I’ve got a question about how often you find yourselves clearing your whistle (bear in mind I’m a newbie):
When my whistle starts to clog, I do the old “cover the end and blow into the windway” trick. That works fine for awhile, but I find that eventually, this doesn’t return my whistle to it’s normal clear tone. Then I resort to the “dishsoap” method (put a drop of dishsoap on a business card and rub it in the windway). This works great. My whistle sound nice and clear again. According to The Whistle Stop, this method “usually makes a big difference on how long you can play before your windway becomes clogged.”
My question is, how often do you have to do this drastic “dishsoap” thing? I just did it last Saturday, and already, I’m finding my whistle is starting to clog, and not completely clearing when I blow in the windway. Is this normal (I ususally play 45 min to an hour a day)?
Although Im not terribly experienced either; Ive been playing less than a year, I find varying clogging experiences depending on the whistle types. I have a dixon suprano tunable D which has never clogged. I have a few generations and an oak which clog about once per hour of play. When they do, I just cover the fipple’s windway and all the toneholes and give a good huff, and these whistles are good for another hour or so. I also have a silkstone alloy D, which has a curved windway to supposedly slow clogging. Although I love the sound of this whistle dearly, it tends to clog every 10 minutes. Ive never tried the dishsoap method though. Hope this helps in atleast relating clogging problems if anything else.
When I started, I played a Susato and it NEVER clogged. So when I got a Sindt and found that it would clog, I adopted the habit of clearing the windway after every song. Now it’s a habit and I almost never clog anymore.
And after each use I run a pipe cleaner throught the fipple to get any build up.
I usually play the first song ok and I can just start to hear a difference, and if I need to I’ll clear it, then I’m good for the rest of the session/practicing as far as I can tell… interesting topic. I hadn’t really thought about it all that much before!! I’m assuming that the first song is warming the whistle up to the conditions wherever I’m playing, and since it’s primarily a metal mouthpiece aside from the plug, it picks up moisture until it warms up maybe? Hmmmmmm… cool.
I have noticed though that after 30 min or so I will get a little condensation / saliva drip out of the bottom of my whistle so I think that perhaps clearing in between each song might not be such a bad idea!!!
it may sound kind of disgusting but I generally suck the spit up as I’m playing, I’ll take a spot where I’d normally be taking a breath and slurp. works like a charm as long as you sneak in a big breath beforehand.