


We will have photographers on course, and at the finish to capture your race day.Ģ. In order to keep the number of people onsite to those that need to be there, we respectfully request NO SPECTATORS.
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This race has a lot of detail and it is important that you familiarize yourself with our registration process, the race site, event flow, courses and our Coved safety protocols.ġ. Nacke says the good news is that so far at least, nobody’s been hurt by any of Four Peaks’ hauntings.Please take some time to read the Cactus Man Athlete Guide. So that's what kind of makes it a little more interesting than your standard, 'Oh, it only happens at 2 or 3 a.m. But no, we do see things and hear things pretty much around the clock here. Yeah, again, I'm paranoid about that room. I didn't realize there was someone back there. And, while I didn’t get to meet any of the building’s spirits, Nacke did have kind of a close call during the interview. Nacke acknowledges all of this is pretty creepy and that he doesn’t love being in the back by himself at night. Nacke says the building’s history is the basis for one of the most popular haunted stories on the tour - it deals with a cooler in one of the breweries’ back rooms and a conversation founder Andy Ingram says he had in the 1990s with a man who died in the 1970s. And it's a little eerie."Ī flyer for Four Peaks Haunted Brewery Tours. "There are sounds that I cannot figure out where they're coming from. Could it just be settling, creaky pipes or a roof that needs repairs? They're a little more physical with stuff, so that you hear a lot more sounds, and things will be moved around and stuff in those rooms, compared to the other ones, where you just kind of tend to see something walking by."īut It's a very old building. Maybe a little more - not hostile - just creepier. There are a couple ghosts back in one of the older rooms that they seem a little more malevolent, maybe? I don't want to say malevolent. And they asked the bad ghosts to turn into good ghosts. "Actually, after one of our founders had a run-in, they held a seance back in about 1995. "Well, we think they're friendly for the most part," Nacke said.
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"We have all sorts of stories dating back from our founders to current and former employees, plus some historical societies that we've worked with here in Arizona that basically document horrible things that have happened, and then to seeing spirits or other entities walking around in every single room of our brewery," Nacke said. I started our conversation by asking what proof he has that the brewery is haunted. We spoke in the old barrel room, which, as you’ll hear is very echo-y due to its high ceilings and concrete and brick floors. I met up with Nacke recently - during the day - to talk more about this. Nacke says some of the hauntings relate to the building’s history - an 1898 train crash that killed two men behind where the brewery is now, for example brewers say they can sometimes hear a train rumbling and screaming at the time of day the accident happened.įour Peaks’ Tempe building originally served as a Creamery, and dates to the late 1800s. That means most of the people getting creeped out are employees, rather than customers. He says somebody hears or sees something odd multiple times a week, mostly in the back of the brewery. But, it’s also apparently a popular destination for - spirits.Ĭarter Nacke is an event assistant at Four Peaks Brewing Company and also a haunted tour guide.Īnd, Nacke says, there’s a lot to cover on that tour. It’s a popular destination in Tempe for people who want to get a beer or something to eat.
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And, leading up to Halloween, The Show visited three of them for the series "Haunted Phoenix." Ghosts, mostly nice, still roam the halls of some of our most well-known locations.

And, that includes some more spooky stories. Carter Nacke at Four Peaks' 8th Street Brewery.
