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average age of a home brewer

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how old are you

  • 20-25

  • 25-30

  • 30-35

  • 35-40

  • 40+


Results are only viewable after voting.
'Cause from the OP's perspective there's old (30-35), very old (35-40), and the rest is ancient. Or he's just polite.



57 next month. Sad to say only started home brewing less than 5 years ago, and only very seriously for a bit over a year. :mug:


Wow! Never thought of being put into the VERY OLD category!




Sent from my iPhone using Home Brew
 
At 40 I was still too young and wild to slow down enough to start home brewing. Now I'm 49, and finally growing up, just started home brewing two months ago.:rockin:
 
I'm 30 and I can't select both options that my age group straddles. Am I 25-30, or 30-35? Based on the groupings, it would seem as though 30-35 is middle-aged, so I'm going to select the younger grouping I think. I don't feel like one of those old fogies in the 30-35 group.
 
I'm 30 and I can't select both options that my age group straddles. Am I 25-30, or 30-35? Based on the groupings, it would seem as though 30-35 is middle-aged, so I'm going to select the younger grouping I think. I don't feel like one of those old fogies in the 30-35 group.

I think that a young person, in their 20s sees a big difference in 25 or 30, but nothing different about 40, 50, 60, 70+, as that's all "old".

I'm the other way- I see very little difference in 20, 23, 25, 28- except the 28 year old might have a better job! :D

Some of us (like Sudsbuster and myself) have been in this hobby 25+ years while craft brewing really just starting getting popular in the last 5-8 years. I'm glad to see so many new people coming into the hobby!
 
Just turned 33 :( and started a few months ago.

At least I'm not 40+ that's like endlessly old. :D
 
Turning 30 in a couple weeks. Just started brewing this year.
 
Just turned 58 last month. Looking back 30 or 40 isn't "really old". I had to laugh when I was 23 & the older teens thought that was really old. Don't worry,your turn is coming,just like it did for us.
 
I never thought about this but it's true. My driver's license says I am 41 but in reality, I've been miraculously stuck at 39 for 2 years in a row. Anyways, it was in the mid to late 90's when I discovered microbreweries and brewpubs and began brewing in 2003. Coincidentally, most established microbreweries date back to the 80's and 90's, which, as Paul said, puts us in the 40-50 range.

Now cut your hair and get a job!

Dare we say greatest beer generation lol? 45 going on 18, brewing since 95.
 
I'm 54, started brewing 2-1/2 years ago, and I don't see an end to it. My LHBS always had different beers on tap to give away that he had brewed. I tasted an Oatmeal Stout
and wondered where this nectar of the gods had been hiding all my life. I was in my early 30's then, and couldn't brew where I lived. So I basically forgot about it. I remember a couple that I worked with were making some kind of a cherry holiday beer, and thought they were nuts. This was in 1993 or so.
 
I received the home brewing kit for my birthday #67 from SWMBO, and my second batch is now in the fermentor. I am grateful for the knowledge shared by all of you whipper-snappers.
Bob
 
57 here, and a relative rookie with three+ years of experience. The poll's upper bracket of "40+" evidences some pollster bias.
 
I'm 48 and started brewing a little less than a year ago. All you young whippersnappers out there(20-30)laugh all you want at us "old foggies", but just remember this: Your time is coming!
 
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