9.9
Lagunitas Skunk Train Rolling Beer Festival
Skunk Train Station, Willits, California
sponsored by:
Lagunitas Brewery, 1280 North McDowell Boulevard, Petaluma, California
707.769.4495 [ Skunk Train website ]
By Jay Brooks
9.9
Lagunitas Skunk Train Rolling Beer Festival
Skunk Train Station, Willits, California
sponsored by:
Lagunitas Brewery, 1280 North McDowell Boulevard, Petaluma, California
707.769.4495 [ Skunk Train website ]
By Jay Brooks
The 3rd annual beer festival put on by the San Francisco Brewers Guild, Brews on the Bay, was held today. Eight of the nine breweries in the city were pouring their beers, with only Anchor abstaining. The festival has an unusual location. It’s held aboard the S.S. Jeremiah O’Brien, a World War Two-era Liberty Ship anchored at Pier 45 in Fisherman’s Wharf. Despite a cold, windy and grey day in the city — imagine that — there was a pretty good turnout for the festival and the ship was packed. The beer was spread all over the deck of the ship and there was music and food on board, as well. It’s a fun place for a festival and indeed everyone appeared to be enjoying themselves immensely.

The Liberty Ship, S.S. Jeremiah O’Brien docked at Pier 45.

The festival on the starboard side.

And on the port side, looking aft.

Already a tourist destination, a lot more people than is usual for a beer festival had cameras and were capturing friends aboard ship.

The Brewing Network’s radio show did a live remote with several of the brewers during the festival.

From the upper deck of the ship looking toward the bow.

Members of the San Francisco Brewers Guild pose with the ship as backdrop.

The brewers with the San Franciso Bay at their backs.
By Jay Brooks
My good friend and colleague, Lisa Morrison — a.k.a. The Beer Goddess — had a nice article on the recent craft beer sales numbers released by the Brewers Association.
By Jay Brooks
Beer taxes have rarely been doled out fairly. They’ve been used to support war efforts such as the very first beer tax in America, which was leveled to help pay for our Civil War in the 1860s. And while most brewers didn’t mind supporting their country, the fact that other industries were not asked to similarly help out was what led to the first U.S. trade association among brewers. Then there’s the so-called “sin tax” on many luxury goods deemed to be either bad for you or having some moral questionability — at least to the more pious elements of society.
So in a way it comes as no suprise that the European Union announced a 31% increase on the duty for beer and spirits. Proponents say it will add only about one Euro cent to the price of a beer (half-litre size). Critics say it will hurt small breweries. If passed by the 25 member states (it needs to be unanimous) it likely wouldn’t go into effect until 2008 or even 2010, with grace periods.
Some interesting facts about Europe’s beer industry from a Reuter’s report:
Europe’s brewing industry employs 2.6 million people directly or indirectly in 3,000 breweries. Over a third of the breweries are in Germany, where they already face a 3 percent rise in value-added sales tax (VAT) from next year.
But here’s the kicker. There’s no duty whatsoever on wine, because the industry has such enormous political influence. Yeah, that seems fair, doesn’t it?
By Jay Brooks
Today at 3:00 p.m. the Great Canadian beer festivals gets under way in Vancouver.
9.8-9
Royal Athletic Park, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
250.383.2332 [ website ]
By Jay Brooks
9.9
Stone 10th Anniversary Celebration & Invitational Beer Festival
Stone Brewing Co., 1999 Citracado Parkway, Escondido, California
760.471.4999 [ website ]
By Jay Brooks
9.9
Brews on the Bay (3rd annual)
SS Jeremiah O’Brien, National Liberty Ship Memorial, Fisherman’s Wharf – Pier 45, San Francisco, California
[ website ] [ tickets ]
By Jay Brooks
This Saturday is the San Francisco Brewers Guild’s beer festival — their third one — and it will again take place aboard the SS Jeremiah O’Brien, the National Liberty Ship Memorial on Pier 45 of Fisherman’s Wharf in San Francisco. Over 50 beers brewed in the city will be available for sampling.
9.9
Brews on the Bay (3rd annual)
SS Jeremiah O’Brien, National Liberty Ship Memorial, Fisherman’s Wharf – Pier 45, San Francisco, California
[ website ] [ tickets ]
By Jay Brooks

An understandably concerned brewer I know of noticed the image below while searching on the State of Indiana Alcohol & Tobacco website. Apparently it’s on a free flyer that also lists five “facts” about alcohol, but not about beer. I didn’t see the flyer on the website, but the image is taken from a neo-prohibitionist group called Facing Alcohol Concerns Through Education or FACE.

