Auburn's Prison City announces head brewer's departure
The barred cell door at Prison City Pub & Brewery will close behind Ben Maeso one last time next week.
The Auburn brewpub's owners, Dawn and Marc Schulz, Friday morning that Maeso, its head brewer since it opened in 2014, is leaving Prison City Brewing. His last day will be Friday, Aug. 26.
Maeso told 水果派AV he has no plans for the near future except taking time off to figure out his next steps. He also expressed gratitude for his eight years at the State Street brewpub.
"We certainly didn't expect the pub to get as crazy as it did when we started," he said. "I loved seeing friends, employees and the locals from Auburn slowly develop a taste for different styles of beer."
Born in Puerto Rico, Maeso grew up in Hornell and graduated there before getting into brewing at home. He quickly developed a following, winning New York State Home Brewer of the Year in 2011.
Through that following, Maeso met the Schulzes as they prepared to open Prison City. He began on a 5-barrel system there, creating beers like Bleek Worden Belgian pale ale and Mass Riot聽New England-style India pale ale. The former would earn the brewpub its first major award, a silver medal at the 2015 Great American Beer Festival, while the latter would make Prison City a national name when it was ranked the best IPA in the country by Paste Magazine the following year. Maeso was also highly regarded for fruited sour beers like Run Like an Apricot, another silver medalist at the festival in 2021.
"We were fortunate enough to be part of a very interesting time in craft beer," he said. "I'm incredibly thankful to have been given a great environment to produce whatever we felt like whipping up."聽
Thursday will mark five years since Prison City Pub & Brewery opened its doors in downtown Auburn.
As the awards piled up, so did demand for Maeso's beer. To meet it, Prison City expanded into the basement of the State Street brewpub in 2016, then聽opened a 14,000-square-foot production facility on North Street in 2020. While Mass Riot, Wham Whams imperial stout and more of Maeso's recipes were made in much larger batches at the facility, he remained at the brewpub, devising new recipes.
In their announcement on Facebook, the Schulzes credited Maeso for the many beers he created over the last eight years by calling him a "mythical brewing creature," a "magician" and a "wizard."
"Ben, thank you for jumping aboard this crazy train when you did. Prison City Brewing wouldn't be what it is without you & your beer," they said. "Collectively, we learned so much together, accomplished so much together and, as you put it 鈥榣eft our mark on the NY brewing scene鈥. We did all of that and then some!! It鈥檚 been one hell of a ride w/ zero regrets. It's been a RIOT!"
Gallery: The beer is flowing at Prison City Brewing's new facility in Auburn
A variety of brews are on tap in the taproom at Prison City Brewing's new facility at 251 North St. in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Patrons enjoy food and drink in the taproom at Prison City Brewing's new facility at 251 North St. in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
A variety of brews are on tap in the taproom at Prison City Brewing's new facility at 251 North St. in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Beer available to go in December at Prison City Brewing's new facility at 251 North St. in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Patrons enter the new taproom at Prison City Brewing's new facility at 251 North St. in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Brewer Rick Hatch at work at Prison City Brewing's new facility at 251 North St. in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Prison City Brewing's new facility at 251 North St. in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
The renovated barn at Prison City Brewing at 251 North St. in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
The taproom at Prison City Brewing's facility at 251 North St. in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
The brewing room at Prison City Brewing's facility at 251 North St. in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Love and care: Auburn man turning vacant property into future home
Donald Love grew up one of two children to a single mother on welfare in Melone Village in Auburn.
As he and his sister walked to聽school, they would often pass by a vacant property on Clymer Street.
"It'd be nice to live there one day," Love thought to himself.
Almost 50 years later, he will.
Love, 55, has spent the last three years personally transforming the property, which sits across from Tyburn Academy of Mary Immaculate. He's cleared debris, cut down trees and trimmed bushes. He's even built a wall of rocks bordering the nearby creek. The rocks came from a farm in Genoa, where Love filled his GMC Envoy with them five times a day. The wall took three weeks to build.
