It's a strange name for brewery, isn't it? I would think you either wander or you linger, but it never occurred to me that someone might do both. I suppose you could wander somewhere and then linger once you're there? Sure. Why not? I don't know what the 100 days reference is in the title of the beer, but it seems like I don't get many of the references on some of these quirky beer names. The fact that they make the two zeroes into an infinity might imply that they think you could drink this beer all day every day, but this is 7.6% ABV, so it's not an all day IPA.
The relatively clear, amber beer does have some suspended white bits in the middle with a reasonably sized head that boils down to a patchy glob of large and small bubbles with a strong ring around the sides and the implication that there will be lacing, but there's no actual evidence of lacing thus far. The aroma is malt heavy and the hops appeared to be from the pine variety. Indeed, it smells mostly like resin.First sip is sort of sharp with the pine predictably causing a bit of bitterness that seems to hang on through the entire drink and resin lingering on quite a bit afterward. The caramel malt seems to do a fine job at first, but the bitterness isn't being held back like it really should be. As a result, the sip seems more unbalanced than I would expect from a West Coast IPA. Let's let the gulp even things out.
Tip-in is light carbonation tingle with pine and caramel malt. A graininess seems to come up from the middle, but it might be coming from the rise and pine resin that is hitting the caramel malt hard. Then, the malt washes away to allow the pine to resonate bitterness inside the mouth before ultimately trailing off almost every flavor but resin and bitterness.
Bottom Line: Honestly, not as bad as this review makes it sound. Still, it could probably be better.
2.25/5