Bidding advice
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Placing a Maximum Bid
Use the "Set your bid limit" button on the left side of the bidding panel to enter the highest amount you're willing to bid on a lot. Our system will then automatically raise your bid in set increments if you’re outbid, up to your maximum. If someone bids above your set limit, we’ll notify you by email so you can choose whether to increase your bid.
Placing a Single Bid
Alternatively, place a single bid by selecting the button on the right side of the bidding panel. The button displays the amount needed for the next increment. For example, if the current highest bid is £50.00, the button will show "+ £55.00" (reflecting a £5.00 increment).
Incremental Bidding Explained
Our system increases bids based on preset increments, as shown in the table below, whether you set a maximum bid or make a single bid.
Bottle Details
This incredibly unusual whisky was sourced from a collection of unlabelled bottles within sealed cases in a private cellar. The original 12-bottle cases were labelled 'Ben Nevis 15-year-old' and were sealed with packing tape with the company name Joseph Barber & Company Limited, which was liquidated in 1983. Its believed based on the rotation number printed on the outside of these cases that this was bottled in 1981.
Ben Nevis 15 Year Old Private Bottling
Ben Nevis distillery was built by \"Long\" John MacDonald in 1825, and was so popular by the end of the 19th century that at one point the estate employed over 200 people. After a series of closure and re-openings at the beginning of the 20th, it was eventually bought by former Canadian bootlegger, Joseph Hobbs. He installed a coffey still there in 1955, making Ben Nevis Scotland's first dual-operation distillery, and began to blend its malt and grain before filling it to cask. Sporadic closures again followed Hobb's death, with stability finally ensured in 1989 when it was bought by long-term customers, Nikka Whisky of Japan. Its turbulent history means there were few distillery bottlings until the launch of the 10 year old single malt in 1996, but casks had long been making their way to independent labels, and many of them are very highly praised.
This incredibly unusual whisky was sourced from a collection of unlabelled bottles within sealed cases in a private cellar. The original 12-bottle cases were labelled 'Ben Nevis 15-year-old' and were sealed with packing tape with the company name Joseph Barber and Company Limited, which was liquidated in 1983. Its believed based on the rotation number printed on the outside of these cases that this was bottled in 1981.
Please note there is no stated ABV, liquid volume, or any further information about this whisky printed on the glass or metal cap.
Ben Nevis
A historic malt distillery located in the Highland region of Scotland. Since 1989 it has been Japanese-owned as part of the Asahi Group. Although it only produces single malt today, the distillery dabbled in grain whisky production from 1955 to 1984, even producing rare examples of single blends.
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Frequently asked questions
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