Come spring, Love hopes his work will culminate in the building of a one-level, open-concept, 2,700-square-foot modular farmhouse on the property. He's also planning a three-car pole barn with a driveway and, eventually, an inground swimming pool. The 1.5-acre property consists of 28 and 30 Clymer St., which the city will merge into a new address when the house is finished.
Even before ground is broken, though, Love has already built a following of neighbors who appreciate how much his efforts have beautified the area. Love, he told 水果派AV, appreciates them back.
"It's like I'm a celebrity over here," he said with a laugh. "The transformation is incredible. People stop and walk in the yard. I've seen them take pictures for weddings and graduations."
Love couldn't believe the property he passed by as a child was still vacant when he returned to Auburn a few years ago. He had just retired from the聽New York State Department of Transportation, where he worked for 21 years. Prior to that, Love served in the Army, which deployed him to South Africa, Nicaragua, Iraq and Afghanistan. He enlisted shortly after graduating from Auburn High in 1985.
While employed by the state, Love studied environmental engineering. That and his membership in the Masons, at Onondaga Lodge No. 32, have been the foundation of his efforts on Clymer Street.
Beyond that, the only thing guiding Love's hands since buying the property in July 2019 has been his vision for what it can become.
"This was all me being creative off the top of my head," he said. "Everything was eyeballed. No YouTube, no magazines."
Love has spent "a small fortune" transforming the property, he said. It has also come with a physical cost, as he needed a hip replaced in April. He was already disabled after his service in the Army.
A week and a half later, though, he was back at work.
One of the neighbors who noticed his absence was Mary Ann Finn, of nearby Oak Street.聽She has often stopped at the property to compliment Love, she told 水果派AV, and is grateful for his contribution to the neighborhood. Along with the rock wall, she was particularly impressed by his use of gallon jugs to water his growing plants due to the lack of a faucet for a hose there.
"It looks loved and cared for," Finn said. "Every time I went by I could see how he had improved it. I wanted him to know I noticed, and thought it was a wonderful thing he's been doing."聽
Love hopes his work on Clymer Street inspires more than just praise from his new neighbors, though. He believes the story of a poor child from Melone Village growing up to build his own house down the street is nothing short of testimony. Whether it's his two children and three grandchildren, or a child growing up in Melone Village today, Love has an important message to share with them.聽
"If you do right, you'll be rewarded for it, trust me," he said. "I bust my butt for everything I got. I did everything the right way and tried to be a good person, and God is rewarding me now."
Fingerlakes Mall: New and returning stores as fall approaches
As summer is halfway gone and students prepare to return to school, the Fingerlakes Mall prepares for a new season! As fall nears, we have some exciting changes coming, along with some new events with our longtime tenants and even a couple new tenants!
Friends Helping Friends of Cayuga County is a nonprofit organization focused on providing emergency help to the Auburn community via a food and hygiene pantry. The Friends Helping Friends pantry evolved from something rather unexpected: a Facebook group! Created in December of 2013, this group was built with the aim of connecting community members to create a support network among locals. Since then, the group has developed from a few members trading free and used items to thousands of community members looking for help or providing assistance.
The emergency pantry has been open here at Fingerlakes Mall since August 2018, and has been able to help hundreds of families with dietary needs, hygiene products and back-to-school supplies. FHF has also been able to grow its services, now offering a Christmas gift program and domestic violence resources. FHF hosts seasonal events and fundraisers to provide family-friendly and accessible activities to the community while still supporting the pantry.
Its biggest and most well-known event has been the annual Trunk-or-Treat event, when it partners with local organizations such as Girl Scouts, car clubs and law enforcement. FHF hosts this event outside, having groups bring their vehicles and goodies to hand out at each vehicle. Admission for this event is $1 or a nonperishable food item or hygiene product per child. This way, the community has access to a safe and affordable event, and raises money for the pantry鈥檚 Christmas gift program. FHF is open from noon to 2 p.m. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
Funky Fashions Boutique is a small, eclectic store that calls Fingerlakes Mall home. From blankets and bibs to sundresses and jewelry, Nancy Bacon has it all. Opened here at the mall in 2016, Funky Fashions is a culmination of decades of sewing experience and a passion for colorful design. Nancy began sewing in her early teen years, finding joy in the creation of new projects. She spent many years working for Mackenzie-Childs in the sewing department and loved the whimsical and bright patterns she created while there. At Funky Fashions, Nancy can sew all sorts of things, from tissue covers and potholders to custom tailored dresses. When asked about her business, Nancy shared a very important tidbit of information: 鈥淢y fabrics are my best-kept secret. I sell fabrics for other crafters and sewers to buy for their projects. Most of which are 100% cotton, and I sell them quite cheap. It鈥檚 hard to find quality fabric around here.鈥 Funky Fashions is open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays.
