Certainly one to look out for Dave.
Rob.
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Certainly one to look out for Dave.
Rob.
Not sure if the title refers to the Boatswain or the Glass.
Attachment 36268
Rob.
This beer celebrates a Canadian warship.
Attachment 36369
Attachment 36370
http://www.navy-marine.forces.gc.ca/...llingwood.page
Attachment 36384
Still at the bottom of the sea for me I'm afraid.
Also from the Side Launch Brewing Company, there is
Attachment 36401
Attachment 36402
The brewery wrote,"Named after Lake Huron, “The S.S. Huronic” was the first steel-hulled ship built in the Collingwood shipyards. During the Great Lakes Storm of 1913, aka the “White Hurricane”, it ran aground on Whitefish Point in Michigan. More fortunate than most, her crew and passengers survived. In the late 1930s, her cabins were removed and passenger service ended. In 1950, she was finally scrapped in Hamilton, Ontario. Though she’s no longer with us, her legend lives on with a beer that’s as complex as her past. "
How is this for supplies?
Attachment 36405
I trust that it does not taste like gunpowder, Rob. :)
Attachment 36438Attachment 36439
About this, the brewery wrote," The 165-foot “Germanic” was reportedly the last wooden steamship built in Collingwood in 1899. She began her career on the Upper Great Lakes for the Great Northern Transit Company and succumbed to a raging fire in 1917. Yes, she’s lost, but she’s most certainly not forgotten. "
Gunpowder Tea may-hap Neil!
How about this one.
Attachment 36442
Rob.
Since we seem to have started a Collingwood week, how about this?
Attachment 36462
I'll allow that.
Bligh.
Attachment 36526
Attachment 36527
About this ship the brewers wrote," The Majestic was a wooden passenger and a package freight propeller built in 1895 at Collingwood. It launched April 23, 1895. With 800 passengers aboard, she took part in ceremonies at the opening of the Canadian Zoo Canal, September 7, 1895. She mostly operated in the Georgian Bay Mackinac Island route. Unfortunately, she was destroyed by fire in Sarnia, December 15, 1915."
From the Side Launch Brewery in Collingwood, Canada we have three men overboard.
Attachment 36543Attachment 36557Attachment 36558
Another Flintlock.
Attachment 36551
From Australia we have
Attachment 36565
Since this brewery is in Maine, U.S.A., I would think that the name of the drink refers to the shellfish rather than the Marines.
Attachment 36586
Another lobster themed beer.
Attachment 36594
Attachment 36618
USS Wisconsin (BB-64) is an Iowa-class battleship, the second ship of the United States Navy to be named in honor of the U.S. state of Wisconsin. She was built at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and launched on 7 December 1943 (the second anniversary of the Pearl Harbor raid), sponsored by the wife of Governor Walter Goodland of Wisconsin.
During her career, Wisconsin served in the Pacific Theater of World War II, where she shelled Japanese fortifications and screened United States aircraft carriers as they conducted air raids against enemy positions. During the Korean War, Wisconsin shelled North Korean targets in support of United Nations and South Korean ground operations, after which she was decommissioned. She was reactivated on 1 August 1986; after a modernization program, she participated in Operation Desert Storm in January and February 1991.
Wisconsin was last decommissioned in September 1991 after a total of 14 years of active service in the fleet, and having earned a total of six battle stars for service in World War II and Korea, as well as a Navy Unit Commendation for service during the January/February 1991 Gulf War. She currently functions as a museum ship operated by Nauticus, The National Maritime Center in Norfolk, Virginia. Wisconsin was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register (NVR) 17 March 2006, and was donated for permanent use as a museum ship. On 15 April 2010, the City of Norfolk officially took over ownership of the ship
Attachment 36626
According to the brewery, this rich dark ale has a robust porter base and was brewed with live lobsters, which were added directly to the boil to cook off for the kitchen. Along with the lobsters, just over 6 pounds of dark cocoa powder were added to the whirlpool, along with a basil tea that was added to compliment both the chocolate and lobster.
Thank you kind sir!
Rob.
Looks like the WWI Squadron comes to the Anchorage Dave.
Attachment 36664
Another Privateer
Attachment 36697