Saturday, 10:35 AM, Somewhere on Interstate 465:
A phone rings.
"Did you hear the news?"
"No, Chris... what?"
"Hot Shotz burned down last night."
"Oh come on."
"..."
"You're serious?"
"Yeah, Bob Mack called me this morning."
"Okaaaay.... see you there."
"I'm at the storage shed, we'll be there shortly."
11:40 AM, Outlots of the burned out Hot Shotz, 96th and Gray Road
A few Knights of the Beer Roundtable stand under a tent, setting up tables.
"Go figure he tells us to get here at 11 and Chris isn't here yet."
I dial Chris up on his phone.
"Hey, I've got some good news."
"What?"
"I just saved a bunch of money on car insurance. Where are you?"
"I'll be there in a minute."
"I'm getting lunch."
3:00 PM
Six men are standing in a circle, holding vinyl signs, some rope, duct tape, and a knife
"I think we can just tape it to the rope."
3:30 PM
"Our power just went out."
"Maybe we shouldn't have everything plugged in right next to the water spout?"
4:00 PM
"Now what?"
"I'm drinking."
6:00 PM
"Buy a raffle ticket. That bottle of beer is like $70 on Ebay. But if you sell it there I'm going to kill you."
"..."
7:00 PM
"Chris, I'm surprised you were able to pull off this many brewers this late. Especially with Brew Ha Ha last week..."
"Well, I dropped Hoosier Beer Geek a lot. I think that helped."
"Well I hope they're happy.."
8:30 PM
"Can I have some of that beer?"
"You know what? We've been closed for a half hour, you won a trip to Great American Beer Fest... I think you did well enough today. We're done serving."
"Ok, I'll just drink the bottle in my pocket."
8:45 PM
"Chris, you need anything?"
"I think we're good."
"Bye."
* * * * *
I was lazy all day Sunday, so pictures we'll have pictures here tomorrow. Bob Ostrander from Indiana Beer has a few, including some of the fire damage at Hot Shotz.
For those of you that attended, thank you. We'd love to hear whatever comments or suggestions you have.
Showing posts with label Hops for Pops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hops for Pops. Show all posts
30 June 2008
27 June 2008
Final Hops for Pops Beer List
If I don't post this, Maples has me killed.
Well, Hops for Pops is tomorrow, 4-8pm, on the outlots of Hot Shotz (96th and Gray Road, Indianapolis). Will it be an overwhelming success? An underattended money pit? Somewhere in the middle? Might I be sporting a mustache? SHOW UP AND FIND OUT.
Today's the last day to get discounted tickets, so if that's something you're interested in, click here. They're $30 today, $40 tomorrow.
And here's the as close as we're gonna get to final beer list - lots of interesting and new stuff in there, so I think there's definitely something for everyone.
CAVALIER
Weihenstephaner Dunkel
Gaffel Kolsch
Founders Red’s Rye
Stone Ruination IPA
Mad Anthony Old Woody Pale Ale
Boulder Beer Mojo IPA
Sea Dog Blue Paw Berry
Berghoff Dark Ale
Pizza Beer
Original Sin Cider
Celis White
Mad River Steel Head Porter
Fort Collins Pomegranate Wheat
Achouffe Houblon
Clipper City Organic Raspberry Wheat
Butte Creek Organic Pale Ale
Lake Front Fuel Café Stout
Coney Island Albino Python
Breckenridge Summerbright
Corsendonk Apple White
WABASH VALLEY
Cannonball Porter
Hazy Days Wheat
Gangster Pale
Harvest Amber
WORLD CLASS
Bell’s Oberon
Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA
Flying Dog Woody White
Avery Collaboration Not Litigation
Victory Prima Pils
Victory Hop Devil
Victory Golden Monkey
Atwater Vanilla Java Porter
Dinkelacker Pils
Wyder’s Pear Cider
Franziskaner Hefe-weisse
Buffalo Bills Orange Blossom Cream Ale
BARLEY ISLAND
Sheet Metal Blonde
Dirty Helen Brown
Barfly IPA
Count Hopula Double IPA
UPLAND
Preservation Pilsner
Wheat
BRUGGE
White
Black
Tripel de Ripple
SCHLAFLY
Pale Ale
Hefeweizen
Dry-Hopped APA
Number 15
Export IPA
Raspberry Hefeweizen
WARBIRD
T-6 Red Ale
Mustang Gold Ale
Thunderbolt Wheat
Warhawk Pale Ale
HALF MOON
Old Ben Brown
Elwood’s IPA
Seasonal
OAKEN BARREL
Razz Wheat
Gnaw Bone Pale Ale
Alabaster Belgian Witbier
Indiana Amber
NEW ALBANIAN
Elector Imperial Red Ale
BROAD RIPPLE
India Pale Ale
Lawn Mower Pale Ale
ROCK BOTTOM - DOWNTOWN
Hefe
Sugar Creek Pale Ale
Maibock
Saison
HOP SHOP
Hoppin’ Frog Mean Manalishi Double IPA
Dark Horse Crooked Tree IPA
Dogfish Head Aprihop
Coney Island Lager
Jever Pilsener
Hope to see everyone tomorrow.
