Rosebank Unity

The penultimate bottle in the Rosebank Roses series, Unity – the sixth entry – is again a combination of bourbon and Madeira casks, specially selected to add layers of sweetness and spice to the classic Rosebank Lowland grassy meadow character. A look back in time to a style of whisky no longer produced in Scotland and which is, like Rosebank itself, much missed.

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The Rosebank distillery was situated in Camelon on the banks of the Forth and Clyde canal between Edinburgh and Glasgow. Its name originated after the roses which grew along the side of the canal.

Rosebank was once considered one of the premier lowland whiskies but United Distillers mothballed the distillery in 1993.  The reason given for the mothballing was that its effluent treatment would have required a £2m upgrade in order to comply with European standards of the time, this did not make it commercially viable. At the time of its closure, it still retained many historical features in the production of the whisky.

Unicorns are coming

The start of a loyalty program

There are these unicorns, these bottles that get very popular among real whisky enthusiast who buy them to try them, compare them to previous releases, enjoy them with friends, …

But collectors and investors are also always on the lookout for these unicorns that do not pass every week. As a retailer and a whisky enthusiast, I enjoy it much better to see these bottles being popped open and enjoyed by as many people as possible.

So as a tiny shopkeeper with very limited allocations, I came up with the following concept to give everyone a fair chance to get their hands on these exclusive bottles.

The keyword will be LOYALTY!

From the 1st of April I will start keeping track of who buys on a regular basis in my web shop. To avoid speculation, I will always use a different focus point to decide your loyalty and the weight (number of entry tickets) you will get in a raffle.

For example: I could have a look at the amount spend during a certain period of time; maybe I don’t look at the amount spend, but rather to the number of bottles purchased or I could look at the number of bottles of non-whisky you have bought at the shop, … In short, no need to try and manipulate your chances. Each raffle will get its own focus point, which I will use to give weight to your account, so this will be different each and every raffle.

For example if I focus on the amount of bottles purchased in the last month to determine how many entries each costumers will get for the upcoming raffle and I give one entry ticket per purchased bottle, it is obvious that the one with the most purchased bottles will have the most entry tickets in the raffle and the highest chance to get picked, but if I would look in the same example at the money spend and give an entry ticket per €100 spend I could get a whole different amount of entries for the same person.

So, it is a key that you are already a costumer. You need to purchase a FREE, entry ticket for each and every raffle, if you like to participate. I will determine the number of entries you get in the raffle depending on the focus point of that specific raffle.

The winner of a raffle gets the chance to buy the bottle at the advertised price. The bottle will be opened, or the label will be marked to avoid it ending up on an auction. I will leave it to the costumer to choose what he prefers. Obviously, I prefer opening it and having a dram together, but that might not always be possible for some of you.

I will also check if people are interested in samples as it is a nice way to give more people at least the chance to have a try. For samples you only already need to be a costumer. I will apply a first come, first served principal.

These unicorns are coming shortly: