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OLD PULTENEY DISTILLERY Navigator 46% abv 70cl

£90.00

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This bottle is being sold on behalf of a private client. As it is older, the packaging and closure may have deteriorated, so care should be taken with transportation, storage and opening of this bottle. The bottle is sold as seen and described, we do not accept liability for the state of the packaging or closure. Additional photos are available on request. No Vat.

OLD PULTENEY DISTILLERY Navigator

The ‘Old Pulteney’ Clipper Round the World Race yacht departed from London’s Tower Bridge on Sunday 1st September with a very special cargo on board: the first case of a brand new limited edition Old Pulteney inspired by the intrepid maritime adventure in the 13-14 Clipper Race - ‘Old Pulteney Navigator’. APPEARANCE Rich golden honeycomb. AROMA Sweet and crisp: tangy apples and dried fruit with hints of chocolate and fresh vanilla. TASTE Full bodied and rich: a burst of cocoa, honey and oranges with a long-lasting, spicy finish and suggestion of the sea at the end. Released in 2013 to coincide with its sponsoring of a yacht in the Clipper Round the World Race.

2 in stock

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Overview
Additional Info

OLD PULTENEY DISTILLERY Navigator

Pulteney distillery was established in 1826 in the newly-developed Pulteneytown area of Wick by James Henderson, who had previously distilled at Stemster, near Halkirk, some 15 miles away. After almost a century of operation, Pulteney was acquired by the Dundee blending firm of James Watson & Co in 1920.

Five years later, Watson’s was absorbed into the Distillers Company, having previously been purchased by John Dewar & Sons. In 1930 production ceased at Pulteney, due to the imposition of prohibition in Wick in an attempt to curb drunkenness. The town remained ‘dry’ until 1947, and four years later Pulteney distillery re-opened, now in the hands of lawyer Bertie Cumming, who also owned Balblair.

In 1955 Cumming sold Pulteney on to the Canadian distilling giant Hiram Walker & Sons, through its James & George Stodart subsidiary. The distillery was substantially rebuilt during 1958/59, at which point floor maltings were abandoned. The plant was then acquired in 1961 by Allied Breweries – later Allied Domecq – who operated it until its sale to Inver House Distillers in 1995.

During the Allied regime, Old Pulteney, as the ‘make’ of the distillery had long been known, was destined almost exclusively for the blending vats – with Gordon & MacPhail bottling small quantities as an 8-year-old single malt – but Inver House set out to build a successful single malt brand.

As well as developing a range of aged expressions, In 2010 Pulteney introduced into the travel retail arena an expression with no-age-statement called WK499 Isabella Fortuna. This took its name from one of the last surviving herring drifters, built in 1890 and now preserved by the Wick Society. This was followed in 2012 by WK209, matured in European Sherry casks and named after another herring drifter, WK209 Good Hope, built in Wick during 1948, and by WK217 Spectrum which commemorated the steel-hulled steam drifter Spectrum, launched in 1920.

These bottlings further reinforced Pulteney’s role as the ‘Genuine Maritime Malt,’ as did their travel retail successors, a trio of expressions named after local lighthouses – Noss Head, Duncansby Head and Pentland Skerries.

Approximately 60% of the output of Pulteney distillery is retained by Inver House – now owned by Thai Beverage – for single malt bottling, and of that 60% some 95% is filled into ex-Bourbon casks for maturation in Pulteney’s five on-site warehouses.

Additional information

Weight 3 kg
Dimensions 12 × 40 × 12 cm

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