Well, Hops for Pops is tomorrow, 4-8pm, on the outlots of Hot Shotz (96th and Gray Road, Indianapolis). Will it be an overwhelming success? An underattended money pit? Somewhere in the middle? Might I be sporting a mustache? SHOW UP AND FIND OUT.
Today's the last day to get discounted tickets, so if that's something you're interested in, click here. They're $30 today, $40 tomorrow.
And here's the as close as we're gonna get to final beer list - lots of interesting and new stuff in there, so I think there's definitely something for everyone.
CAVALIER
Weihenstephaner Dunkel
Gaffel Kolsch
Founders Red’s Rye
Stone Ruination IPA
Mad Anthony Old Woody Pale Ale
Boulder Beer Mojo IPA
Sea Dog Blue Paw Berry
Berghoff Dark Ale
Pizza Beer
Original Sin Cider
Celis White
Mad River Steel Head Porter
Fort Collins Pomegranate Wheat
Achouffe Houblon
Clipper City Organic Raspberry Wheat
Butte Creek Organic Pale Ale
Lake Front Fuel Café Stout
Coney Island Albino Python
Breckenridge Summerbright
Corsendonk Apple White
WABASH VALLEY
Cannonball Porter
Hazy Days Wheat
Gangster Pale
Harvest Amber
WORLD CLASS
Bell’s Oberon
Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA
Flying Dog Woody White
Avery Collaboration Not Litigation
Victory Prima Pils
Victory Hop Devil
Victory Golden Monkey
Atwater Vanilla Java Porter
Dinkelacker Pils
Wyder’s Pear Cider
Franziskaner Hefe-weisse
Buffalo Bills Orange Blossom Cream Ale
BARLEY ISLAND
Sheet Metal Blonde
Dirty Helen Brown
Barfly IPA
Count Hopula Double IPA
UPLAND
Preservation Pilsner
Wheat
BRUGGE
White
Black
Tripel de Ripple
SCHLAFLY
Pale Ale
Hefeweizen
Dry-Hopped APA
Number 15
Export IPA
Raspberry Hefeweizen
WARBIRD
T-6 Red Ale
Mustang Gold Ale
Thunderbolt Wheat
Warhawk Pale Ale
HALF MOON
Old Ben Brown
Elwood’s IPA
Seasonal
OAKEN BARREL
Razz Wheat
Gnaw Bone Pale Ale
Alabaster Belgian Witbier
Indiana Amber
NEW ALBANIAN
Elector Imperial Red Ale
BROAD RIPPLE
India Pale Ale
Lawn Mower Pale Ale
ROCK BOTTOM - DOWNTOWN
Hefe
Sugar Creek Pale Ale
Maibock
Saison
HOP SHOP
Hoppin’ Frog Mean Manalishi Double IPA
Dark Horse Crooked Tree IPA
Dogfish Head Aprihop
Coney Island Lager
Jever Pilsener
Hope to see everyone tomorrow.
24 June 2008
More Hops for Pops Details
If you've had enough of the constant Hops for Pops news feel free to drop us a line - I promise none of us will be offended. But in the meantime, he's some more details:
We really are doing our best to put on a heck of an event, so we hope to see you there.
Chris,and...
Here is the list of what we will be pouring at the event this Saturday.
Hops for Pops tasting:
Jocky Box 1
Weihenstephaner Dunkel
Gaffel Kolsch
Jocky Box 2
Founders Red’s Rye
Stone Ruination IPA
Jocky Box 3
Mad Anthony Old Woody Pale Ale
Boulder Beer Mojo IPA
Jocky Box 4
Sea Dog Blue Paw Berry
Berghoff Dark Ale
Bottles:
Pizza Beer
Original Sin Cider
Celis White
Mad River Steel Head Porter
Fort Collins Pomegranate Wheat
Achouffe Houblon
Clipper City Organic Raspberry Wheat
Butte Creek Organic Pale Ale
Lake Front Fuel Café Stout
Coney Island Albino Python
Breckenridge Summerbright
Corsendonk Apple White
Greg Blackman
Sales Manager
Cavalier Distributing, IN
Chris,I think of particular interest to the veterans of the craft beer game may be the inclusion of 90 Minute (always a favorite) and a nice lineup of Victory's beers, which are new to Indiana.
Here are the beers I’d like to pour on Saturday. I’ll try to scrape up a surprise or two by Saturday also.
WABASH TABLE –
Cannonball Porter, Hazy Days Wheat, Gangster Pale, Harvest Amber
WORLD CLASS TABLE 1 –
Bell’s Oberon, Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA, Flying Dog Woody White, Avery Collaboration Not Litigation
WORLD CLASS TABLE 2 –
Victory Prima Pils, Victory Hop Devil, Victory Golden Monkey, Atwater Vanilla Java Porter
WORLD CLASS TABLE 3 –
Dinkelacker Pils, Wyder’s Pear Cider, Franziskaner Hefe-weisse, Buffalo Bills Orange Blossom Cream Ale
Bob Mack
World Class Beverages
2007 GABF "Craft Distributor of the Year"
We really are doing our best to put on a heck of an event, so we hope to see you there.
23 June 2008
Hops for Pops Brewery List and Your Weekend Recap - Open Post

Upland
Schlafly
New Albanian
Rock Bottom - Downtown
Half Moon
Brugge
Barley Island
Warbird
Oaken Barrel
Wabash Valley
Mad Anthony
Broad Ripple Brew Pub
Tentative:
Bluegrass Brewing Company
It's fantastic to see such great support from the Indiana Beer community. Salute!
Chris left this in the comments for those of you reading via email:
"I'm not sure that we're going to be able to get a complete beer list prior to the event, but Cavalier is pouring Mad Anthony, plus some other stuff yet to be determined. Boston Beer will be represented with Sam Adams (not sure of styles, yet) and Twisted Tea. World Class will be pouring Victory's Golden Monkey, Prima Pils, and Hop Devil, plus Wyder's Cider. We have a limited supply of New Albanian's Elector, and when it's gone, it's gone. We still have a couple of breweries to confirm, but I'm guessing we're going to have at least 20 different breweries represented with 40-50 different styles."In addition, we'll have raffles for a few items including a bottle of 2008 DarkLord (and if the winner sells it on Ebay I'll personally guarantee that I'll have his/her whole family killed). If I'm not mistaken, there will also be some sort of raffle for a package of airline + event tickets for the Great American Beer Fest in Denver in October.
* * * *
Although we ran listings for Friday's Indy Wine and Brew Fest at The Rathskeller and Saturday's Brew-Ha-Ha, there wasn't a large Knight of the Beer Roundtable presence at either event.
