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Whyte & Mackay Whisky Found at the South Pole

 
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Bookie
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 15, 2009 11:01 pm    Post subject: Whyte & Mackay Whisky Found at the South Pole Reply with quote

I saw this in The Telegraph and thouhght it may interest some of you on here.

Explorers want to recover a rare batch of whisky lost during explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton's ill-fated voyage to the South Pole a century ago.

Two crates of the now extinct "Rare Old"? brand of McKinlay and Co whisky have been buried in the Antarctic ice since Shackleton was forced to abandon his polar mission in 1909.

But Whyte & Mackay, the whisky giant that owns McKinlay and Co, has asked a team of New Zealand explorers heading out on a January expedition to return a sample of the drink for a series of experiments.

The team intends to utilise special drills to free the trapped crates and rescue a bottle from the wreckage, which is believed to have been discarded 97 miles from the pole.

If they cannot retrieve a full bottle, they are hoping to use a syringe to extract some of the contents.

The sample will then be brought home to Richard Paterson, Whyte & Mackay's master blender, who intends to replicate the famous old whisky.

If the experiment is successful, original McKinlay whisky could be put back on sale.

Mr Paterson said: "I really hope we can get some back here. It's been laying there lonely and neglected. It should come back to Scotland where it was born.

"Even if most of the bottles have to remain in Antarctica for historic reasons, it would be good if we could get a couple."?

Mr Paterson said Shackleton's whisky could still be drinkable and taste exactly how it did 100 years ago, but conceded that the bottles could have been damaged due to the changing conditions in the Antarctic.

"When that whisky was made it would have been quite heavy and peaty as that was the style in the early 1900s,"? he added.

"It may taste the same as it did back then if the cork has stayed in the bottle and kept it airtight. However, if the whisky is on its side, the cork may have been eroded."?

Shackleton and his men were donated the crates of whisky as they set off for the South Pole in 1907.

Severe weather conditions meant they had to be rescued two years later when just days away from reaching their target.

All supplies were then left behind in their hut at Cape Royds including the two cases of whisky.

The crates were discovered by polar explorers in January 2006, but couldn't be removed as they were too deeply embedded.

However, the team going back to Antarctica next year have agreed to try to retrieve some bottles.

According to international protocols agreed by 12 Antarctic Treaty nations, the crates can only be taken off Antarctica for conservation reasons.

Al Fastier from the New Zealand Antarctic Heritage Trust, is leading the expedition to Cape Royds in January, is determined to find the crates but does not want to sample their contents.

He said: "It's better to imagine it than to taste it. That way it keeps its mystery."

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McKay
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PostPosted: Mon Nov 16, 2009 5:12 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I will have mine on ice, lol. With all the essentials that they needed to survive they took crates of McKinlay whisky with them, amazing. I wonder if explorers would take such things with them today.

Anyway watch out for a bottle of Whyte & Mackay McKInlays Shackleton expression coming to a store near you. Best served chilled!

Here is a picture of the hut the whisky is buried under from th eBBC news site:


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kingfishertw
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 17, 2009 12:31 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Please see Lex's article as below

http://www.maltmaniacs.org/malt-104.html#2007-44
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Calder
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 17, 2009 1:40 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks for the link kingfishertw, a very interesting read.

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Acker
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 17, 2009 3:01 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

They gave this story some coverage on TV this morning. I think we may be buying limited edition Whyte & MacKay South Pole by this time next year, lol. Seriously i think Whyte & MacKay have seen a good marketing chance here and i am sure if they reproduced a replica of it and released it i am sure curiosity would get the better of me and i would buy a bottle.

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