The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fungus leaves sobering impact from whiskey

Tennessee residents complain of effects from distillery’s aging process.

- Michael Levenson | c. 2023 The New York Time

The ethanol-fueled fungus known as whiskey fungus has thrived for centuries around distilleri­es and bakeries. It’s been the source of complaints from residents who live near Kentucky bourbon distilleri­es, Canadian whisky makers and Caribbean rum manufactur­ers.

Now it is driving a wedge between some residents of Lincoln

Jack Daniel’s has built six warehouses, known as barrelhous­es, to age whiskey in rural Lincoln County, which is home to about 35,000 residents and sits on the Tennessee-alabama line, just north of Huntsville, Alabama. The company is building a seventh on a property that has room to house one more, a company spokesman said. The distillery has asked the county to rezone a second property where it could build six additional barrelhous­es.

A company representa­tive, Donna Willis, told county officials in November that 14 barrelhous­es would generate $1 million in annual property tax revenue for the county, which had approved about $15 million in general fund spending for the 2022 fiscal year.

‘Fungus on steroids’

But not all residents are happy about the expansion.

Christi Long, who owns a local mansion built in 1900 that she operates as a venue for weddings and other events, sued the county in January, contending that barrelhous­es near her property lacked the proper permits. Insider previously reported on the dispute.

A judge ruled last week that one barrelhous­e currently under constructi­on had not been properly approved and that its building permit would have to be rescinded until Jack Daniel’s obtains the necessary permits.

Long’s lawyer, Jason Holleman, said he planned to ask the judge and the county to stop Jack Daniel’s from using other barrelhous­es near Long’s 4,000-square-foot mansion, known as the Manor at Shaejo.

Long and her husband, Patrick Long, said whiskey fungus had already inundated the property, darkening the copper roof and exterior walls, creeping over the rock garden and metal gate, and encrusting the branches of magnolia trees. Nearby, it blackens metal road signs, they said.

The Longs said they use a high-pressure hose to wash the property every three months with Clorox bleach and water, but the fungus always returns.

“If you take your fingernail and run your fingernail down our tree branch, it will just coat the tip of your finger,” Patrick Long said. “It’s just disgusting.”

Christi Long said her corner of Lincoln County “is going to be black as coal” unless Jack Daniel’s installs air filters in the barrelhous­es, one of which sits about 250 yards from her property.

“This fungus now is on steroids,” she said.

A lawyer who represents Lincoln County declined to comment, citing the continuing litigation.

Melvin Keebler, general manager of the Jack Daniel Distillery, said in a statement that the company “complies with all local, state, and federal regulation­s regarding the design, constructi­on, and permitting of our barrelhous­es.”

“We are committed to protecting the environmen­t and the safety and health of our employees and neighbors,” Keebler said.

‘The angel’s share’

At a county commission meeting in November, Willis, director of technical services, maintenanc­e and barrel distributi­on at Jack Daniel’s, said studies have shown that the fungus is not hazardous to human health and does not damage property.

“Could it be a nuisance?” Willis said. “Yeah, sure. And it can easily be remedied by having it washed off.”

She said the company would not agree, however, to power-wash homes, saying Jack Daniel’s could be held liable for any damage.

Willis also said air filters could hurt the flavor that Jack Daniel’s whiskey acquires during

County, Tennessee, and Jack Daniel’s, the famed distillery founded in 1866 in neighborin­g Moore County.

For months, some residents have complained that a sooty, dark crust has blanketed homes, cars, road signs, bird feeders, patio furniture and trees as the fungus has spread uncontroll­ably, fed by alcohol vapors wafting from charred oak barrels of aging Jack Daniel’s whiskey.

the aging process. Distillers refer poetically to the liquor that evaporates during that process as “the angel’s share.”

The fungus that thrives off the lost alcohol has been noted at least since the 1870s, when Antonin Baudoin, director of

the French Distillers’ Associatio­n, observed a “plague of soot” blackening the walls of distilleri­es in Cognac, France.

James A. Scott, a professor at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto who has studied the fungus since 2001 — and helped name its genus, Baudoinia, in honor of Baudoin — said he was not aware of any research specifical­ly looking at the health effects of exposure to the fungus.

But the fungus can destroy property and can cling to almost any surface, he said. A puff of alcohol, Scott said, makes it remarkably resistant to temperatur­e changes, allowing it to withstand hot summers in Tennessee.

“The fungus is pretty destructiv­e, and the only way to stop it is to turn off its alcohol supply,” Scott wrote in an email. “It

wrecks patio furniture, house siding, almost any outdoor surface. I’ve seen trees choked to death by it. It is a small mercy that it does not also appear to have a negative impact on human health.”

Tracy Ferry said she and her husband, Warren Ferry, who bought a home in Lincoln County three years ago, were hoping that Jack Daniel’s would install air filters.

Tracy Ferry said that since Jack Daniel’s built a barrelhous­e next to her house in December, whiskey fungus had been accumulati­ng on the roof of her home and car and on trees on her property. She said she had scrubbed the paint off wooden patio furniture while trying to remove the dark growth.

“I could try and sell, but what am I going to get?” Ferry said. “Who’s going to want to live here?”

 ?? NEW YORK TIMES 2012 ?? A whiskey aging warehouse in Louisville, Ky., is shown coated in Baudoinia, a type of fungus that germinates off ethanol. The dark growth fed by alcohol vapors from barrels of aging whiskey can spread to coat nearly everything outside.
NEW YORK TIMES 2012 A whiskey aging warehouse in Louisville, Ky., is shown coated in Baudoinia, a type of fungus that germinates off ethanol. The dark growth fed by alcohol vapors from barrels of aging whiskey can spread to coat nearly everything outside.
 ?? PATRICK LONG VIA NEW YORK TIMES ?? A photo provided by Patrick Long shows whiskey fungus on tree branches in Lincoln County, Tenn., where residents have been complainin­g of ethanol-fueled effects from a Jack Daniel’s distillery in neighborin­g Moore County.
PATRICK LONG VIA NEW YORK TIMES A photo provided by Patrick Long shows whiskey fungus on tree branches in Lincoln County, Tenn., where residents have been complainin­g of ethanol-fueled effects from a Jack Daniel’s distillery in neighborin­g Moore County.
 ?? PATRICK LONG VIA NEW YORK TIMES ?? Another photo from Patrick Long shows the effect on leaves. Long and his wife sued Lincoln County after it was announced more barrelhous­es would be built.
PATRICK LONG VIA NEW YORK TIMES Another photo from Patrick Long shows the effect on leaves. Long and his wife sued Lincoln County after it was announced more barrelhous­es would be built.

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