
The Forever Aging Urn—a small cask made from the wood of bourbon barrels, designed to hold ashes—is manufactured in Virginia and sold by Sarasota, Florida-based Bogati Urn Company. (Photo courtesy of Bogati Urn Company)
You Can Age Forever With Your Favorite Whisky Thanks to This Bourbon Barrel Urn
January 14, 2020 –––––– Zak Kostro
Whisky lovers longing to spend eternity steeped in the aroma of their favorite spirit can do just that, thanks to the Forever Aging urn—a small cask made from the whiskey-soaked wood of bourbon barrels, designed specifically to hold the ashes of the dead, further moistened by a drop or two of their dram of choice.The Forever Aging urn was designed by William Elam, a retired attorney and native Kentuckian, who, ironically, isn't big on bourbon. “I enjoy a strawberry Daiquiri around the pool,” he says. “Bourbon itself is a little hard, a little strong.” But Elam nevertheless enjoys the heady aromas of bourbon that waft over from nearby distilleries to the backyard of his Frankfort home, in the heart of bourbon country. “I can frequently smell the mash if I inhale deeply and the wind is right,” Elam says. “It is a beautiful flavor.”In late 2018, Elam was musing over the fact that bourbon must be aged in new charred oak containers, leaving a lot of perfectly good barrels in search of new uses. His entrepreneurial spirit kicked in, spurring him to devise how they might be given a second life as urns. “I'm 77 years old, so I think about things like this,” Elam says. “I'm going to croak—all of us are—so what will be done with our ashes? I intend to be cremated, but I've looked at various urns and said, ‘Why be sitting on a mantle somewhere in a fancy vase that, a couple of generations from now, no one would care about?'”Before he'd even decided on what shape the urns should take, Elam dreamed up the slogan that's now branded onto one end of each mini cask. “I had an epiphany,” he says. “‘Forever Aging.' Because the longer bourbon ages in the barrel, the better it gets.” (Well, not always.) Elam teamed up with Andrea Bogard LeBlanc—the founder of Sarasota, Florida-based Bogati Urn Company—to get the project up and running. He settled on a barrel-shaped design for the urns because it's easier to build from actual bourbon barrels. “It's very difficult to take curved barrel staves and make a square box out of them, and still leave the char integrity there,” he says.
Retired attorney and native Kentuckian William Elam and Andrea Bogard LeBlanc, founder of Bogati Urn Company in Sarasota, Florida, raise a glass to the Forever Aging bourbon barrel urn.