Kelly (and Matt?) did volunteer at Brew Ha Ha - but we're wondering if any readers attended either event. Judging from these pictures at Indiana Beer, there were plenty of folks at the Rathskeller event. If so, how'd it go? Any suggestion or comments that might give us ideas or tips for this weekend's Hops for Pops? Did you drink anything spectacular? Anything horrible? Drop us a comment.
18 June 2008
The Story Behind The Story Behind Hops For Pops
This is long-winded, but please stay with me...
If somehow you weren't aware already, in just a couple weeks the people behind Hoosier Beer Geek will also be among the people behind Hops For Pops. As we've put this together, we've learned that throwing a beer festival isn't as easy as we might have suspected.
Being that this is a first time event, we're sure that there's still some surprises in store. But we're going to do our best to put on a quality event, and we're hoping that people show up. Having said all that, we at Hoosier Beer Geek don't have nearly as much riding on this event as (HBG and Dads Inc. founder) Chris Maples does.
In an effort to gain a little empathy from the general public (and to sell tickets), I sent Chris an email:
If somehow you weren't aware already, in just a couple weeks the people behind Hoosier Beer Geek will also be among the people behind Hops For Pops. As we've put this together, we've learned that throwing a beer festival isn't as easy as we might have suspected.
Being that this is a first time event, we're sure that there's still some surprises in store. But we're going to do our best to put on a quality event, and we're hoping that people show up. Having said all that, we at Hoosier Beer Geek don't have nearly as much riding on this event as (HBG and Dads Inc. founder) Chris Maples does.
In an effort to gain a little empathy from the general public (and to sell tickets), I sent Chris an email:
If you could do a little storytelling about how the dads inc thing started at whatnot - whatever you're comfortable sharing - a lot less formal than the official statement on the website, I think that'd be nice to include. When we were attempting to distribute posters, most folks wanted to know what Dads Inc is first.Chris' response:
I'm gonna do my best appeal to the sensitivities sort of post and and anything you can add in your story will help. Say something about puppies, too. Girls are really into puppies.
Also if you can have some really old people be in love and then have one of them die and then the other one die like two days later, that gets people really involved emotionally.
Ok i gotta go back to writing my screenplay for On Golden Pond 2.
Mike
Mike asked me to talk about the real and personal reasons behind founding Dads Inc. – and not the vanilla stuff that’s on our website. He also asked me to talk about babies, puppies, butterflies, and old people so that you feel all mushy inside and want to buy a ticket to Hops for Pops to support such a wonderful organization. I’ll try to do that, too.If that doesn't work, we'll have a list of brewers shortly.
It all started about 5 years or so ago. I had just gotten married to the wonderful women who I want to grow into old people with. We were talking about having babies and all that fun stuff that, and while I wanted babies, I was scared to death of the thought of becoming a father myself. Why, you ask? I mean, such a classy, confident guy as me shouldn’t have cute little butterflies in his stomach or be afraid of a little thing like fatherhood, right?
But yet I was, and for the same reason that so many other guys are – we didn’t have the best role models on how to be good dads because our dads (while we love them) weren’t the most loving or involved in our lives, and so we didn’t really know how to do it for our kids. Hell, I wasn’t even a good father to the two puppies I had adopted, and eventually gave them away to good homes with people that could take better care of them and be better fathers to them than I knew how to. I knew, however, that my friends and I wanted desperately to be better fathers than those that we had. We just needed the skills and support to get it done. And never wanted to appear inept at a chore as simple as child-rearing, I knew men would jump at the chance to get these skills without looking like a wussy.
I figured that there was surely an organization out there that would have some classes for me to take to get my daddy skills on. I looked far and wide. The only organization I could find (while a very good & worthwhile organization) was one that only catered to a more “traditional” non-profit client – young, uneducated, unemployed, poor, and irresponsible dads. While I was young, the other four didn’t really fit (ok, well, I could be irresponsible at times, but not like to the point of just cutting out of my family’s life). I couldn’t find a single class for a guy like me.
At the same time, I was becoming more aware of and tuned into the negative portrayal of men, and fathers specifically, in mass media. For example, other than Cliff Huxtable, name me one television father of our generation that is portrayed as something other than moronic and completely and utterly inept at parenting. If you can actually name me one, I will name you 15 others that aren’t.