The caption is a little difficult to read, so here it is: “Beer contains alcohol. Alcohol is a drug. Alcohol is the number one drug in this country. Not marijuana. Not cocaine. Alcohol. Get the point? Make the choice to make a change.”
Of course, even without the text, the message is abundantly clear. Beer is the equivalent of a drug that you inject directly into your veins, like heroin. Sure, that seems reasonable. But it clearly shows the inability of fanatics to recognize the difference. Or perhaps they do know but purposely choose to be so extremely deceitful, dishonest and manipulative.
This image is in poster form, and you can actually buy one for $7.00 on FACE’s website, along with many, many other offensively ridiculous propaganda pieces. You can buy their many items as posters, magnets, billboards, bookmarks and even air fresheners. The amount of merchandise for sale to spread fear is truly staggering. That they present these items as tools to help you in the fight against alcohol underscores the extent to which alcohol is under attack once more in this country.
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Here’s another one attacking beer festivals. Apparently they send a bad message to kids.
Now I go to a lot of beer festivals, probably many more than the average person. And whenever possible, I take my kids along with me because I like having my family around me. Perhaps that makes me strange, who knows? There are a growing number of festivals that because of liability issues and governmental controls are unable to even permit children to attend beer festivals. So soon I won’t be able to spend as much time with my family because neo-prohibitionists are making my parenting decisions for me. Few things anger me as much as being told what’s best for my children. If these people don’t want their kids exposed to alcohol and want to keep them as ignorant as possible about the world, they have an obvious choice. Here’s my simple advice to them. “Don’t go or don’t take your kids. But please, don’t tell me I can’t travel with my family. Don’t decide for me what is ‘dangerous’ for my children. That’s my decision, not yours.” Frankly, a community spirit that seeks to control and restrict the actions of others is no community. It’s a dictatorship, a neo-fascist police state. Neo-prohibitionists have decided how the world should look and they’re doing everything in their growing power to make it look that way, public opinion be damned. The idea that “annual festivals,” which celebrate all manner of local culture, should not include alcohol — which is still legal the last time I checked — is antithetical to a community’s spirit is spurious at best and downright maliciously evil at worst. |
But let’s return to Indiana. As our concerned brewer rightly asks, what is a state governmental agency doing spreading such obvious propaganda? Since when is it the job of our government to push the agenda of a few citizens and not represent the entirety of the population? To me that’s the biggest danger we’re facing right now. It seems like state agencies are being overrun by people who are either neo-prohibitionists themselves or are sympathetic to their ridiculous cause of making all alcohol illegal again. If I were a brewer from Indiana I would ask my state representative and/or senator why the tax dollars from my business and my own personal taxes along with the revenue and jobs I was creating for the state economy were being used to fund propaganda that depicts my livelihood as being comparable to heroin? But check first to see if he accepted any bribes … er, I mean campaign contributions from any neo-prohibitionist organizations. That will help you to judge the honesty of his answer.

By Jay Brooks
Bluegrass Brewing’s beer, Hell for Certain, has been out before but something caught my eye in a short article about it’s impending re-release (perhaps seasonally) in the Louisville, Kentucky Courier-Journal. It seems the Belgian-style ale is named for an actual town in Leslie County, Kentucky whose name really is “Hell for Certain.” If you were born there, would you assume you were damned from the get go? Are there many churches there? How would you explain to people that you were born in hell? Ah, the possibilities are endless.
