Hops take off in Ontario thanks to booming craft beer market - Action News
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Hops take off in Ontario thanks to booming craft beer market

Drink craft beer? Some of Ontario's farmers have you to thank for a new crop they've added to their arsenal.

There are 80 hop yards in the province this year 4 years ago there were only 5

Hops are a slow growing, temperamental crop that take about three years to mature. (CBC)

Drink craft beer? Some of Ontario's farmers have you to thank for a new crop they've added to their arsenal.

Hops are taking off. Eighty hop yards of the beer flavouringflower aregrowing in the province this year. A hugejump from four years ago when there will only five hop yards in Ontario.

A boom in the craft beer market is responsible for growing interest in the crop. There are currently more than 60 craft breweries across the province including at least eightin Toronto alone, according to the industry group Ontario Craft Brewers.

But don't expect to get local hops in your local brewby this harvest season. Thepresident of the Ontario Hop Growers' Association says mass production is a long wayoff.

Patience is a hops virtue

"We figure it's going to take five to 10 years before we can even begin to meet the demand of a major craft brewer," said Hugh Brown. "The brewers import almost 99 per cent of the hops they use from the U.S. and Europe."

That's because hops like wine take patience. It's a slow-growing, temperamental crop that takesabout three years to mature.
Scott and Todd Hayhoe planted three acres of hops in eight varieties three years ago and are looking forward to their first harvest this fall. (CBC)

Twobrothers in Elgin County, about 50 kilometres south of London, Ont.,are nearing the end of that process. Hop cropping is now a full-time job for Scott and Todd Hayhoe. The pair planted threeacres of hopsin eight varieties three years ago and are looking forward to their first harvest, and paycheque, this fall.

"So far we've been focusing on how to grow it, and now we need to focus on how to sell it," said Todd, who came up with the idea for Hayhoe Hops over a pint with his brother.

"We like craft beer and we were like, it would be fun to grow something for these guys," recalled Scott.

Ontario hops on the rise

A London Ont., brewery saysthey'reready to start buying homegrown hops on a larger scaleafter watching fairly new operations grow and work out the kinks in their processes.
Brewmaster Steven Nazarian plans on making Forked River Brewing Company's first big batch of beer using Ontario hops soon. (CBC)

"They've gotten to the point where they're fully mature organizations," said Steven Nazarian, one of three brewers at Forked River Brewing Company. "We're pretty happy with the quality we've seen, so I've ordered quite a bit."

In the next few weeks thebrewmaster plans to use the order to brew Forked River'sfirst big batch of beer using Ontario hops.

Premium prices for local crops

Hops for Ontario growers can go for more than $6 a pound more than regular suppliers out of the U.S. and Europe. (CBC)
The price of those hops is at a premium, says Brown, with some selling at more than $20 a pound, compared to around $14 from normalsources in the U.S. and Europe.

"We've been getting a much better rate," said the Ontario Hop Growers' president. "The issue is we don't know how long that will stay the case, as more growers come online andas the novelty wears off."

For growers Scott and Todd Hayhoe, that could mean quite a big return on their beer-inspired venture this fall.

With files from Amanda Margison