you make chew
00:22with. That's what you, you know, you can make some chew with that. You can, you
00:26can press it down and make a plug with it. If you got your cousin, you know, saying
00:31your little nephew or something who want to roll him a J, you can, you know, put
00:35that to the side for that. You know what I'm saying? You can actually use it for
00:39bandages. You know, you can dry it and use it for bandages. You can put it in oils,
00:44you know, like for skin rashes or antiseptic. So you never really throw none of
00:49this stuff away. All of these scraps, you take all of the stems, as I mentioned
00:52before, and use them for like anise, use them for like insect repellents. So now,
00:57here we go.
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