NOTE: This forum is no longer active. This is an archive copy of the forum as it was on 10 March 2018.
brettie vedder wrote:a neat read for those who havent heard this story....
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/8361995.stm
JohnM wrote:brettie vedder wrote:a neat read for those who havent heard this story....
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/8361995.stm
It's amazing that, given the difficulty of hauling a man all the way to the Pole, with some dying along the way and nobody else on this trip making it, they chose to attempt to haul a crate of whisky with them. I wonder did they leave whisky on the moon too.
jcskinner wrote:I find it sort of bizarre and a tiny bit ghoulish.
The plan from the distiller's point of view is to get either a sealed bottle or an extract of the whiskey (removed by hypodermic through the cork) and attempt to recreate the brand from a century past, and then obviously sell it as 'Shackleton's dram'.
You can't fault the marketing coup of such an idea; whether the new whisky resembles the original or not, most people will never know and many will buy anyway.
On the other hand, the original whisky was thought to be pretty young and fiery, with a lot of smoke. So perhaps recreating the taste profile won't be too difficult, but may result in an unrewarding dram.
IrishWhiskeyChaser wrote:The saga continues ...
Looks like Whyte & Mackay will get some after all ... and the feeding frenzy will start.
Some lunatic valued the bottles at circa 70,000 US dollars
Me thinks there will be a very expensive limited edition comming from this ... I don't care how old it is ... it is still probably a fairly bog standard blend ...
See Here
IrishWhiskeyChaser wrote: Basically a £100 for what was probably a bog standard blend of the time.
John wrote:Was Shackleton Irish? I know one of the exploration party, Tom Crean, was from Kerry.
J.
Ernest Shackleton was born on 15 February 1874, in Kilkea near Athy, County Kildare, Ireland, about 30 miles (48 km) from Dublin. Ernest's father, Henry, and mother, born Henrietta Letitia Sophia Gavan, were of Anglo-Irish ancestry
Partly this was in search of better professional prospects for the newly qualified doctor [his father], but another factor may have been unease about their Anglo-Irish ancestry, following the assassination by Irish nationalists of Lord Frederick Cavendish, the British Chief Secretary for Ireland, in 1882