I expect him to do a half-assed jobsaints_gambit wrote:I just hope he doesn't arse it up.matt7215 wrote:Mr Crack will get to the bottom of this!Cass wrote:
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Beau's Home Delivery shut down by AGCO
The Ottawa Citizen reports that the prohibition against Beau's home delivery has been lifted.
Steve Beauchesne hopes to resume deliveries by Monday.
Steve Beauchesne hopes to resume deliveries by Monday.
Good news!zane9 wrote:The Ottawa Citizen reports that the prohibition against Beau's home delivery has been lifted.
Steve Beauchesne hopes to resume deliveries by Monday.
so here is my question (admittedly without knowing all the facts), does this mean I can sign up to Beaus Greener Futures project and get bottles delivered to Waterloo? Or does a homeless guy need to deliver it?

http://www.beaus.ca/beer/greener_futures
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- Seasoned Drinker
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Pretty sure they're only delivering in the Ottawa area for the time being.NRman wrote:Good news!zane9 wrote:The Ottawa Citizen reports that the prohibition against Beau's home delivery has been lifted.
Steve Beauchesne hopes to resume deliveries by Monday.
so here is my question (admittedly without knowing all the facts), does this mean I can sign up to Beaus Greener Futures project and get bottles delivered to Waterloo? Or does a homeless guy need to deliver it?![]()
http://www.beaus.ca/beer/greener_futures
understood, but they deliver to some bars here in Waterloo and I am wondering if there is now a legal reason why this "exemption" cannot be extended to include delivery to Waterloo?velovampire wrote:Pretty sure they're only delivering in the Ottawa area for the time being.NRman wrote:Good news!zane9 wrote:The Ottawa Citizen reports that the prohibition against Beau's home delivery has been lifted.
Steve Beauchesne hopes to resume deliveries by Monday.
so here is my question (admittedly without knowing all the facts), does this mean I can sign up to Beaus Greener Futures project and get bottles delivered to Waterloo? Or does a homeless guy need to deliver it?![]()
http://www.beaus.ca/beer/greener_futures
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The Delivery license is held by the charity "Operation Come Home" not Beau'sNRman wrote:
understood, but they deliver to some bars here in Waterloo and I am wondering if there is now a legal reason why this "exemption" cannot be extended to include delivery to Waterloo?
"Everything ... is happening" - Bob Cole
So does this mean we won't find out who made the complaint? I would still like to know.zane9 wrote:The Ottawa Citizen reports that the prohibition against Beau's home delivery has been lifted.
Steve Beauchesne hopes to resume deliveries by Monday.
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With the rule being reversed and the law being changed for all brewers I wonder how long it will be before we start seeing other breweries try the same thing. I mean especially with the charity angle Beau's got a ton of coverage over this. They were on the CTV local news at least 4 times since the whole thing blew up. That must have led to a ton of extra orders once the service got back up and running. I could totally see another brewery like one of the ones on the outskirts of Toronto or in the towns ouside of Toronto starting to do this as well. I wonder if any of them have anything like this in the works?Cagiva650 wrote:So does this mean we won't find out who made the complaint? I would still like to know.zane9 wrote:The Ottawa Citizen reports that the prohibition against Beau's home delivery has been lifted.
Steve Beauchesne hopes to resume deliveries by Monday.
I really wonderif this Beau's thing will actually be commercially viable. $15 is a huge premium to pay to get beer. The folks that run Beau's are much better at selling beer than I am, so I won't question too loudly, but I remain skeptical that this will stand the test of time.
And even if it works for them, the circumstances for them in Ottawa are very different than anywhere else. They have a combination of a very large market that is incredibly underserved. No disrespect to k or to Broadhead, but they just aren't in the same quality+variety league as Beau's, as far as I can tell. Even the LCBO sends us product last when at all.
Would people in Toronto pay a premium to get better access to Flying Monkeys with all the options around the city? I guess there the issue is less about any single brewery, and more about how big a hassle it is to just get to any one of them. For someone on the east side of the city even getting to Amsterdam is probably more challenging than it is for me to get to Beau's from Ottawa.
Anyway, it'll be interesting to see if the Beau's thing even works long/medium term.
And even if it works for them, the circumstances for them in Ottawa are very different than anywhere else. They have a combination of a very large market that is incredibly underserved. No disrespect to k or to Broadhead, but they just aren't in the same quality+variety league as Beau's, as far as I can tell. Even the LCBO sends us product last when at all.

Would people in Toronto pay a premium to get better access to Flying Monkeys with all the options around the city? I guess there the issue is less about any single brewery, and more about how big a hassle it is to just get to any one of them. For someone on the east side of the city even getting to Amsterdam is probably more challenging than it is for me to get to Beau's from Ottawa.
Anyway, it'll be interesting to see if the Beau's thing even works long/medium term.
When you consider your time & mileage, it's not really that huge.rejtable wrote:$15 is a huge premium to pay to get beer.
It could definitely work around any college or university, where many students often don't have the means to go pickup a large case (could be cheaper than a cab there & back, and a heck of a lot cheaper than drinking at the pub).
They've got a lot of press, but some cheap advertising in school papers & student radio might pay off.

If I still lived in Ottawa, $15 would totally be worth it. It would allow me to get some Beau's seasonals without the drive to Vankleek hill, or possibly missing out on stock at the LCBO.
.... Now only if they serviced the Timmins area.
.... Now only if they serviced the Timmins area.

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It is important to remember that of that 15 bucks, something like $8.25 is a charitable donation to Operation Come Home. If another brewery wanted to start something like this as a commercial venture, or just set it at a more competetive price point, a delivery service for around $6.75 isn't that unreasonable.rejtable wrote:I really wonderif this Beau's thing will actually be commercially viable. $15 is a huge premium to pay to get beer. The folks that run Beau's are much better at selling beer than I am, so I won't question too loudly, but I remain skeptical that this will stand the test of time.
And even if it works for them, the circumstances for them in Ottawa are very different than anywhere else. They have a combination of a very large market that is incredibly underserved. No disrespect to k or to Broadhead, but they just aren't in the same quality+variety league as Beau's, as far as I can tell. Even the LCBO sends us product last when at all.![]()
Would people in Toronto pay a premium to get better access to Flying Monkeys with all the options around the city? I guess there the issue is less about any single brewery, and more about how big a hassle it is to just get to any one of them. For someone on the east side of the city even getting to Amsterdam is probably more challenging than it is for me to get to Beau's from Ottawa.
Anyway, it'll be interesting to see if the Beau's thing even works long/medium term.
All $15 goes to operation come home. As you mentioned, $8.75 is a charitable donation and the other $6.75 is used by OCH to cover operating costs.Kel Varnsen wrote:It is important to remember that of that 15 bucks, something like $8.25 is a charitable donation to Operation Come Home. If another brewery wanted to start something like this as a commercial venture, or just set it at a more competetive price point, a delivery service for around $6.75 isn't that unreasonable.
In Toronto I'd use such a service for certain breweries and certain beers of theirs. They would be beers that aren't available at the LCBO or TBS and I'd have to drive out to the brewery at a certain time of year to get them. Two examples: Church Key Cranberry Maple Wheat, Purple Loosestrife Mead and Grand River Bumbleberry. I know two of the three aren't made anymore, just providing examples. In that case paying $15 for delivery of a few cases would be totally worth it for my time, gas and general dislike of driving distances.
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