I have my sites set on western Newfoundland, Canada right now. Specifically the Corner Brook area.
I love the production aspect of homebrewing, I love having people enjoy my brews and have been in and out of various business ventures since I've been 20.
I'm one of those people who can't help but take something to professional levels if it's possible for me to do so and I thrive off 12-14 HR days of manual labor coupled with the impossible tasks of managing marketing and other business duties simultaneously. It's what makes me tick.
In the meantime I just continue developing recipes and having fun enjoying my beer. I'll always listen to someone who wants me to commercially brew just in case they can actually pull it off. It would be a great part time gig for some extra spending money but it would have to net me at least 85K a year to do it full time which I know isn't really possible unless you actually own the business.
And if you owned the business you wouldn't be doing the brewing.
Here in NZ, alot of brewers contract brew, rather than the outlay of buying their own large scale system, the costs in renting or buying a premises etc. their beers are made using an existing breweries system. They pay a levy per litre for the use of systems and fermenters etc.
it means we can get alot more beers out in the market without a brewery every 200 yards.
in the NI there is a larger scale production brewery being built as we speak, which will brew a heap of beer for about 8-10 different breweries (with more coming on board later)
no mundane ness is brewingthe same recipes, and it can mean you keep home brewing as well rather than brewing becoming your job.
I like brewing too much to open a brewery. It used to be something I thought about, especially after the tech slowdown following y2k, but I like doing things on my terms, which means giving beer away to my friends instead of trying to sell it to annoying yuppies with the latest phone-app to review it.