The Guardian (Charlottetown)

A different type of bar

Lawyer opts to turn home hobby into an award-winning beer

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R GOODING AMHERST NEWS

When Joe and Laura Parker decided a family-owned brewery was in their future they were coming from a good place: he had no one to let down and she had all the support in the world.

And, frankly, Joe had no choice.

“He was pushed into it,” Laura says.

“The hobby was taking over the house,” Joe explains.

Joe was called to the bar – different bar, he’s a qualified lawyer – when he took a good look at his future and realized he would never hold his job in his hand and raise it up for his friends to toast.

The lack of tangibilit­y struck him.

“I wanted to create and sell a product,” Joe said. “I didn’t know that until it was too late. I was unhappy peddling service when I wanted to peddle a product. I needed that satisfacti­on of going to work a producing a skid of beer and then going home and saying ‘How did today go? It went well. I produced a skid of beer. Hopefully tomorrow someone buys it.’”

But as reality set in, Joe realized he was in a good place. He didn’t have any clients. He could switch careers midstream without any unfinished business.

Laura, however, was fullsteam ahead with a veterinary career – also known as the best career in the world to be in if you consider becoming an entreprene­ur.

The veterinary community, the Potters say, is built on compassion and sincerity, so when it became evident Joe needed a partner, Laura’s employer knew just the prescripti­on for their condition and worked with her to let her be more involved with the upstart business.

A year later and Trider’s Craft Beer has grown from Cumberland County’s first craft brewery into a Nova Scotiaknow­n product, available at Nova Scotia Liquor Commission outlets and winning awards as they do.

Out of the gate, their red ale claimed gold in its category at the 2016 Atlantic Canadian Beer Awards and they’ve continued to collect hardware along the way, including for the sense of fun and patriotism. In July their Brew-deau Canadian Cream Ale was named Most Canadian Beer by a panel of 12 judges in the Brew Patriot Love contest lead by Halifax’s Propeller Brewing.

Having something tangible to show for a hard day’s work while reclaiming the kitchen may have been the goal for the Potter’s, but friends and fun have been the rewards of becoming entreprene­urs.

“I enjoy handing someone a glass of beer and watching their reaction and their enthusiasm afterwards,” Laura says.

“They think, ‘Oh, craft beer. It’s going to be either like homebrew or over my head,’ then they’re like ‘Whoa! It’s good!” Joe says.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R GOODING/AMHERST NEWS ?? Newlywed in 2015 and just beginning careers in veterinary sciences and law, two years later the entreprene­urial spirit finds Laura and Joe Potter running their own craft brewery in Northern Nova Scotia.
CHRISTOPHE­R GOODING/AMHERST NEWS Newlywed in 2015 and just beginning careers in veterinary sciences and law, two years later the entreprene­urial spirit finds Laura and Joe Potter running their own craft brewery in Northern Nova Scotia.
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