Vermont
Three Questions for Foam Brewers’ Bob Grim Ahead of the Vermont Brewers Festival

Because it opened at 112 Lake Avenue in Burlington in 2016, Foam Brewers has been the Vermont Brewers Competition’s unofficial pregame and after-party spot. It is a no-brainer: The Vermont Brewers Affiliation’s annual tasting extravaganza at Waterfront Park is principally on Foam’s entrance garden.
However this yr’s pageant — operating Thursday, July 21, by Saturday, July 23, after a two-year hiatus — shall be solely the second through which the brewery has formally participated.
“The primary couple years, we did not have sufficient beer,” Foam cofounder and head brewer Bob Grim stated. The brewery participated in 2018 however skipped 2019 to deal with different initiatives, together with the development of its restaurant, Deep Metropolis. Foam might simply do its personal factor once more this yr, nevertheless it has dedicated to all three days of the pageant.
“We’re again as a result of we wish to present help for the affiliation and for the opposite brewers which can be pouring right here,” Grim stated. “And we do not wish to be jerks.”
The Vermont Brewers Competition began in 1991. There are just a few adjustments this yr: badges as an alternative of drink tickets, a number of choices for pour sizes and a brand new Thursday session that includes native components.
The lineup can even range every day: With pandemic staffing challenges in thoughts, the pageant not requires that the 37 collaborating breweries attend the entire weekend.
Grim, who not too long ago joined the Vermont Brewers Affiliation’s board of administrators, is prepared for the throngs of Vermont beer lovers who will flock to the park with tasting glasses in hand, desperate to sip the state’s most interesting suds. He sat down with Seven Days for a pint and a fast chat about Foam’s return to the pageant.
SEVEN DAYS: What are your predictions for this yr’s Vermont Brewers Competition?
BOB GRIM: The best way folks eat and purchase beer has modified a lot over the previous couple years. Folks do not actually wait in large traces anymore for can releases, and preferences have modified. The best-ABV beer on the menu was once the one that everybody would go for, crushing by double and triple IPAs simply to get fucked up. Now they’re extra aware of what they’re consuming, which is an efficient factor.
I believe All Evening Lengthy [a 3.2-percent lager] goes to do fairly effectively. It is a mild possibility. I like consuming lagers and pilsners on the finish of the day — they’re a terrific deal with. It is cool to see that persons are going again to that and appreciating it.
SD: A brand new Thursday evening session options breweries pouring beer brewed with native components. What’s Foam bringing?
BG: We do a ton of native ingredient sourcing, however we have been awkward with our communication about it. It might really feel like a advertising gimmick. Not telling the tales of the farmers and producers we’re working with is a bummer, although, so we’re making an attempt to step it up.
The Thursday session goes to be a extremely cool, intimate time to style and discuss concerning the plethora of issues persons are rising — and the way cool it’s that we get to help native agriculture and add them to beer.
We’re bringing For You, our one hundred pc native pale ale, and One other Refrain, a blended mixed-culture beer brewed with Vermont Malthouse pilsner malt and wheat from NEK Grains [from Gingue Family Farm] that we conditioned with 300 kilos of scrumptious, ripe strawberries from Final Resort Farm. We hand-puréed them with an immersion blender. It smelled nice, and it is going to be wonderful, however I am unsure I would try this with an immersion blender once more.
SD: Submit-festival, you are again at Foam. What are you consuming and consuming?
BG: I am positively consuming a pilsner. And the poutine at Deep Metropolis is a reasonably good factor to eat after consuming some beers.
This interview was edited and condensed for readability and size.

Vermont
Vermont murder suspect arrested in New York

PORTLAND, N.Y. (WCAX) – Police say the suspect in a Vermont murder was arrested in New York on Wednesday.
Terrence Biggs Jr., 25, of Michigan, was wanted in the deadly shooting of Austin Rodriguez, 26, of Rutland. It happened at a home on Summer Street on April 22.
Investigators say state police in New York arrested Biggs during a traffic stop in Portland, New York, that is in western New York, early Wednesday morning.
Biggs is charged with second-degree murder.
We still don’t know what authorities think led to the shooting or what the connection was between the two men.
Copyright 2025 WCAX. All rights reserved.
Vermont
Vermont shelter celebrates 68 adoptions in one month
Vermont
A covered bridge quest in Vermont – VTDigger


