YFGF on social media

Want even fresher beer news?
Go to YFGF's Facebook page:
YoursForGoodFermentables/
Or scroll down.
***************
- Serve cask ale at your pub? Cask Marque accreditation is now available in America.
- Follow YFGF on Twitter: @Cizauskas.
- Follow YFGF on Flickr: Cizauskas.
- Follow YFGF on Instagram: @tcizauskas.

Saturday, December 14, 2019
Pic(k) of the Week: Misted field and pond
26 November 2019: morning mist on the marsh, on the bank of Postal Pond, on the 77-acre grounds of the former United Methodist Children's Home, in Decatur, Georgia, USA.
The Children’s Home had been in Decatur since 1873, originally established to care for children orphaned during the Civil War. The city of Decatur purchased the property from the church in 2017.
Although sounds of the city, faint or obnoxious, can be heard throughout the grounds, city sights, in undeveloped portions, can vanish.
-----more-----
Saturday, December 07, 2019
Pic(k) of the Week: Bend in the boardwalk
Slow down, speeding pedestrians! There's a bend a-coming.
Looking northwest along a meandering, leaf-covered, wooden boardwalk on the South Peachtree Creek Trail, northwest of Medlock Park, in DeKalb County, Georgia, USA. 5 December 2017.
I don't often add selective color to black-and-white photos. Too gimmicky. But I succumbed here.
-----more-----
at
4:43 AM
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: black and white, park, Pic(k) of the Week, trail, winter
Thursday, December 05, 2019
On this date in American history, it once again became legal to sell intoxicating beverages.
— Henry Louis (H.L.) MenckenA prohibitionist is the sort of man one couldn't care to drink with,
even if he drank.
Eighty-six years ago, today —on 5 December 1933 (at 5:32 pm ET)— the state of Utah voted to approve the 21st Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America, its decision fulfilling the requisite number of states and thus terminating the ignoble, nearly 14-year reign, of the 18th Amendment, Prohibition.
Some might find it ironic that Utah of all states —with its widespread latter-day teetotalling— would vote to ALLOW alcohol. On closer examination, it may have been logically sagacious of that state to repudiate the 18th amendment, the ONLY amendment to eradicate constitutional rights rather than creating, affirming, or clarifying them.
After Utah's vote, two more states would vote to ratify. Six states (excluding Alaska and Hawaii, which were not states at that time) would never bother to vote on the amendment. But alone among all the states of the nation, only South Carolina, deserving of ignominy, voted against repeal.
-----more-----
Saturday, November 30, 2019
Pic(k) of the Week: Remains of New Manchester Manufacturing Co.
Remains of the New Manchester Manufacturing Company, an 18th-century water-powered mill in Georgia, USA, once a large manufacturer of cotton textiles, yarn, and fabric, 'humbly' named for the city of Manchester, England, then the world-renowned center of textile manufacturing.
The Union Army effectively destroyed the mill in 1864, during a campaign preceding the Battle of Atlanta of the American Civil War.
As seen looking east to west, across the Sweetwater Creek, in an eponymous State Park, about 20 miles west of Atlanta, near the town of Lithia Springs, in Douglas County, Georgia, on 17 November 2019.
-----more-----
Saturday, November 23, 2019
Pic(k) of the Week: PBR at Northside Tavern
A mural depicting a bald eagle and the logo for Pabst Blue Ribbon beer is painted on the outside wall of Northside Tavern blues club —and 'dive' bar— in Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Despite its name, Northside sits in Atlanta's Westside, an area that has experienced rampant redevelopment since February 2016, when I took this photo. One hopes for the club's continued long life.
And for that of the blues.
-----more-----
at
4:07 AM
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: beer, black and white, blues, breweriana, mural, music, Pic(k) of the Week, pub
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)