Forums > General Discussion   Shooting the breeze...

The price of a pint...

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Created by shi thouse > 9 months ago, 21 Oct 2014
Cobra
9106 posts
27 Oct 2014 3:56PM
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Mobydisc said..

Cobra said..
Sands if your beers are getting warm, your talking to much
as for bar maids not knowing what pints are, its probably because they just turned 18
whats metric got to do with it beer was served in the first fleet days as pints,hold on to your/our heritage boys
don't sell out to the hipsters of the new world




I don't think a huge amount of beer was consumed by the first fleeters. They usually preferred rum which could be any sort of spirit. Until breweries got going in Sydney most people wanted rum. It would have been too expensive to transport beer from England to Australia when there was more bang for the buck with rum.

yep probably right about the rum... but beer was here and it was served

History[edit]18th century[edit]The history of Australian beer starts very early in Australia's colonial history. Captain James Cook brought beer with him on his ship Endeavour as a means of preserving drinking water. On 1 August 1768, as Cook was fitting out the Endeavour for its voyage, Nathaniel Hulme wrote to Joseph Banks with a recommendation:"a quantity of Molasses and Turpentine, in order to brew Beer with, for your daily drink, when your Water becomes bad. … [B]rewing Beer at sea will be peculiarly useful in case you should have stinking water on board; for I find by Experience that the smell of stinking water will be entirely destroyed by the process of fermentation."— Letter to Joseph Banks 1768

SandS
VIC, 5904 posts
27 Oct 2014 9:37PM
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LateStarter said..
$17 for a pint of Hoegarden at the Belgian Beer Cafe
$14.50 for a schooner of Becks at the Aviary
$11.50 for a stubbie of Stella at Lost Society

Perth prices blow, but at least we have the best looking women in the world!*












*Gina Rinehart excluded, obviously.



with prices that steep , you need the best looking women !!!!!!............... too exy to fit the beer goggles for others !!!

petermac33
WA, 6415 posts
28 Oct 2014 2:19AM
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Was told by a girl who frequented the old Raffles Hotel around 8 years ago that a pint of beer was 11 dollars. Must be a lot more now.

She thought that was kind of cool,part of the attraction of the place for many i think,crazy as it sounds.




mattyjee
WA, 575 posts
28 Oct 2014 1:51PM
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To those wondering why pubs charge that much for a pint, its simple economics really.

People are still willing to pay that much. Go to one of these pubs charging over $10 for a pint and you'll find it's still packed and people are happily forking out cash for beer. If I owned a pub, I'd be charging that much too. Sad really, but if people started going to the cheaper pubs then the more expensive ones would have to drop prices to compete.

Poida
WA, 1921 posts
28 Oct 2014 2:27PM
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they closed the Glengarry tavern, but that certainly had a different ambiance to the more expensive boutique beer places




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Forums > General Discussion   Shooting the breeze...


"The price of a pint..." started by shi thouse