THIRSTYGROWLER EcHoEs oF cAnNeRiEs pAsT Local breweries, once fi sh canneries, are canning once again BY WILLIAM DEAN Brews & News Listen closely and you can almost hear the clamor of the canning lines from a cen- tury ago. Along Astoria’s waterfront, where hun- dreds of workers once toiled in salmon and tuna canneries, there has been a revival of sorts. Canning has returned, this time under the roofs of craft breweries. “It’s certainly an interesting turn of events to see that transition,” local histo- rian John Goodenberger said. “It speaks to the beauty of an industrial building in that it’s adaptable. They’ve been repurposed for a new cause, a new product. Now they’re canning beer,” Goodenberger added. Nearly all of the city’s brewhouses are canning now, in part due to shifting eco- nomics . Canning is cheaper than bottling, and while draught beer brings the highest profi t, the lingering pandemic has damp- ened sales in taprooms and pubs. In the past year alone, several of Asto- ria’s breweries have invested in sophisti- cated and speedy canning machines, includ- ing Fort George Brewery, Buoy Beer Co., Astoria Brewing and Reach Break Brew- ing. When Obelisk Beer Co. launches this spring, the brewery’s owners plan to start canning immediately. All of the breweries believe canning is here to stay. What’s striking about the trend are the echoes from Astoria’s once robust fi sh can- ning era. Buoy Beer opened on the water- front nearly a decade ago in a former fi sh processing house and cannery. Now the brewery is doing canning of its own. Further down the banks of the Colum- bia, toward the Astoria Bridge, workers at Fort George’s processing facility are now guiding cans along conveyor belts, des- tined for bottle shops and markets through- out the region. It’s happening in a space that was once used to make cans and labels for the tons of fi sh harvested from local waters. “The building was literally made for can- Brace yourself for Reach Break Brewing’s special Oyster Stout, an Irish-style brew made with Pacifi c northwest oysters, fi t- tingly slated for release on St. Patrick’s Day. The Oregon Otter Beer Festival, scheduled for March 12 in Portland, quickly sold out. It’s a fundraiser for the Elakha Alliance, a nonprofi t dedicated to restoring sea otters to the Oregon Coast. Thirteen breweries, including Fort George, are participating. You can’t go, but you can still donate! Obelisk Beer Co. remains on track to open its Astoria brewery this spring. A custom brewing facility has been ordered and remodeling is underway at the former Columbia Fruit & Produce building on Bond Street, including a concrete ramp leading to a new entrance that will open into a taproom. ning. Now it’s continuing that tradition with a diff erent ingredient,” head production brewer Michal Frankowicz said. But the high-tech operations run by breweries today with just a handful of employees bear little resemblance to the gritty fi sh canneries of old, where workers fl anked the lines for grueling shifts. There were once dozens of salmon can- neries in the Columbia-Pacifi c, but as salmon stocks declined, the number of riv- erside processing plants dwindled. By 1970, there were only six. Ten years later, Bumble Bee Seafoods, the city’s last major cannery, closed on Pier 39. Today, the heritage of canning is deeply ingrained in Astoria, chronicled in muse- ums and by old salts on bar stools. It’s even refl ected in the label art decorating down- town trash containers. The dawn of beer-canning on the water- front is a good thing, according to Gooden- berger. Breweries could have demolished Hanthorn Cannery Museum Women can fi sh in Astoria. Photos by William Dean ABOVE: Chris Lamb, assistant packaging manager, monitors the packing of Fort George’s City of Dreams hazy IPA. RIGHT: Canning beer the modern way at Fort George’s waterfront facility. The system can produce 100 cases in 10 minutes. the historic industrial buildings and gone modern. Instead, they’re giving the old structures new life. “It’s nice to see a leg- acy continued,” Goodenberger said, “We’ve gone from tuna and salmon to beer.” William Dean is an author with a pas- sion for craft beer. His suspense novels, “The Ghosts We Know” and “Dangerous Freedom” are available at Amazon and in bookstores. Column ideas? Contact him at williamdeanbooks@gmail.com. MORE THAN YOU IMAGINED 3D Theater • Museum Store • Model Boat Pond OPEN DAILY 9:30 TO 5:00 • 1792 Marine Drive, Astoria, OR 503.325.2323 • www.crmm.org 8 // COASTWEEKEND.COM