And what about the Robitussin commercials where mom is sick and the whole house goes into chaos because dad doesn’t know how to cook, clean up after himself, dress his kids, or provide for them in any way other than doing his job outside of the house (you know, like what it means to be a grown up)? Approved by Dr. Mom, huh? When was the last time you saw a laundry or house cleaning detergent or grocery store commercial that didn’t have a woman starring in it? I don’t know about you all, but the last time I checked my house, I do a significant amount of laundry, almost all of the grocery shopping, and even a good bit of cleaning the house. Now with a son and another child on the way, I change his diapers and get him ready for day care every morning, and I know how to get him ready for bed every night, and how to calm him when he’s upset. Hell, my wife even makes a lot more money than I do (thank God for that!).
What I’m trying to say is that the traditional gender roles have been shot all to hell, but media hasn’t caught up with that. How is this line of thinking helping to provide young boys with any sense of what it means to be a good man in today’s society? So I also wanted to see an outlet that would set the record straight on modern gender roles and the abilities of fathers and men, and to provide an accurate and balanced picture of today’s man. But again, there was nothing out there.
One of my better traits, I must admit, is that when I see something I don’t like, instead of just bitching about it, I try to change it (note, I’m not saying I don’t bitch about it, too, though). It helped that I was already working in non-profits, so I was used to being poor and living with the pressure that relying on other people’s donations for your salary so wonderfully provides. But I still hadn’t found my calling. Does that make sense? I was passionate about many things, and very socially aware of the problems the less-fortunate face. But I hadn’t found the one thing that I wanted to dedicate the rest of the productive years of my life to. It finally dawned on me one day in late April of 2005 what I needed and wanted to do – start my own non-profit that would help any man, regardless of his income level or his zip code, to be a good dad. I wanted an organization that my friends and I could go to and be welcomed at. After all, the bad stuff about not having an active and involved father in one’s life is the same regardless if you’re rich or poor, black or white. There are drugs, pregnant teenagers, and high school dropouts in Carmel just like there is in Haughville. The environment is different, but the end results are the same – generations of broken lives. And that has to change now.
And that’s exactly what Dads Inc. does. We take fathers who want to provide more for their children than just a rough over their heads, and give them the skills, support, and opportunities they need to be active and positively engaged in the lives of their children. Last year, in our very first year of offering our services, 196 dads took advantage of the opportunities we presented to get better at parenting. That’s double the amount of dads that the experts we consulted with while planning said we could expect in our wildest dreams for our first year. And we’re on track this year to blow that number out of the water. Men want and need this service we provide, and they’re proving it by showing up in herds to things we offer.
Over the last three years, I think Dads Inc. has been able to raise awareness of and promote a good civic conversation on the importance of fathers and the state of fatherhood in our community. Through our Fatherhood Hall of Fame, we highlight and celebrate men who dedicate themselves to being the ideal father – or at least coming as close as possible. We want to raise these men and offer them as examples of what is right and good about dads to our boys and girls so that they have a high standard to strive to meet when becoming adults. This work that Dads Inc. does is not just about changing today, but also about preventing bad tomorrows. We see the work we do today as having a positive impact on generations of families. After all, boys get their example of fathering from their own fathers and girls get their example of what to look for in a man from their fathers. If we make sure they have the right example, then they will model the right example for their kids, who will model the right example for their kids, etc.
As an aside, through my work and study in the field of the fatherhood movement, I started to work much harder at understanding and changing my relationship with my own father. He lives in Kentucky, and so we only see each other a couple of times a year. He’s 65 now, and certainly isn’t getting any younger. I didn’t want to regret not getting to know and understand him better after he passed away when I had the chance to before that horrible day comes. So I decided that during the few times we do get to spend together, I was going to make a very serious effort to learn about his childhood (something he rarely, if ever, spoke to me about), what he was like before I was born, what he was afraid of as a father, what his regrets were, etc. What I’ve learned so far over the last couple of years has dramatically changed the way I view him as a father and our relationship – for the better.
