Ardbeg 1972 Douglas Laing 29 Year Old Sherry Cask 75cl / The Plowed Society 'The Ardbeggeddon'

Ardbeg 1972 Douglas Laing 29 Year Old Sherry Cask 75cl / The Plowed Society 'The Ardbeggeddon'

结束时间: 2024-09-09
¥29937 (含佣金15.5%)
£2700(成交价) ¥25920
拍品详情
品牌: Ardbeg
生产地: Islay
酒龄: 29 Year Old
瓶装商: Douglas Laing
净含量: 75cl
酒精度: 48.4%
桶型: Sherry Cask
装桶日期: 1972
酒款说明
Douglas Laing & Co was established in 1948 by Fred Douglas Laing, affectionately known as “FDL.” The company started out as a blending business, but over time their focus shifted towards independently bottlings single malts. Fred died in 1982, leaving the business to his two sons, Stewart and Fred Jr, who eventually carved it up in 2013, with Stewart leaving to establish Hunter Laing. Fred Jr and his daughter Cara now run Douglas Laing, which continues to bottle single malt and has also revived its blending business. Additionally, the company has recently moved into distilling as well, announcing plans to construct the new Clutha distillery in Glasgow, and taking over Strathearn in Perthshire in 2019.

The Old Malt Cask series is one of the most established independent labels on the market. It was launched by Douglas Laing in 1998 and bottled by them until 2013 when the brand became part of the Hunter Laing portfolio instead.

This whisky was distilled in 1972 and aged in a single ex-Sherry cask for 27 years. It was bottled at cask strength in November 2001.

You would not think it to see it now, but Ardbeg had a difficult time of it for much of the 20th century. The distillery was bought in a joint venture between Hiram Walker and DCL in 1959, both intending to supply their blends. The subsequent years were very successful, but DCL backed out in 1979 (closing many of their other distilleries a few years later), and Hiram Walker then struggled in the 1980s era oversupply when interest in blended Scotch was waning. They closed it down for the majority of the decade. It re-opened briefly in the 1990s before being revived for good by Glenmorangie plc in 1997.

The rising demand for its product in the 1970s meant that Ardbeg was forced to stop using its own malted barley, instead buying it in from the neighbouring Port Ellen maltings. The result was a change in the style and profile of the distillery's whisky, and pre-1974 vintages such as this are incredibly sought after by connoisseurs and collectors alike.

One of 227 bottles specially selected for The Plowed Society by The Whisky Shop to commemorate The Ardbeggeddon gathering in Las Vegas in 2002.