At the beginning of August, we had a well-known and loved store return to the mall: Spirit Halloween! A one-stop destination for everything shoppers can imagine for Halloween, Spirit provides a vast merchandise assortment and memorable visual presentation. In addition to being a fun and interactive event for shoppers, the locations offer complete selections of costumes and accessories for infants/toddlers, children, tweens, teens and adults. A broad assortment of d茅cor and party goods complete the Halloween story. A large portion of the selection is exclusive merchandise found only at Spirit Halloween. This year, Spirit Halloween will be in a larger store space, inhabiting the former Great Outdoors RV location on the west end of the mall. They will have an entrance from the inside of the mall, as well as one from the exterior of the building, at the front of the mall. Spirit Halloween will be open from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Mondays through Fridays, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturdays and noon to 6 p.m. Sundays. Hours will update and extend as we get closer to Halloween.
Another new business will be joining us this fall. With American classics like burgers, dogs, fries, milkshakes and more, please welcome Dilly鈥檚! A passion project brought to life by friends (and now business associates) Dan O鈥橦ara, Ray Danny and Kanissa Dillabough, Dilly鈥檚 will be serving up fresh foods daily in the Fingerlakes Mall Caf茅 Square. The new business entrepreneurs hope to expand in the future to include a bar, but for now they are still in the process of getting all set up for their restaurant to open. Although no firm opening date exists yet, the group is looking to start serving by the beginning of September.
The Fingerlakes Mall is looking forward to a bright and eventful new season!
Great Race returns after two-year absence, '4 Horsemen of the Apocalypse' wins
OWASCO 鈥 Another Great Race is in the books, but this one comes with a little extra satisfaction.聽
The 44th Myles Keogh Paddle Run and Wheel was held on Sunday for the 44th time, and the first time in person since 2019.聽
The 2020 race was conducted virtually, while no race was held in 2021.聽
The team of Richard Moore (runner), Dave Heck (cyclist), Steve Bachorik and Joe Allison (canoeists) 鈥 nicknamed "4 Horsemen of the Apocalypse" 鈥 was the Great Race winner, completing the course in one hour, 19 minutes and 39 seconds.聽
The foursome held the lead for almost the entirety of the race. Moore was the first runner to reach the exchange zone, finishing the 4-mile run with a 21:30 split.聽
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Heck took over the cycling portion (12.4 miles) and was neck-and-neck with聽Andy Melnychenko of the eventual runner-up "Running for Jill" team for the middle section of the race.聽
He handed off the baton to Bachorik and Allison, who finished the 2 1/2-mile trip onto Owasco Lake several lengths in front of the runner-up.聽
"Running for Jill", featuring runner Alex Houge, cyclist Melnychenko, and canoeists Ed Wagner and John Potter, was gunning for its third straight Great Race win. Instead the team settled for second, completing the race less than a minute behind the winners.聽
This year's version of the Great Race offered a touch of a different flavor. For several years participants had the option of racing in the traditional course or a shot course, but organizers elected to return to the original format that included a single race.聽
Competitors were also provided the option of racing as a single member, or "Iron Man," which was a first. In the inaugural solo division, Chip O'Hara was the first to cross the finish line with a time of 1:32.13.聽
Moore was a second-time participant, after running and finishing seventh in the 10K run in 2019. The 23-year old Canisius student was filling in for a teacher of his who was unable to participate, and he made the most of it.聽
"I had a blast three years ago and really enjoyed it, and was really glad this was happening again," Moore said. "You never put together runners, bikers and canoers. It's just something that doesn't happen in triathlons.聽
"I hadn't met a single member of my team because they're scattered all around New York, but I'm very happy to be doing it."
