
Do we still have around 350 breweries in a state with a population of 8.6 million, giving us a brewery for approximately every 24,000 people? Yes we do. Can you go in pretty much any decent sized store and get beer brewed in Virginia? Yes you can.
Still, the Virginia brewing scene is a poorer place today.
“Why?” I hear you ask…
My few hours on Chincoteague with Josh was a shot in the arm for me. Here was someone making beer in ways that deeply resonated with me, on equipment that wasn’t state of the art, in a manner that seemed to encapsulate the early pioneers of craft beer. Josh’s hops were mostly from the Eastern Shore, he only used Murphy & Rude malt, which is all made from Virginia grown barley, he did interesting things, like using pine needles, oyster liquor, and eelgrass in his beer. He supported his community by taking what they could offer, and returning it to them in the form of insanely tasty beer.
Black Narrows was a local brewery in perhaps the purest sense of the word.
In announcing the closure, Josh noted that “we watched our ingredients, equipment and labor costs increase. It was all too much”. In the end, the finances of being a hyper local, community supporting brewery just couldn’t sustain the business, when I interviewed Jasper Akerboom noted that “If you start a brewery, you are not going to get very wealthy”. Prescient words perhaps.
Thankfully, the beer scene on the broader Delmarva Peninsula is not losing Josh entirely, and there is something new in works, and when it opens you bet your life I’ll be trekking up past northern Virginia to get there – and how much I hope the corn lager will be part of this new adventure.



