Quote:
Originally Posted by niwell
My only real complaints are the lack of discounts for products offered through the LCBO (brewery/vineyard direct purchases can be discounted) and the general (un)availability of Canadian products from outside Ontario. The latter is a much larger issue experienced Canada-wide, and most shops here do have a great selection of Ontario craft products.
Alcohol sales are byzantine across North America and Ontario is probably more accessible than the overall average at this point. Plenty of places in the US where you can't buy booze on Sundays still or need to ask for hard alcohol from behind a glassed in counter. Pennsylvania is particularly awful.
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I don't have much to complain about either. We can buy from independent bottle shops, we can buy from the producers themselves, we can buy from increasingly more grocery stores, we can BYOB and pay a corking fee (this never was that appealing to me, so I've never done it), we can drink on a patio that no longer has a fence, we can drink in a park on a mostly 'don't ask, don't tell' basis. Maybe I'm getting conservative as I get older, but this is good enough for me.
My only complaint is the high prices, although this is increasingly not a problem for me because I don't buy cheap beer or wine anymore. We don't have two buck chuck and you can't buy a 30 pack of Natty Lite at WalMart for $16US, but above a certain price and quality point the LCBO becomes price competitive with American liquor stores.
My other complaint is, like you, the lack of other Canadian content. There are a lot of Quebecois and BC beers I'd like to easily get my hands on.
Do you know if bottle shops have to buy through the LCBO as a middleman? I always wondered where they get items that aren't for sale at the LCBO, but also if that was the reason that their prices were marked up.