This is where the commercial and faux commercial wannabees end up. These are just ordinary putzes who just happen to possess ego and time enough to put up a "rum website". They are almost never - well, never actually - qualified as real authorities. What they're really after is to gain attention, to get lots of freebies and/or to promote their rum business. In time, a bunch of monkeys come to regard this webmasterbaiter as an "expert", and here's the key - this individual now feels obligated to act the part.
They have painted themselves into the "Expert's Corner". This week we hear again from one of the greats - Wolfboy, a true master of the bar stool. As always he starts with a commercial blurb from the distiller, in this case a family made gin from Vancouver...
(Emphasis added)"Victoria Gin is hand crafted using a German copper pot wood-fired still. The company producing the spirit (Victoria Spirits) is located on Vancouver Island, British Colombia, and it is produced in a small batch process from a neutral grain spirit which has been enhanced with ten natural and wild-gathered botanicals..."
Our pot bellied "expert" once again can't tell the difference between a pot and a column still. To a hammer, everything looks like a nail, and to a pot-bellied reviewer, I guess everything looks like a pot (no doubt used to cook the sausage for his vodka tastings). I know this will bore most of you, but for visiting monkeys, a pot still is nothing more or less than a big squat pot, with a single exit called the "lyne arm", which conducts the vapors to a cooling device where it condenses into the captured alcohol. Here's a pot still from another post:

(Pot still to thumper to worm condenser)
Even this pot has been modified with a simple thumper in between the pot and the worm condenser. For example, most whiskies are made with the pot alone. Now, here is a true pot still:

And here are a couple of Carls:
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .


As you can see, lots of bells, whistles, and a spaghetti of tubing and gauges, and very similar to the small column used by Victoria to make their gin.
Like so many micro distillers, this lovely family has spent good money to get what is may be a Carl or more likely, a Carl lookalike copper still. As you will see, a Carl (or lookalike) are small, expensive, short column stills with a column of at least five or more refining "plates" that allow the production of high alcohol white spirits. What looks like a pot really acts like a boiler to feed the column.
While such a still can be run as a quasi-pot (by not running all the plates) this is only done for brown spirits, and no matter what, it is run as a deballed column, whose output will be notably different than the heavy spirits produced by classic pot stills. No matter...
In this case this column is being run as a column, using multiple plates to produce what in this case is an 86% output. Another difference from classic gin, is how the family soaks the botanicals in grain neutral spirit (maybe not even theirs), filters and then redistills the botannical-soaked GNS using most if not all of the column plates.
This too differs from real pot still gin, which does not soak the botanicals, but places them in a "gin head" which is on top of the pot, and through which the distilled alcohol vapors pass through and pick up the flavors and aromatics in what is a more expensive, and more subtle way. Still (pun intended), we remain big fans of all micro distillers and their fledgling efforts. A wonderful video of their process is (here).
Highly recommended watching.
As for our pot-bellied friend, I'd stick to holding forth at your local pub, the later the better. An oh - pick a sturdy stool...