Today’s infographic is all about the Science Behind Sobriety Tests, and especially the three most common field tests that police officers administer on the side of the road when they suspect that someone might be driving with blood alcohol over the legal limit. It was created by Total DUI, a legal website specializing in helping people facing DUI/DWI charges.
Beer & Your Body
Today’s infographic is entitled “Beer and Your Body,” and was created by the Micro Beer Club. It details several of the well-established health benefits of moderate beer drinking.
Click here to see the infographic full size.
Vitamins In Beer
Today’s infographic is pretty cool, showing the vitamins contained in beer. Hold your mouse’s cursor over each, and find out how many beers you’d need to drink your recommended daily requirement of that particular vitamin. It was created by Merlin U. Ward using Infogr.am.
All Hopped Up For The Cure 2013
Yesterday I had lunch at Russian River Brewing, invited by co-owner Natalie Cilurzo as one of a small group of friends who had at least one thing in common: we’d each lost someone to breast cancer. For me, it was my mother when I was 22, and she was only 42. Each year, the Santa Rosa brewpub rolls out its biggest charity effort of the year to raise money for the local Sutter Breast Care Center. The entire month of October, which is Breast Cancer Awareness Month, the brewpub is festooned in pink and several great prizes are auctioned throughout the month.
This is the eighth year they’ve made the All Hopped Up for the Cure charity effort, and last year they raised $76,000 for breast cancer. SO far, they’re on target to beat that total this year. Here’s Natalie Cilurzo writing on the brewery’s blog about this year’s charity drive:
So here we are and it’s already October, my favorite month of the year. Aside from it being beautiful in Sonoma County, we host our annual month-long fundraiser for the Sutter Women’s Health Care Center of Santa Rosa, which brings me great joy! All of the money we raise/donate goes directly to help uninsured or underinsured women AND men in our community receive life saving screening and treatment for Breast Cancer. Recently we have become acquainted with several recipients of our fundraising efforts. Some of their lives have been changed or even saved by the services offered by Sutter. Check out our special Breast Cancer Awareness Month page on our website during October for more info on raffle items, how to get this year’s cute shirt and other interesting things!
This Saturday will be the final blowout of the month-long charity drive — a costume party — when the auction winners will be revealed. But there’s still time to help their efforts, both with donations and buying raffle tickets for the auction items. The big ticket item, a pink Genuine Buddy 50cc scooter, you can try to win for $10 a raffle ticker, or 3 for $25. The winner of the scooter will announced at 10 p.m. Saturday night.
There are a few other terrific items being raffled, too. For instance, there’s a custom-made guitar by local luthier Tom Ribbecke of Ribbecke Guitars. To win the guitar, it’s also $10 a raffle ticker, or 3 for $25.
There’s also a pink bicycle, an Electra Beach Cruiser, “graciously donated by The Bike Peddler in Santa Rosa.” Tickets for the bike are only $1 per raffle ticket, or 6 for $5.
There’s also some cool t-shirts, designed by local artist Laurel Gregory.
Gregory also created a pink painting of a Pliny the Elder bottle that will be auctioned Saturday.
The scooter will be announced at 10 p.m., but the rest of the items will have the winners for them announced throughout the evening. So come and enjoy an evening at Russian River and help raise money for a very worthy cause. There will also be music, by Brothers Horse. In addition to Russian River’s regular beers, the special release Framboise for a Cure 2013 (bottles of which are sold out) will be tapped at 5:00 p.m. The beer uses Temptation as its base beer, to which 800 pounds of fresh raspberries are added (30 pounds per barrel), and then it’s aged for several months in Chardonnay barrels spiked with brett, lacto, and pedio. There are only two kegs of it left, and they’ll keep selling it until it runs out. This is your last chance to try this year’s version. There will also be 23 special growlers, screened in pink ink, and full of the Framboise beer available for a minimum donation of $100.
Come on down Saturday night and get All Hopped Up For the Cure!
Ten Healthy Reasons To Drink Beer
Today’s infographic, 10 Healthy Reasons To Drink Beer, was created by Brittany McKinnon, a graphic design student from Brooklyn, New York. The only downside is this is the largest version of the poster I could find.
The Remedy: Hangover Cures From Around The World
Today’s infographic is entitled The Remedy: Hangover Cures From Around The World, using a simple, but clever design, to show various concoction from various places around the world to cure your hangover. Remind me to never get drunk in Poland. To me, that cure sounds worse than the disease!
Click here to see the poster full size.
Body Effects Of Alcohol
Today’s infographic crudely shows the Body Effects of Alcohol. Having been posting a new infographic every day for nearly a full eight months, I think this is probably the ugliest and least well-designed infographic to date.
Click here to see the infographic full size.
Visualizing Alcohol Use
Today’s infographic uses a simple graphic technique for Visualizing Alcohol Use, showing a variety of metrics using the same dot matrix.
Click here to see the infographic full size.
Blood Alcohol Content Effects At Different Levels
Today’s infographic, Blood Alcohol Content Effects At Different Levels, shows just that, moving from your first pint, at 0.000% BAC and proceeding to an untimely death at 0.410% BAC. It was created by Sober.com, a clearing house for treatment centers.
Click here to see the infographic full size.
10 Surprising Health Benefits Of Drinking Beer
Today’s infographic is entitled 10 Surprising Health Benefits of Drinking Beer, and was created by the Future of Health Now. None of these are particularly surprising, especially to regular readers, but thanks to anti-alcohol biases they tend to be under-reported and breweries are, in fact, forbidden from making health claims about their beer, another neo-prohibitionist victory. But drink up — in moderation of course — you’ll live longer and it’ll annoy the hell out of them.