I'm still sad I'm going to miss you guys next week!My house. I'll make em bright red for you, just the way you like em
I'm still sad I'm going to miss you guys next week!My house. I'll make em bright red for you, just the way you like em
yeah but...I wouldn't...hmmmm...I wouldn't take it as they know how to play beer pub yet...
I love Lauren.Step in the right direction. Plus Lauren rocks
I love Lauren.
She used to roll in the back and make me "Mad Taco" any time of night that I arrived. She can call me whatever she wants.Haven't met any cool beer geek that doesn't love her. All though she likes to call us all nerds
Step in the right direction. Plus Lauren rocks
I love Lauren.
HMMMMMMI hope the TH/SARA collab is just a prelude to the collab with Christian Zellersfield.
I'm going to put it pretty simply and you are most likely not going to agree with me but Shaun Hill reads these threads and trolls this and the other beer sites and he absolutely despises these things we are talking about right here in this thread and others. He knows Art, and the future Ann will be traded, bartered, and sold for crazy prices and it just eats at him to no avail. So putting a 40 dollar price on Art and a possible higher price on the future Ann could be his way of sticking to trade community because and I quote directly from Shaun himself " I hate this beer commodity **** " .........and that new brewery looks kind of expensive also lol
Quoting a post from Krebsy from a discussion about the hypothetical price of Ann over in an ISO:FT thread:
I don't disagree that that reasoning (if it's true), but I do have to wonder at what point do the high prices in the name of slowing down sales intended to use the beer as a commodity start to annoy the locals. Or would most regulars gladly trade off paying $10-20+ more for the occasional rare bottle in order to alleviate nonsense like the DBD release? I honestly don't know, maybe some of the Vermont folks can offer their opinions.
If Shaun Hill really does want to cut down on the commodification of his rare releases, while also keeping the price reasonable for those who simply want to enjoy them, perhaps the solution would be to only have them available for on-premise consumption once the expansion is finished? Maybe he's already planning to do this with some bottles, I don't know.
I think these are great points but with his growth, the new brewery equipment, and the general overall growth of craft he has to pay for it somehow. As far as the locals go thru his spite of the beer commodities game he knows people are coming from far and wide so why not charge the high prices. He can get 40 bucks for Art which probably had a run of 1500 or more bottles and still do his standards Anne, Arthur, etc... For 10 bucks because of the volume ( 2-3 cases per ) either way I know I'll be making the 4 1/2 hour drive up and pay the big bucks when Ann releases.Quoting a post from Krebsy from a discussion about the hypothetical price of Ann over in an ISO:FT thread:
I don't disagree that that reasoning (if it's true), but I do have to wonder at what point do the high prices in the name of slowing down sales intended to use the beer as a commodity start to annoy the locals. Or would most regulars gladly trade off paying $10-20+ more for the occasional rare bottle in order to alleviate nonsense like the DBD release? I honestly don't know, maybe some of the Vermont folks can offer their opinions.
If Shaun Hill really does want to cut down on the commodification of his rare releases, while also keeping the price reasonable for those who simply want to enjoy them, perhaps the solution would be to only have them available for on-premise consumption once the expansion is finished? Maybe he's already planning to do this with some bottles, I don't know.
Or would most regulars gladly trade off paying $10-20+ more for the occasional rare bottle in order to alleviate nonsense like the DBD release? I honestly don't know, maybe some of the Vermont folks can offer their opinions.
DBD was like $35 or 40 for a li'l bottle
Yeah but that included a donation to a local charity.![]()
irrelevant in terms of what locals(and non locals) paid and what the $4$ acolytes discuss the cost of DBD to be
DBD was $20 with a $15 donation attached.
- Works of Love #1: Hoppy Blonde Ale with Earl Gray Tea 3.6% abv ($7/$15)