This story by Tim Calabro was first published in The Herald on Sept. 11, 2025.
Phill Gatenby rolled over the Moxley Bridge in Chelsea with a plastic skeleton riding shotgun in his Jeep, having made the long drive from Brattleboro for an early morning visit. Just a year ago, the Manchester, England native — by way of Florida — had never laid eyes on a covered bridge. Now he’s smitten.
Gatenby recalled seeing a covered bridge while driving around and thinking, “Oh, that’s interesting. I’d never seen a covered bridge in my life before. Never really heard of them,” he said. “A couple days later, I was going to Townshend, and all of a sudden it’s the Dummerston Bridge, and I’m just like, different size, different shape, different color.”
He stopped for directions and as he got lost on the back roads, he saw more and more covered bridges.
What started as casual curiosity has evolved into a quest: visit and film all 100 of Vermont’s authentic, historic covered bridges and share the journey on YouTube in a series titled “Vermont’s 100 Covered Bridges.”
So far he’s been to 50 and cranked out 37 videos of his visits — one every Sunday.
The most recent set of episodes has focused on the covered bridges of Tunbridge, Chelsea, and Randolph.
No two are quite alike. From king and queen trusses to parallelogram-shaped spans built on bends, like some on the First Branch, Gatenby has come to appreciate their variety and character.
And, stepping back from the bridges, the entire scene fascinates Gatenby.
“I mentioned this in the Kingsbury Bridge [episode]. I was at the bridge and I looked, and you’ve got the green mountains in the background and rolling hills. Then you’ve got the farm with the — is it the corn towers? — the river and a covered bridge. And it just says, like, you can’t get more Vermont!”
Gatenby’s process is rigorous. Each episode takes hours to shoot and edit. He gets different angles — sometimes driving through a bridge three or four times for the right shot. He’s waded into rivers, climbed steep banks, and once filmed inside a long-retired bridge that had been turned into a town shed.
“I try and do something that’s consistent,” he says. “So it’s, you know, the same start, the same middle. I go in the river. I’ve been in every single river so far.”
Gatenby credits community access TV stations — first Okemo Valley TV in Ludlow and now Brattleboro Community TV — for helping him build his skills and loaning him equipment.
“They literally brilliantly sat down and five, six, seven weeks went through how you do it,” he recalled.
Gatenby’s episodes go out via Okemo Valley TV’s YouTube channel and have regular times on the Okemo Valley and Brattleboro TV stations.
Form, Function, History
Vermont once had more than 600 covered bridges, Gatenby noted, but flooding and age have winnowed down the number greatly. Now, 100 remain and many towns hold clusters of them.
Tunbridge, for example, boasts five (Flint, Larkin, Mill, Cilley and Howe), with the Moxley bridge just over the Chelsea line. Randolph has three (Kingsbury, Gifford, and Braley or Johnson), all of them along the Second Branch.
Gatenby pointed out that three of the First Branch bridges were built by the same person, Arthur Adams. That’s a phenomenon common to covered bridges, Gatenby noted. Oftentimes the same person who had the skills to build a bridge would become the area’s go-to expert.
As Gatenby visits each of the 100 covered bridges spread throughout the state, he points out the history and construction techniques used in each, particularly the suspension methods unique to covered bridges. Most covered bridges in the White River Valley make use of modified king trusses, posts fitted into a triangle, which provide strength to the structure. Some, like the Moxley bridge, use both king trusses and square queen trusses around them.
Vermont’s covered bridges aren’t just structural relics, though — they’re cultural icons.
Some have graced the silver screen, including the Kingsbury Bridge in Randolph, used by Alfred Hitchcock as scenery in his 1955 film “The Trouble with Harry.”
“North by Northwest” has its dramatic crop duster strafing Cary Grant, Gatenby jokes in one of his episodes before cutting to a humble, scenic shot featuring the South Randolph bridge. “Unfortunately, it wasn’t quite as glamorous as that!”
The Chiselville bridge in Sunderland — Gatenby’s favorite so far — featured in “Baby Boom,” Diane Keaton’s 1987 film, and a year later, in the 1988 Chevy Chase and Madolyun Smith Osborne comedy, the Upper Falls bridge in Weathersfield made for a memorable gag (“I wouldn’t go that way if I were you”).
Another memorable stop is East Corinth, where the prop bridge used in “Beetlejuice” was fabricated out of whole cloth for the two weeks of filming. “Thousands of people go there every year,” he said, noting that the set-piece, used now as a shed at a ski area, doesn’t count among the authentic and historic bridges he films.
Nor, he said, does the Quechee Bridge. Though it is often mistaken for a traditional covered bridge, it’s just a facade.
“It’s concrete and steel. There’s very little wood,” Gatenby said. “You see the wood on the outside and the roof.”
Traditional bridges are completely made from wood and use a variety of truss systems to strengthen the span.
Place and Purpose
Gatenby moved to Vermont from Florida in July of last year. He now lives in Brattleboro with his wife and works as a shift supervisor at a home for adults with mental health issues.
“I’m a trained youth worker in England,” he said, having spent years working for the Prince’s Trust, a charity founded by King Charles. His day job might be demanding, but the early hours leave room for exploration.
“Three o’clock to 11:30 at night, so the daytime allows me to spend time in the TV studio,” he says. That flexibility has enabled him to squeeze in long road trips, sometimes filming six or seven bridges in a single day. “I’ve got to do minimum six, seven bridges each trip now,” he added. “To make it worth it.”
This Sunday, the show’s 38th episode will be released.
“I’m doing a little special 50th episode,” he said, noting the halfway point in the 100-bridge journey. “That’s where I’m bringing in stuff like the Quechee bridge. Because people said, ‘Oh, you didn’t go to the Quechee.’”
As the series nears its midpoint, Gatenby’s audience is slowly growing, both online and in the communities he visits.
“It’s just amazing … you know, and I’m just visiting them all,” he said, “places that I wouldn’t have got to see otherwise.”
With 50 more bridges to go, Vermont’s covered bridge guy still has miles to travel and stories to uncover.Gatenby’s series of covered bridge videos can be watched on Okemo Valley and Brattleboro public television stations or found on YouTube.
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