Changes in California's climate are
drying up a river that supplies a fantastic brewery.
You’ve
gone from just being annoying know-nothings to now posing a serious threat to
an essential good that embodies humankind’s finest collaboration with nature:
beer.
It’s
one thing for the science denial cult to stand in the way of doing something
about melting ice caps in the Arctic, but it’s another thing altogether for
them to mess with beer.
This
makes it personal.
What
has that got to do with beer?
Glad
you asked. Mendocino feeds the Russian River, which flows by the town of
Petaluma, home of the Lagunitas Brewing Company, which makes very fine beers. A
key ingredient in the Lagunitas brew is the pristine water the company draws
from the Russian River, which presently is in danger of becoming a trickle.
Can’t
Lagunitas and other breweries along the river just switch to groundwater? No.
The
head beermaster at Lagunitas notes that heavy minerals in that water would
cause it to fizz in the brewing process, plus there are concentrations of
nitrates, iron, and manganese in the area’s groundwater, creating issues of
odor, taste, and other unpleasantries that do not add up to good beer.
What
the Lagunitas experience is teaching us once again is that the nature of nature
is that all things are linked together, despite the fantasies of industry
shills who insist that their contaminants have no dire consequences.
Mess
with the global climate and you mess with Lake Mendocino, which messes with the
Russian River, which messes with the beer. And now you’re messing with me and
millions of beer drinkers.
Like
I said: It’s personal.
OtherWords columnist Jim Hightower is
a radio commentator, writer, and public speaker. He’s also editor of the
populist newsletter, The Hightower
Lowdown. OtherWords.org