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Welcome

Thank you for taking an interest in reading my Blog. I write about travel, beer, identity, experiences, etc. Anything that comes to mind. I also have guest appearances from friends to mix it up. Overall, I just enjoy writing.

Enjoy,

Roy Pogorzelski

About Me

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Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada
I am an award winning and community minded social activist and entrepreneur. I own 3 businesses, lecture in University, PHD candidate and consultant/facilitator. I have lived, worked and studied in Belgium and Austria and facilitated/spoke in Switzerland, Sweden, Kenya and Mexico. My writings are my own reflection on life, love and liberty.

Tuesday, 18 June 2013

Home Brewing 101

As a beer enthusiast that has sampled over 2,000 beers throughout the world, I always thought of getting into the brewing process myself.  The popularity of brewing one's own beer for consumption amongst friends is always appealing, but normally people are hesitant to try someone's home brew because they must force out a fib to reassure the over joyed brewer that it is great.

Mix this phenomenon with the growing popularity of the Craft Beer Industry, for example the commercialized Alexander Keith's has recently just released it's hop series in an attempt to tap into craft beer hop lover's.  Is this working?  I would have to say that the Hallertau is outdoing the Cascade, mostly because Canadians like hoppy beer, but not hoppiness that is intrusive to their regular tastes.

Watching new breweries emerge throughout North America, finally destroying the international reputation that North American beer is terrible has been inspiring, while offering a variety of experimental brews that are great.  Granville Island, Dogfish Head, Rogue, Liberty, Dieu du Ciel, Howe Sound, New Belgium, Allagash and this is to name a very slim few.



I have always been interested in joining this wave of new brewers, so when instructing courses was finished last April, my brother and I one day decided to go to Wine Kitz and were convinced to finally purchase our first beer kit.  Excited, our first beer we brewed was a Wheat Beer, naturally starting with pre-made wort, but nonetheless we were extremely delicate to the process.  We poured the wart into the primary fermenter, sprinkled on the yeast and waited patiently for a week to allow the yeast to do it's business.  Next we siphoned the alcohol to the secondary fermenter and again waited 2 weeks for it to ferment storing it carefully in a darkened room at room temperature (meanwhile sanitizing like mad men). 

After this, we were ready to bottle, so we shifted the brew back to the primary fermenter and while adding sugar to the process, stirred nicely and then bottled.  At this point, the excitement builds as we let it sit for 4 weeks.  A real nice surprise awaited me as I came back from Sweden, John and I tasted the brew and low and behold it was impressive, but naturally we will find it okay, so we took it to the critics.



At around this time, the Cream Ale (second batch) was also ready, so we had many people sample the beer, harsh critics, people we knew and people we did not know and it went over extremely well, even having people they would buy it in a pub.  Therefore, we stepped it up and brewed an Oatmeal Double Stout and John and my Father sampled it on Father's day and again it was a success and even though it was pre-made wort, it was our first time and we succeeded.



At this point, we have also brewed a Cerveca and a Pilsner.  I move to Lethbridge a week ago and already the Galt Museum wants me to run a home brewing demonstration, also potentially sell my beer as locally Lethbridge.  In that case, the next journey is making my own wort and experimenting with new ingredients, so challenge accepted, when I finally purchase a new home, I am going to turn the basement into a brewery, very exciting things are happening on the brew front, so hopefully within a couple years, there will be a Pogo Brew Pub in Lethbridge haha.

Brewing is Awesome!!


Monday, 10 June 2013

Time for Change

What can I say?  CHANGE has been a normal concept in my life since 2006, but like any classic story, there must be a moment of conflict that engages a life, so that change and growth can be made.  My story continues, as I have moved to Lethbridge to try and figure out exactly what i want to do with my life.  From managing a classroom to engaging in community development.

My roller coaster ride has left me with a Jeep full of worldly possessions, but a head full of amazing memories.  As I navigated through life: Student - International Intern - Master's Student - Professional - Fiance - Immigrant - Failed Relationship (Conflict) - Professional - Story continues to be written.

Is it true that I actually might have chosen a career over love?  Well I traveled to Belgium, lived in Belgium and adjusted me life to the point that I came out with a Jeep full of worldly possessions.  Not many people in life can say that they have ever had a do-over.

A do-over is an opportunity to explore the second path of the two diverged in a woods.  In the words of Robert Frost - he took the one less traveled by and it made all the difference.  That being said, I also took the one less traveled by, but by some crazy whole in the Universe, I have been sent back to the same decisions and paths.

Allow me to explain, in 2009, I started at ACL as the Diversity Support Coordinator, the only difference is I was dating a Flemmish girl from Belgium.  I constantly turned down opportunities to advance my career for the prospect of spending my life with this girl.  In 2012, I started instructing courses at the FNUC and then moved to Belgium.  After an unsuccessful attempt at immigrating to another country and a caught off guard dumping, I hopped on a plane to Regina to continue instructing university courses and try to get settled back at home.

The only difference between this tele-portal is Regina (my home) became a different place that was unsettling and hard to adjust to.  Mostly because I was single and alone now dealing with heart ache, curiosity and wonderment for that moment she would meet another guy.

Fast forward to a week ago, while I still held on to the hope that I would one day reunite with the love of my life, I receive an email telling me that I must move on because she has found another person to replace me and offer her the things that I could not.  This brings me back to Lethbridge to work back in Human Rights at ACL with opportunity to grow - a complete tele-portal do-over.  Same people, same city, same opportunities, but the only difference is I am older, wiser and broken hearted.

However, inspiration comes in many forms and I read a quote recently by Viktor Frankl (a man that endured so much pain, toruture and heart-ache), a survivor of the Nazi concentration camp of Aushwitz.  I remember him, he wrote a book on logo-therapy, which I wrote a paper on in University and this simply explains that people must find the will to live in the most dire situations if they want to survive.

He also goes on to quote and I paraphrase "if you cannot change a situation, then you must change yourself to fit into that situation" - he is referring to death.  In my case, it is a simple reminder that one needs to adapt to any situation if they are going to move on and be better.  I admire this quote because I have the ability to change myself, I have the ability to adapt to my new life and I have the ability to work hard and be better, not just for myself, but for the benefit of the people that have walked into my life.

This is the only part of ending a 7 year relationship and an engagement that is beneficial, is the opportunity to learn and grow and know that even though times get difficult, one must find opportunity within their own pain to better the lives of others.

"One day at a time"

Roy

Business & Story-Telling

Recently, I have started to think about entrepreneurship and the need for business owners to open up be vulnerable and tell their stories.  ...