Category Archives: Thoughts

Flickrmeet at Boston Breweries

Lager On Tap A group of members of the Cape Town Flickr Meetup Group Group met up yesterday afternoon at Boston Breweries, an independent micro-brewery situated in Paardeneiland, Cape Town.

Chris Barnard, the founder and chief brewer welcomed us, offering the choice of beer or tour first.  Naturally we chose beer first and were served our choice of Boston Lager or Whale Tale Ale.  I chose the ale, which proved delicious, served in a glass straight from the freezer.

After we had enjoyed our beer, while chatting and snapping photos in the entrance/tasting area, we moved on to the brewing hall next door where Chris explained the process of producing beer.  Brewing hall is perhaps a grandiose term; it was far smaller than I expected, micro-brewery indeed.

Passionate About BeerChris is clearly passionate about beer, and explained that the extra flavour in their beer is due to the filtering process.  They use slightly larger filtering screens than the larger brewers ensuring that their beer retains as much flavour as possible.  The huge commercial brewers filter their beers more, removing most of the flavour in the process.

While Andre and I spoke to him, he revealed the difficulties that small businesses face in competing against huge monopolies, such as South African Breweries that absolutely dominates the beer market in South Africa.  To get a foothold in outlets the small guys must buy floor space for their products and reps from the big guys will come along, and take over that space by simply paying double.  It’s not uncommon for Chris to arrive at an outlet on a Saturday morning to find a palette of his product sitting outside in the sun, rather than in the store for customers to buy.  And strangely, no one will have any idea who fork-lifted the palette outside.  Marketing and advertising is a problem due to the expense of advertising in traditional media and Andre suggested that Chris look into using social media to raise awareness of his brands.

CratesWe ended our visit in the tasting room where we chatted again over some more of the delicious beer, purchased our supplies to take home; in my case a six-pack of Hazzard Ten Ale, described thusly on the Boston web site.

If you’re a fizzy yellow beer drinker this is definitely not for you. With an alcohol content of 10% it is strongest beer brewed in South Africa, the most defining character however is it’s flavour. It is dark red in colour, has a thick creamy head, and a strong malty character. The sweetness has been balanced by adding large amounts of hops to the beer after fermentation, a process called dry hopping. It’s definitely the beer that is the most fun to make!

I enjoyed the first of these last night and it rates right up there with Paulaner Weissbier as one of tastiest beers I’ve ever had.  I will certainly lay in a stock of Boston beers for the festive season when I’m on leave and will be wanting cool, tasty refreshments at hand.  The fact that they offer a home delivery service is a definite plus too.

Ever changing

When we moved from Gauteng to the Western Cape at the end of 1999, we chose to live in Strand; mainly for the small-town atmosphere and the lovely beach front.

The small-town atmosphere is still largely there, despite the huge amount of development going on in the area around Somerset Mall.  The beach front though, has changed dramatically; for the worse, most locals would feel.  Gone are the small hotels and holiday apartment blocks that accommodated scores of holiday makers in the December summer holidays; they have mostly made way for flashy new high-rise residential apartment blocks, with more being built all the time.  There are still a few houses and small blocks, but as the signs in this photo show; their days are numbered.

The new blocks going up are expensive, with apartments being advertised with come-ons like “From only R2,500,000”.  Perhaps I’m naive but I fail to see how the word only can be used with a figure like that.  I wonder who the residents of these new blocks are and how they feel about the state of the area their shiny towers are in?  Beach Road and the beach front facilities, once the big tourist draw cards, are in disrepair.  The historic jetty has been unusable for years but rather than being repaired or simply demolished, it has been fenced of in the most unsightly manner possible.

What happened to the fail whale?

Looks like twitter have done away with the fail whale.  Now there’s a caterpillar and an ice-cream.

Save money; share your commute

Take a look at Car Share South Africa, a new classified ad site aimed specifically at bringing together people that want to save costs by sharing their travel. As the site says;

Whether you’re looking for a lift to work, wanting to fill those empty seats in your vehicle (and decrease the traffic jam by a few cars) or simply need to get from one place to another, Car Share is the place to be. Find a fellow commuter, a student carpool or simply a one-off lift from A to B.

All migrated

I have just finished with the migration of all the old posts from a previous blogging engine, Antville, to this blog.  If your interested, take a look at all the posts from November 2005 back.

A beautiful day

Strand Beach

This photo from Strand beach, taken at 8:15 this morning, shows what a beautiful day it is in the Cape today.  It’s warm but not too hot, with not a breath of wind.  Sadly there is a cold front on the way, due to arrive tomorrow, that will bring some more rain.

I don’t get politics

I don’t pretend to understand my own country’s politics and the US political system confuses me more. If each party has two main candidates for party nomination, why does the winner nominate someone else as their vice-presidential running mate? Wouldn’t it make sense for the losing candidate to assume that role?

Looks like the beast is dead

Since making the change I referred to earlier, my machine has been humming along quite happily, despite the screens looking like this most of the time.

Hadn’t even had a Firefox crash all day; until I was writing this post in Scribefire, and I suspect that wasn’t a memory-related crash.

Memory; think I’m losing it

I have been having a lot of problems with my computers, particularly the one at work, behaving strangely in past months. I’ve never been able to grasp why I have trouble compiling and debugging our solution when others don’t; or why Firefox 3 is so unstable. Last night I was on my machine at home and got a popup telling me that my virtual memory setting was too low and I might want to increase it. I’ve been ignoring similar popups for a week or two but decided that I might as well increase the size. So I open the memory settings and what do I see? Total paging file size for all drives: 0 MB; ZERO? WTF!!

Then it crawled up from the depths of my repressed memories; I had once seen an article suggesting that in most cases disabling the paging file will improve performance. I tried it and found that it worked. Clearly the memory requirements of the software I run has now grown to the point where this is no longer viable, so I turned on my paging file again. Just found the same thing here at work and have enabled paging. Let’s hope this delivers the more stable, if slightly slower, experience I’ve been missing.

Self portrait in bookmarks

This is a representation of who I am, based on the tags I’ve applied to my delicious bookmarks; as generated by Wordle.