Specific to the run, Moore noted the difference in 2022 versus his 10K in 2019. This year's four-plus miles were a simple NASCAR-esque loop that started on Lake Avenue and passed Auburn High School before returning to Route 38A.聽
"I had never ran a 10K at that point. It was my first," Moore said, referring to his first Great Race. "The fact that it was all one race makes it more competitive, I think. I'm also sure it's also easier to organize. This course also runs fast. The old 10K had some sharp hills and you ran through the (city of Auburn). I liked it, but I wouldn't mind either way if they went back to the old course."
Moore's teammates entered this year's Great Race with similar experience. This year was Heck's fourth year competing, while it was the second for Bachorik and Allison.聽
Bachorik and Allison were the canoeing anchors for the team that finished 17th overall in the last Great Race. Moore's team finished a few spots behind in 20th that year, while Heck's unit came in 29th. All were in the long course.聽
It was the first time this foursome had combined and it proved a winning formula. Glad to take home the top team's award, the foursome also appreciated being back at Emerson Park and Owasco Lake after a two-year absence.聽
"It was awesome to see everybody out again, after all the COVID stuff. This was great," Bachorik said.聽
Gallery: 44th annual 'Great Race' returns to Auburn
Runners during the national anthem during the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Runners at the starting line during the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Richard Moore is the first runner to finish the first leg of 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Directing traffic during the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Runners cross the finish line of the first leg of the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
A cyclist signals to her running teammate during the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Runners hand off their writs bands to their cyclist teammates during the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
A runner catches his breathe after finishing the running segment of the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Spectators watch during the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Cyclists start their leg of the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
A paddleboarder races a canoe team on Owasco Lake during the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
A team has to restart after tipping over their canoe during the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Canoe and Kayakers head out on the leg during the third segment of the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Spectators watch from shore during the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Canoeists Joe Allison, front, and Steve Bachorik finish the final leg of the Great Race Sunday on Owasco Lake.聽
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Canoeists and kayakers cool off in the lake after finishing the third segment of the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Cyclists wait for their runner during the 2022 Great Race in Auburn.
Kevin Rivoli, 水果派AV
Police: Auburn man killed in motorcycle crash
Police said an Auburn man was killed in a motorcycle accident on Friday.
The Cayuga County Sheriff's Office on Saturday said that deputies responded to a report of a serious accident just before 5:30 p.m. Friday on Franklin Street Road in the town of Sennett.
Police said that Joseph M. Costello, 24, was operating a 2016 Honda in a westerly direction when the motorcycle left the north shoulder of the roadway and struck a utility post.
He was transported to Auburn Community Hospital by ambulance where he was later pronounced dead.
Police said that the investigation was still ongoing Saturday and that anyone with information regarding the crash is asked to contact Detective David Harkness at (315) 294-8143.
The sheriff鈥檚 office said that it was assisted by the New York State Police, Cayuga County E-911, Sennett Fire Department, SAVES Ambulance and the Cayuga County Coroner鈥檚 Office.
Officers injured in attacks at Auburn prison, union blames policy
The union representing corrections officers at New York state prisons said that several officers were injured in attacks by inmates in Auburn last week and that state policy has made prisons less safe.
The state Correctional Officers & Police Benevolent Association on Thursday said that eight officers were injured, including one with a broken nose, a second with a concussion and a another with a puncture wound after being stabbed, when two inmates attacked staff near the Auburn Correctional Facility mess hall last week.
According to a news release, six of the injured officers needed to be treated at Auburn Community Hospital for their injuries.
The incident occurred the morning of Aug. 10, the union said, as two officers were escorting a disruptive inmate from the mess hall when the inmate suddenly turned and attacked one of the officers, punching him several times in the face.
The officer reportedly defended himself as the inmate continued the attack, and several staff responded and assisted in getting the inmate in a body hold and initially forced him against the wall before forcing him to the ground. On the ground and still combative, staff were able to remove the inmate from the mess hall area.
