(I'm actually not at all given to getting drunk, as strange as this may seem for a collector of fine liquors ...).
Anyway, slƔinte mhath
M.
Sounds delicious! I'm a bit of a bourbon fan, I feel it's appropriate as a quintessentially American spirit. In my cupboard right now is a Burnside Goose Hollow Reserve. They're a Portland, Oregon distillery (yeah, I know, slightly blasphemous that it isn't from Kentucky, but whatever) that uses an Oregon-only oak variety for their charred barrels. I might have to pull that bottle out for a photo this month, it seems thematically appropriate!Interesting ... a sort of safety from me, too. I'm just too tired to venture out today (or to arrange my subjects properly - the shot had to be quick, or it wouldn't have happened).
But here's what I will do:
I had my last dram a couple of weeks ago - literally no time to settle down and enjoy a nice drop.
I don't know if I've ever let slip that I'm actually an afficionado and collector - anyhow, these three have been waiting in the wings for a while now, so it's time to transfer them from the display to the bar. Of course, it doesn't do to guzzle these, so I'll crack open just one and have a nice dram - or, given the circumstances, two (I'm actually not at all given to getting drunk, as strange as this may seem for a collector of fine liquors ...).
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Anyway, slƔinte mhath
M.
Excellent tones, suites perfectly with a bit sad face
What an "Image for the times"! Bravo!I worried that this might be a bit cliche, but I decided to keep an open mind.
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Iām not sure if folks didnāt notice but the top of the skull is missing. If you look closer, there is a little hook on the left side of the skull that holds the absent skull top in place. Hence the āopen mindā comment.What an "Image for the times"! Bravo!