This is a wake-up scent for men who saddle their horses at dawn to quickly check the fences around the pasture.
First of all, I want to point out that this fragrance reacts completely differently on the test strip than it does on my skin.
The dot on the paper clearly reveals citrus top notes. Not sharply citrus, but rather a mix of mandarin peel and lime. While this lasts relatively long and then shifts into a very slightly silver-green direction, Jackeroo on the skin begins directly with a green-floral note after a brief citrus burst. We’ve already encountered this floral for men story elsewhere, but more suited for the evening. I think of the Flowers for Men series by Morris or Dark Rose by Czech and Speake, but also Black Tie, the absolute floral scent for men.
Jackeroo is definitely made for the day, the very early day. Some would label it an office scent. Despite an underlying sharpness, it is a light fragrance. In the middle development stage, bright floral tones appear. But don’t worry, these flowers are presented in a masculine way. How is that possible? No idea, they are sharp flowers, rather white, not sweet. A morning dew-fresh bouquet with plenty of silver baby’s breath. There is a base that neither drifts too woody nor too leathery. More like a freshly cut willow branch, spring wood-green. Mr. Jarvis really doesn’t make it easy with his restraint regarding the ingredients.
I find Jackeroo beautifully fresh, subtly masculine, and it stays relatively close to the wearer. No one will be overwhelmed here. I am very curious to see what men will say about it.
unfortunately, my hope that it could also be something for girls was not confirmed