Again highlighting the generational impact of fathering, I discovered that his father, who I only met a handful of times, had untreated and very serious psychological problems and ferociously beat his wife and children regularly. At one point, when my dad was still very young, his father (who was in one of his bouts with his problems) lined very one of his children up outside of their house and threatened to shoot them all with his shotgun. Thankfully, a neighbor came along and stopped it, but I can’t even imagine the scars something like that leaves behind on a little boy’s mind. His father was institutionalized when he was 14, and he left home at 16 to try to better himself, never returning home.
So after coming to understand the example of fathering my dad had, I began to think he actually did a pretty damn good job of being my dad. I’m not saying he was all of a sudden a perfect dad and I’m not making excuses for some of the shortcoming he did have as a father, but I came to see that he probably did the best he could with what he had. It helped me to see how much he did actually love me, even though he didn’t really put it into words so well. Now on every trip to Kentucky, I uncover and learn something new about my dad. We talk more frequently on the phone, and I think we’ve come to understand each other better. I see the affection he shows my son, and how much he enjoys doing it. I have to admit that the little boy in me gets jealous when I see that, not really ever getting a whole lot of it myself when I was that age, but really I’m so happy that he has learned how to show that affection and is getting the chance to now as a grandfather that he didn’t take advantage of as a father.
Now, go buy lots of tickets for Hops for Pops!!
11 March 2008
Hops for Pops Needs Help

We're looking for a few great men and women to help us along the way. If you've got any experience with how these things work, we want your input. Please send an email to (Dads Inc. main dude and HBG founder) Chris Maples (maples@dadsinc.org) if you're willing to help. And if you know what you're doing, that's even better.
17 December 2007
New Date for Hops for Pops
Since Three Floyds just had to go and schedule Dark Lord Day for April 19th, the date for the Hops for Pops beer festival has been changed to to coincide with Father's Day. The new date is Saturday, June 14th (day before Father's Day). So now you have an excuse to drag your dad out drinking with you! Location is still the same - the outlots in front of The Hop Shop. More info to come at a later date.
27 June 2007
Hops for Pops
As I mentioned last week, The Hop Shop and Dads Inc. were planning to team up to offer a large charity beer festival in the spring, with all proceeds going to Dads Inc. Courtney and I met on Monday to finalize some ideas and start some others.
Hops for Pops (only the working name - please, please suggest some others!) will take place on the afternoon of Saturday, April 19, 2008, most likely in the outlots of where The Hop Shop is located. We know this is the same day as the Race for the Cure, but their thing is in the morning, so we're hoping that after all the walking and running, those people will want to come up and drink some good beer! We're going to try for all the in-state breweries, and some of our favorites from the midwest, the nation, and one or two foreigners.
We want to do a few things differently than most beer fests - we really want to use this event for good beer education, too. One idea we're kicking around is having a Brewers Roundtable, and some other events that highlight the craft beer industry.
Tickets for the event will probably be $25 in advance, $30 at the door, with a special low price for DDs. We will also probably do I VIP ticket that will get you into the Roundtable and few other things. Just put it on your calendars, and as I get more info, I'll pass it on.
Hops for Pops (only the working name - please, please suggest some others!) will take place on the afternoon of Saturday, April 19, 2008, most likely in the outlots of where The Hop Shop is located. We know this is the same day as the Race for the Cure, but their thing is in the morning, so we're hoping that after all the walking and running, those people will want to come up and drink some good beer! We're going to try for all the in-state breweries, and some of our favorites from the midwest, the nation, and one or two foreigners.
We want to do a few things differently than most beer fests - we really want to use this event for good beer education, too. One idea we're kicking around is having a Brewers Roundtable, and some other events that highlight the craft beer industry.
Tickets for the event will probably be $25 in advance, $30 at the door, with a special low price for DDs. We will also probably do I VIP ticket that will get you into the Roundtable and few other things. Just put it on your calendars, and as I get more info, I'll pass it on.
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