The injured officer was transported to ACH, where it was determined he sustained a broken nose.
The inmate, 31, was transferred to Five Points Correctional Facility after the attack. He is serving a 23 year sentence after being convicted of assault in Monroe County in 2016.
Simultaneous to the first incident, the union said that a second inmate began shouting and aggressively approached remaining staff. An officer stepped in front of him to stop his movement and the inmate attacked the officer, making a stabbing motion and striking him in the neck and face area. The officer grabbed the inmate in a body hold and forced him to the ground with the assistance of two other officers. On the ground and still combative, the inmate held his arms under his body so staff could not apply handcuffs. Several orders were given to the inmate and he complied and released his arms. Handcuffs were applied and the inmate became compliant. The inmate was escorted out of the area.
The injured officer was taken to AMH with a cut and a puncture wound that were consistent with a cutting type weapon.
That inmate, 33, was also transferred to Five Points. He is serving a 12 year sentence after being convicted in Nassau County of criminal sale of a controlled substance.
During both attacks, the union said, 15 inmates were demonstrating and making threats against staff. Once order was restored, the inmates were returned to their cells. They face disciplinary charges for their actions.
Staff recovered a make-shift weapon sharpened on one end during a search of inmates鈥 cells following the incident.
Six other officers were injured in the attacks and four were transported to ACH for treatment, including one who sustained a concussion and a bite to his knee that broke the skin.
In a statement, the union reiterated its argument that the elimination of solitary confinement in state prisons means that inmates now have much less incentive to obey the rules.
鈥淭he reality is, it doesn鈥檛 matter which correctional facility we are talking about, violence is plaguing all of them throughout the state daily," NYSCOPBA Western Region Vice President Kenny Gold said in a statement. "That is what makes Senator Luis Sepulveda, a co-sponsor of the disastrous HALT Act, comments last week questioning the seriousness of the assaults against staff so troubling. His comments, which were way off-base, is a slap in the face to the hard working men and women who wear the uniform and who have been subjected to daily violence. If six officers needing hospital treatment after this latest attack, two that still cannot return to work as a result of the injuries sustained at Auburn Correctional Facility, isn鈥檛 serious, I am not sure what is!
"Rest assured, our members will not forget the legislators who supported this horrendous law come election time in November, Gold said. "水果派AVs of New York need to elect representatives who support members of law enforcement. They deserve nothing less.鈥
Auburn resident charged with murder in case of man found stabbed to death
Auburn police have charged a man with murder in the investigation into a stabbing death earlier this month.
In a Thursday news release, the Auburn Police Department said that Michael Dennison, 57, was found dead shortly after 10 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 7, after suffering multiple stab wounds at his 49 Grant Ave. residence.
Police said that investigators later learned that Daniel D. Nachtsheim, 58, of 131 Prospect St., Building 3, Apt. B1, had been at Dennison's home in the early morning hours before he died.
Nachtsheim, described by police as an acquaintance of Dennison, was questioned by police Wednesday, Aug. 17, "and ultimately admitted to causing the death of Michael."
The APD said that a search of聽Nachtsheim's residence resulted in the recovery of evidence tying him to the crime.
After consultation with the Cayuga County District Attorney鈥檚 Office, Nachtsheim was charged with second-degree murder, arraigned on Thursday at Centralized Arraignment Part Court and remanded to the Cayuga County Jail without bail.
Nachtsheim
According to , he was born in Oklahoma and lived in various places in Oklahoma and Texas before moving to Auburn in 2019.
Auburn police say man hurt in crash intentionally walked into traffic
The Auburn Police Department is investigating a car-pedestrian crash in which they say a man purposely walked into traffic on a busy city street.
The incident took place around 8:48 p.m. Saturday at the intersection of North and Seymour streets. Police said the pedestrian was struck by a car and had to be transported to Upstate University Hospital in Syracuse, but he is expected to recover.
