Tepe
Well-Known Member
I tell you what .. Last year my LHBS sold sacks of 2 row for $90. and Marris Otter for over $100. Now what would you do??
I got an official letter from North Country Malt because I am a regular customer. I'll post a scan of it tommorrow. Basiclly some of what we heard is true. If you are an existing customer your ok. If not order by the end of September.
And to respond to some of the pablum I have seen on this thread....
F-OFF to High prices!!!
Basiclly to us homebrewers, if you can find it cheaper, buy it, if you cant sell it cheaper and compete, suck it.:rockin:
Homebrew shops should be creative. If all their doing is ordering from another shop and reselling at a higher price. F em. That is why I brew my own beer. Too many middlemen wanting a cut with distributed commerical beer.
By creative I mean piggyback ordering with local breweries or growing their own stuff or perhaps a service that crushes up recipes and vacuum seals ready for pickup when the customer arrives... anything besides sitting back and charging more money for nothing.
You run a great buisness, but with all due respect you gotta stop whining. We cant buy a truckload of carboys, or hydrometers, ph meters, or whatever "instrument/equipment" to get bulk prices. So make your money there. Ingredients on the other hand, EXPECT & PLAN, to make pennys on the dollar. Homebrewers are resourceful like computer hackers, we are legion. Before I found NCM, I set up a state tax id so I could make $0, pay $0 tax, and buy wholesale. We will always conquer retail, so offer better products, and service. If you were cutting edge, you would sell grain at cost, advertise that, Like convienience stores sell cig's at state minumum prices, and we would buy all our other crap from you to save on shipping. Nuff said.
I will not post in this thread again...
I regularly use a different, better, online "midwestern" homebrew supplyer.
I buy my hops from Hops direct.
And yet, YET, I still patranize my local home brew supply stores, I just dont go in back and bend over the valt horse for grain, extract, & 5star
...i'm just sayin...
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You run a great buisness, but with all due respect you gotta stop whining. We cant buy a truckload of carboys, or hydrometers, ph meters, or whatever "instrument/equipment" to get bulk prices. So make your money there. Ingredients on the other hand, EXPECT & PLAN, to make pennys on the dollar. Homebrewers are resourceful like computer hackers, we are legion. Before I found NCM, I set up a state tax id so I could make $0, pay $0 tax, and buy wholesale. We will always conquer retail, so offer better products, and service. If you were cutting edge, you would sell grain at cost, advertise that, Like convienience stores sell cig's at state minumum prices, and we would buy all our other crap from you to save on shipping. Nuff said.
I will not post in this thread again...
I regularly use a different, better, online "midwestern" homebrew supplyer.
I buy my hops from Hops direct.
And yet, YET, I still patranize my local home brew supply stores, I just dont go in back and bend over the valt horse for grain, extract, & 5star
...i'm just sayin...
Does anyone know when the cut off for new customers is? It sounds like it was today?
the prices are higher for individual sacks, those are pallet prices
The argument is revolving around homebrewer group-buying a palette at the 1000 or 2200-4000 pound rate vs. what a homebrew store could conceivably buy.
I suppose many homebrew clubs don't make the 2200 pound level so brewdouche is trying to convince AHS that the $.03 per pound is all gravy for them. Of course, that's a loss because it's not worth unpacking the pallet for that much. Also, a decent sized club can easily fill a pallet with 2400 pounds and hit the 2nd tier pricing.
I would argue that clubs wouldn't go through the trouble if they could get sacks for $10 over cost. Yes, I'd pay $50 for a sack of Maris. The trouble is, LHBS wants $70. Yes, for one brewer, in a moment of weakness and need, it's not that big of a deal. But when you have 30 other buddies looking for grain, it's an easy choice.
Holy Crap! That sir, cannot be for personal use!
Yes, Ed brews a lot of beer. You should see his mash tun!