I saw Danner Kline on Colbert explaining why he had created Free The Hops in Alabama and immediately became the only member from New Mexico, because my roots were in Bama. FTH fought a very hard and long battle to totally overhaul the existing beer regulations strangling craft beer in Alabama. Beer could not be stronger than 6%, or in containers larger than 16 ozs. Beer could only be brewed in buildings that had been breweries before prohibition. Obviously craft beer was being crippled in Bama, but FTH built a coalition of interest groups that pulled Bama into the modern world of craft beer. The governor signed the legislation on the eve of the 2009 Magic City Beer festival and breweries from across the country were there with the first legal "strong" beer in many decades.
My wife and I were visiting my parents and we left Mobile a couple of days earlier than planned so we could attend. And while all the locals were lined up at tents selling beer like Stone that had been illegal the day before, my wife and I enjoyed the offerings from southern states that had similar restrictions or that brewed beer compliant with those restriction. Sweetwater and Magnolia come to mind.
I'm curious if anyone here was also there?
If you're wondering why I brought this up my 15 year old tshirt is starting to show it's age.
My wife and I were visiting my parents and we left Mobile a couple of days earlier than planned so we could attend. And while all the locals were lined up at tents selling beer like Stone that had been illegal the day before, my wife and I enjoyed the offerings from southern states that had similar restrictions or that brewed beer compliant with those restriction. Sweetwater and Magnolia come to mind.
I'm curious if anyone here was also there?
If you're wondering why I brought this up my 15 year old tshirt is starting to show it's age.