Long Dogs Distilling operates from a modest facility on Chestnut Street in Arapahoe, Nebraska, a small town of about 1,000 people in the heart of farm country. This micro-distillery represents the kind of small-scale operation that’s popping up in rural communities across the Midwest, though details about the founders and their backstory remain limited in public records. The operation focuses on small-batch spirits production, taking advantage of Nebraska’s agricultural resources and the state’s relatively permissive distilling regulations that have encouraged craft operations in recent years.
The distillery appears to be a newer addition to Nebraska’s growing craft spirits scene, which has expanded significantly since the state relaxed some of its distilling laws. Like many rural distilleries, it likely benefits from direct access to local grain sources and the lower overhead costs that come with operating outside major metropolitan areas. The Arapahoe location puts it in prime agricultural territory, surrounded by the corn and wheat fields that form the backbone of many craft distilleries’ mash bills.
Visitors to Long Dogs Distilling will find themselves in authentic small-town Nebraska, where the distillery represents both entrepreneurial spirit and the agricultural heritage that defines this part of the country. The operation appears to maintain the intimate scale that characterizes many rural craft distilleries, where visitors can get closer to the production process than they might at larger facilities.