If you brew it, they will come.

That’s what Aubrey Hall has discovered since he began distributing farmhouse-style beers from his hand-built barn in rural southeast Parker.

“Our intention was never to have anything here for the public,” said Anne Hall, Aubrey’s mother and business partner at Hall Brewing Co.

That hasn’t kept the “beer geeks” from following dirt roads to pop in for a peek at his quiet farm flanked by agricultural fields and dreamy views of the mountains.

The close-by neighbors — and the fact that Aubrey is the sole brewer of the 20-barrel system — mean the tourists won’t find a tour-based brewery, but it doesn’t mean the company will stay hidden.

Just six months after Hall Brewing began distributing, the Halls are working to open a taproom in Parker where they can offer their beers alongside those of other Colorado craft breweries. Aubrey Hall said they are working out the specifics with the town of Parker.

“I didn’t think we’d sell this much product this fast,” Aubrey Hall said about the company’s success distributing as far as Vail and Estes Park, as well as to Denver-area liquor stores and bars. “It’s probably at least doubled my expectations at the five-month mark.”

A big reason for the young company’s success is its big brewing capacity. Hall said he worked as a welder on large brewing systems and he’s familiar with the upkeep. In the end, he said, it makes his job easier, allowing for the hands-on control he wants to maintain.

As Hall Brewing’s barrel-aged beers hit the shelves later this year and the taproom gets going, beer drinkers can expect the agricultural legacy of Parker to be promoted in each sip.

“Parker has really grown as a housing, residential community. But as a farming, agricultural community, it’s gone pretty far downhill because people don’t support the local farmers,” Hall said. “I wanted to bring that back, I wanted to keep that.”