Stop in for a drink.

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The conundrum for the evening... Which bottle?
Wellers
Knob Creek
Makers Mark
1792
Buffalo Trace
Woodford Reserve


Decisions, decisions...
 
Scotch night tonight at whiskey tasting. Peated Scotch from the Lagavulin Distillery. Looks like a 8 year and a 16 year. I'm not a fan of peated Scotch but someone will bring a bottle of something else to share.

scotch2.jpg


scotch.jpg
 
I guess in the land where they think Haggis is food, infusing whisky with peat smoke makes sense to them.

Not to me.
Agreed. I can't imagine. They used to burn peat moss to heat their homes. They use it to dry the grains and it takes on the Chinese rubber tire taste and smell.
 
Not again...Still!
Speaking of stills. This is from a Iowa distillery:
Iowa Legendary Rye
2 hrs ·
This is the Prohibition-era still we found buried on the Sextro family farm just outside Templeton. We’re in the process of rebuilding it to show what it would have looked like in 1931. We’re about a quarter of the way through the re-build. What do you think?

Iowa Ledgendary Rye still.PNG
 
Speaking of stills. This is from a Iowa distillery:
Iowa Legendary Rye
2 hrs ·
This is the Prohibition-era still we found buried on the Sextro family farm just outside Templeton. We’re in the process of rebuilding it to show what it would have looked like in 1931. We’re about a quarter of the way through the re-build. What do you think?

View attachment 1715440010
That’s cool! Should look great once it’s fully restored with the copper coils on the vent stack added.
 
Speaking of stills. This is from a Iowa distillery:
Iowa Legendary Rye
2 hrs ·
This is the Prohibition-era still we found buried on the Sextro family farm just outside Templeton. We’re in the process of rebuilding it to show what it would have looked like in 1931. We’re about a quarter of the way through the re-build. What do you think?

View attachment 1715440010
Good part of history I like it.
 
At the lakehiuse for a couple of days. The son and his tribe are coming up to find a nice red cedar to cut down for Christmas tree. Me and the Mrs....well, we gat to spend a night alone with burgers and margaritas. Life is good!!
 
Tried these tonight. Not a big fan of peated scotches. The 16 year was light years ahead. It was a $120 bottle.

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ADVERTISEMENT
Water Cannons Used to Fight Peat Bog Fire
By SALLY ANN CONNELL
SEP. 23, 2000

12 AM
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES
LOS ALAMOS, Calif. —



A smoky and foul-smelling peat bog fire that contributed to one highway death and forced northern Santa Barbara County schools to keep children indoors has begun to subside after firefighters began blasting the smoldering earth with millions of gallons of water.

The fire is in the northeastern portion of Vandenberg Air Force Base, and base firefighters have been attacking it with 4 million gallons of water daily since Wednesday. The blaze was ignited 10 days ago when the so-called Harris fire scorched 11,000 acres near U.S. 101 in the north end of the county. That fire has long since been extinguished, but 65 acres of the 651-acre Barka Slough continue to burn.

“We were unable to let the children play on the playground until today,” said Chris Whitmore, superintendent of the Alamos School District. “Visibility was just zero around here on Tuesday.”

It was late Tuesday night that Donald Lee Thomas, 52, of Morro Bay died after his car struck a slow-moving truck on U.S. 101 near Buellton. The California Highway Patrol said dense smoke was a factor in Thomas’ death.


Air Force Master Sgt. Ty Foster said the water cannons appear to be working. While peat bog fires can burn for months, Foster said that isn’t an option at Vandenberg, with 19,000 people either living or working on the base and 150,000 nearby.

“A peat bog is like God’s natural compost pile,” Foster said. “Peat bogs are usually not in close proximity to a population, so firefighters often let them burn out. Vandenberg doesn’t have that option.”

Foster said the firefighters risk falling into a hot spot if they walk out onto the burned crust of the bog. Flooding the fire is considered the only effective option.

Doug Allard, director of the county’s air pollution control district, said complaints from the public have dropped considerably since the water cannons were turned on.

1" of rain annually from being a desert and we have a peat bog 6 miles away. Vile smelling. Reminded me why I didn't care for Scotch.
 
""1" of rain annually from being a desert and we have a peat bog 6 miles away. Vile smelling. Reminded me why I didn't care for Scotch.""

:rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
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