THU, FEB 16, 6-9PM
IRON BREWER COMPETITION!
The Brewers: American versus Odin
The Ingredients: Mango & Lime
The Winner: YOU decide in a blind taste test!
SAT, FEB 25 – SAT, MAR 3
10TH ANNUAL BARLEYWINE BACCHANAL!
We’ll have twenty-four (24!) dedicated taps for the biggest, boldest brews born between Bellingham and Boulder (and elsewhere, too)!
Rotation includes:
Alaskan Barleywine ‘08, ’09, ‘10; Anacortes Old Sebastes ’08, ’09, ‘10; Anchor Old Foghorn ‘11; Anderson Valley ’11; Avery Hog Heaven ’11; Beer Valley ’11; Big Al ’10, ‘11; Big Sky Old Blue Hair ’11; Black Raven Old Birdbrain ’11; Boulder Killer Penguin ’09, ‘11; Boundary Bay Old Bounder ’10; Deschutes Mirror Mirror ’09; Diamond Knot Icebreaker ’10; Dick’s Barleywine ’11; Elliott Bay Old Portside ’09; Elysian Cyclops ’11; Firestone Walker Abacus ‘11; Fish 10 Squared ’11; Fremont Barleywine ’11; Full Sail Old Boardhead ’08; Full Sail Old Boilermaker ‘09; Great Divide Old Ruffian ’10, ’11; Hale’s Rudyard’s Rare ‘11; Hopworks Urban Brewery Noggin Floggin ’09, ‘11; Hood Canal Breidablik ‘10; Left Hand Oak Aged Widdershins ’10; Mad River John Barleycorn ’07; North Coast Old Stock ’10, ‘11; Pike Old Bawdy ’08, ’09, ’10, ‘11; Port Townsend ’10; Scuttlebutt Old #1 ’09; Seven Seas Wheelchair ’11; Sierra Nevada Black Barleywine ’10; Snipes Mountain Roza ’10; Speakeasy Old Godfather ’09; Stone Old Guardian ’08, ’09, ‘10; and Wingman Barleywing ‘11; to name a few.
SUN, MAR 11, 1-6PM!
SAVE BRISTOL BAY FUNDRAISER!
Join us for a outdoor-themed silent auction to support Trout Unlimited in their efforts to protect Bristol Bay salmon habitat. As wild salmon disappear around the globe, Bristol Bay, Alaska continues to produce the world’s largest sockeye salmon fisheries and one of the largest king salmon runs. The reason for this is clear; the Bay’s freshwater salmon habitat is largely untouched by development. However, the bay is under threat from foreign mining corporations that want to turn the watershed into an industrial mining district. North America’s largest open-pit mine is proposed for an area that straddles two of the bay’s most important salmon streams. If plans for the Pebble Mine are allowed to proceed, they risk destroying a $360 million commercial and sport salmon fishery that celebrated its 125th year in 2009.






