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The provincial liquor stores (LCBO) and The Beer Store are closed on holidays, yeah.

That just reminded me of something, though. You can buy beer at some gas stations and convenience stores now. I forgot about that, cause it's a new thing, and for pretty much my whole life you could only get drinks at the two kinds of stores.
 
The provincial liquor stores (LCBO) and The Beer Store are closed on holidays, yeah.

That just reminded me of something, though. You can buy beer at some gas stations and convenience stores now. I forgot about that, cause it's a new thing, and for pretty much my whole life you could only get drinks at the two kinds of stores.
For Good Friday? That's stupid. Only Thanksgiving and Xmas Day here.
 
When I moved to Wyoming, I was astonished to discover one couldn't buy a bottle of wine in a grocery store. When the nice clerk directed me to the liquor store next door, I didn't know quite how to deal with the stituation. I'd only been in a liquor store once in my life (I was 23 at the time) and it seemed kinda dodgy and drug deal-ish to walk through that door. Only alcoholics went into liquor stores. Everyone else decoriously purchased liquor two aisles over from the baked goods. :sneaky:
 
Had a random flashback from this content. I remember when you could not buy alcohol on Sundays. Because Jesus I guess heh. And then I remembered that earlier than that, most stores in general were closed on Sundays. That's about as weird as smoking in McDonald's in retrospect.
 
Laws can be silly, strange or outdated, indeed. Just google "silly laws" and you'll find millions of results.

One of the more reliable results is probably this wikipedia article on strange laws, which at least tries to divide them into categories like "False", "True", "Never Passed" etc. and substantiate those results with outside links. Have fun. ;)
 
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My home state is part of the Bible Belt and my home county is about as Bible-Belty as they come. Ask me why I've lived in Wyoming for almost fifty years. Home county is still dry, though organizations like VFW have licenses to sell liquor at their events.
 
When I moved to Wyoming, I was astonished to discover one couldn't buy a bottle of wine in a grocery store.
When I moved to New Mexico, I found that you could buy booze at the grocery store, but when the store was open on Sunday, the booze section was gated off.

And on my first visit to Utah, the grocery stores didn't have wine at all. I had to go to an ABC (alcoholic beverage control) stores like the ones in Virginia. You'd walk in and a guy at the counter would give you a looseleaf notebook with the labels of the booze on it, and you'd leaf through it and point to the one you wanted. The guy would fetch the bottle from the store-room behind him and give it to you after you paid him. I felt like I was buying a sex object from an "adult amusement store."

When my family lived in northern Virginia in the 1960s, my dad would make booze runs to Washington, DC, which had regular liquor stores. I don't know what the situation is in Virginia or New Mexico now.

Do I have to include a weather report? Well, here in central California, we've had an unusually warm winter, so the snow-pack we rely on for our summer water supply is melting fast. So it looks like it's going to be another drought this year.
 
Well, here in central California, we've had an unusually warm winter, so the snow-pack we rely on for our summer water supply is melting fast. So it looks like it's going to be another drought this year.
We had the warmest, driest winter on record. Same problem with the snow-pack here. Can I ask where in central CA? I lived in Clovis when it still had a rodeo arena downtown. Population back then was not quite 15,000 people. It was a really nice small town.
 
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