Police said the pedestrian, Karson Ecker, 26, of Auburn, was walking eastbound on the northern sidewalk of Seymour Street and began to cross North Street, where he was struck by a northbound mid-sized, four-door sedan driven by an 85-year-old woman whom police did not identify.
Police said Ecker sustained cuts to his head.
"Ecker later told police that he had intentionally walked into traffic with the intent of harming himself," the APD said in a press release.
Auburn Police Department鈥檚 Accident Reconstruction Team assisted at the scene. The street was closed about four hours while evidence was collected.
Police ask anyone with information on the case to contact Capt. Kyle Platt at (315) 255-4705 or kplatt@auburnny.gov; or the APD main phone at (315) 253-3231 or main email of communitywatch@auburnny.gov. Callers can remain anonymous.
Auburn duo returning with Nashville band for downtown show
A pair of Auburn musicians who moved to Nashville in 2014 will return with their band for a downtown concert this weekend.
The Hi-Jivers, a band inspired by the rhythm and blues and rock 'n' roll of the '50s and '60s, will perform at 7 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 21, at Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St., Auburn.
The band was formed in 2015 by Austin John and Dawna Zahn, who in Nashville bonded with upright bass player Hank Miles and drummer Aaron Mlasko. The four began playing Nashville and Memphis frequently, and that summer released a self-titled EP. That was followed by a second EP, "Always Talkin' Down," in 2017, and the band's first full-length album, "Something's Gotta Shake," in 2018. The band also went from performing in Tennessee to festivals across the U.S. and overseas. Miles and Mlasko have since left the band, but John and Zahn are at work writing a second full-length album.
Syracuse blues performer Colin Aberdeen, of Los Blancos, will open the show.聽
Tickets to the show are $20.聽
For more information, visit or .
2022 Cayuga County Great Race results: How did your friends and family do?
Results reported by the Great Race Committee following the 44th running of the event on Sunday, Aug. 14:
The Top 10 Teams
1. 4 Horsemen Of The Apocalypse - Richard Moore; Dave Heck, Ithaca; Steve Bachorik. (1:19:39).
2. Running For Jill - Alex Houge, Scottsville; Andy Melnychenko, Alpine; Ed Wagner, Auburn. (1:20:25).
3. Xs Energy - Derrick Jones, Henrietta; Zach Degen, Rochester; James Mallory, West Henrietta. (1:21:27).
4. Team Levaithan - Juan Martinez, Jamesville; Charles Brooks, Saratoga; David Wiltey, Johnstown. (1:22:31).
5. Trained For Myles - Keegan Brady, Auburn; Michael Sojka, Auburn; Gary Mason, Auburn. (1:24:11).
6. Around Noon - William Hoyne, Clay; David Fabian, Chatham, NJ; John Saxton, Auburn. (1:25:58).
7. Mason And Grant Air Handling - Chris Mason, Auburn; David Tate, Syracuse; Wayne Mason, Auburn. (1:26:24).
8. Has-Beens - Jake Crotser, Oneonta; Ben Schlimmer, Camillus. (1:26:53).
9. Team Schlimmer - Mike Schlimmer, Cortland; Emily Morlock, Ithaca; Joe Schlimmer, Ithaca. (1:27:16).
10. Brb - Matt Fogerty, Skaneateles; Michael Crowell, West Point; Richard Weber, Marcellus. (1:28:59).
Team Category Results
2 Person Teams
Tandem Male Under 18
1. Twin Engines - Josh Chipman, Sam Chipman. (1:36:04).
Tandem Male 18-39
1. Has-Beens - Jake Crotser, Ben Schlimmer. (1:26:53).
2. M&ms - Kevin Munn, Michael May. (1:36:12).
3. Here For The Beer - Brian Seaback, Jason Pettit. (1:43:28).
4. Pb&j - Joshua Edwards, Philip Bolton Jr. (1:54:20).
Tandem Male Over 60
1. Boneheads - Pete Davis, Dave Wiemann. (1:39:32).
Tandem Mixed Under 18
1. The Winners - Circe Perez, Aiden Saville. (2:03:00).
Tandem Mixed 18-39
1. Shandy - Sheena Wells, Andrew Wells. (1:43:59).