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Cherrybounce 13-01-2005 10:47 PM

Ordering wine online?
 
Do any of you have any experience ordering wine or spirits online? I'm
looking for a particular wine I can't find locally and I would like to
know if anyone has had good results with an online store?

Thanks.


Dan Abel 13-01-2005 11:07 PM

In article .com>,
"Cherrybounce" > wrote:

> Do any of you have any experience ordering wine or spirits online? I'm
> looking for a particular wine I can't find locally and I would like to
> know if anyone has had good results with an online store?



I haven't ordered online, but I've shopped in person at BevMo here in
California, and browsed their web page. In the past there have been
restrictions on shipping alcohol between states, but I don't know if that
is still true. You might want to consider posting what state you live in.


http://www.bevmo.com

--
Dan Abel
Sonoma State University
AIS


Dan Abel 13-01-2005 11:07 PM

In article .com>,
"Cherrybounce" > wrote:

> Do any of you have any experience ordering wine or spirits online? I'm
> looking for a particular wine I can't find locally and I would like to
> know if anyone has had good results with an online store?



I haven't ordered online, but I've shopped in person at BevMo here in
California, and browsed their web page. In the past there have been
restrictions on shipping alcohol between states, but I don't know if that
is still true. You might want to consider posting what state you live in.


http://www.bevmo.com

--
Dan Abel
Sonoma State University
AIS


Siobhan Perricone 13-01-2005 11:07 PM

On 13 Jan 2005 14:47:44 -0800, "Cherrybounce" > wrote:

>Do any of you have any experience ordering wine or spirits online? I'm
>looking for a particular wine I can't find locally and I would like to
>know if anyone has had good results with an online store?


I've never done so, but you live in the US, you should make a point of
ensuring you're not living in a state that has rules about what alcholic
beverages you're allowed to buy from where. You could violate state liquor
laws without even realizing it.

In a lot of states it's illegal to mail order liquor because it's
transporting booze across state lines. :)

--
Siobhan Perricone
Humans wrote the bible,
God wrote the rocks
-- Word of God by Kathy Mar

Siobhan Perricone 13-01-2005 11:07 PM

On 13 Jan 2005 14:47:44 -0800, "Cherrybounce" > wrote:

>Do any of you have any experience ordering wine or spirits online? I'm
>looking for a particular wine I can't find locally and I would like to
>know if anyone has had good results with an online store?


I've never done so, but you live in the US, you should make a point of
ensuring you're not living in a state that has rules about what alcholic
beverages you're allowed to buy from where. You could violate state liquor
laws without even realizing it.

In a lot of states it's illegal to mail order liquor because it's
transporting booze across state lines. :)

--
Siobhan Perricone
Humans wrote the bible,
God wrote the rocks
-- Word of God by Kathy Mar

JimLane 14-01-2005 12:27 AM

Siobhan Perricone wrote:

>
> In a lot of states it's illegal to mail order liquor because it's
> transporting booze across state lines. :)


More often than not, states with official package stores do not like the
loss of revenue when it comes from outside and not through their stores.


jim


JimLane 14-01-2005 12:27 AM

Siobhan Perricone wrote:

>
> In a lot of states it's illegal to mail order liquor because it's
> transporting booze across state lines. :)


More often than not, states with official package stores do not like the
loss of revenue when it comes from outside and not through their stores.


jim


George 14-01-2005 01:23 AM

JimLane wrote:
> Siobhan Perricone wrote:
>
>>
>> In a lot of states it's illegal to mail order liquor because it's
>> transporting booze across state lines. :)

>
>
> More often than not, states with official package stores do not like the
> loss of revenue when it comes from outside and not through their stores.
>
>
> jim
>

Yes, there are only 2 of those states left and I am in one of them (PA).

George 14-01-2005 01:23 AM

JimLane wrote:
> Siobhan Perricone wrote:
>
>>
>> In a lot of states it's illegal to mail order liquor because it's
>> transporting booze across state lines. :)

>
>
> More often than not, states with official package stores do not like the
> loss of revenue when it comes from outside and not through their stores.
>
>
> jim
>

Yes, there are only 2 of those states left and I am in one of them (PA).

Jessica V. 14-01-2005 01:51 AM

George wrote:

> JimLane wrote:
>
>> Siobhan Perricone wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> In a lot of states it's illegal to mail order liquor because it's
>>> transporting booze across state lines. :)

>>
>>
>>
>> More often than not, states with official package stores do not like
>> the loss of revenue when it comes from outside and not through their
>> stores.
>>
>>
>> jim
>>

> Yes, there are only 2 of those states left and I am in one of them (PA).


Maine finally closed the state run liquor stores two years ago. Still
can't have booze shipped into the state and there are limits on what one
can bring in from NH where alcohol taxes are MUCH lower. The state
police used to sit in the parking lot of the Portsmouth, NH liquor store
and follow and pull over Mainers who'd purchased more than their
allotment as soon as they crossed the state line. The usual punishment
was simply confiscation. It'd pop up in the news when some couple got
busted buying champage for a wedding.

Jessica

Bob 14-01-2005 04:53 AM

Cherrybounce asked:

> Do any of you have any experience ordering wine or spirits online? I'm
> looking for a particular wine I can't find locally and I would like to
> know if anyone has had good results with an online store?


I've ordered both wines and spirits online, and never had a problem. I live
in California, if that makes a difference. The wine merchants from whom
I've ordered have all been in California, but I've also shipped wines to my
sisters in Florida without mishap. I had spirits (a macadamia liqueur)
shipped to me from New Zealand, and I got it just fine. (Now I'm trying to
track down a litchi liqueur.)

As someone else noted, Beverages & More has an online store, and I've used
it, but only to have them put a package together for pickup. (The nearest
Beverages & More was about an hour's drive away back then, so I only did
that occasionally. But they just built a MUCH closer one.)

In general, though, I'd recommend online wine/spirit merchants, provided you
follow the same precautions that apply to ANY online merchant (e.g., make
sure that you don't give your credit card number on form unless the form is
secure). If it would make you feel better, most online merchants have a
contact phone number, so you can place your order by phone.

Bob



Bob 14-01-2005 04:53 AM

Cherrybounce asked:

> Do any of you have any experience ordering wine or spirits online? I'm
> looking for a particular wine I can't find locally and I would like to
> know if anyone has had good results with an online store?


I've ordered both wines and spirits online, and never had a problem. I live
in California, if that makes a difference. The wine merchants from whom
I've ordered have all been in California, but I've also shipped wines to my
sisters in Florida without mishap. I had spirits (a macadamia liqueur)
shipped to me from New Zealand, and I got it just fine. (Now I'm trying to
track down a litchi liqueur.)

As someone else noted, Beverages & More has an online store, and I've used
it, but only to have them put a package together for pickup. (The nearest
Beverages & More was about an hour's drive away back then, so I only did
that occasionally. But they just built a MUCH closer one.)

In general, though, I'd recommend online wine/spirit merchants, provided you
follow the same precautions that apply to ANY online merchant (e.g., make
sure that you don't give your credit card number on form unless the form is
secure). If it would make you feel better, most online merchants have a
contact phone number, so you can place your order by phone.

Bob



-L. 14-01-2005 05:35 AM


Cherrybounce wrote:
> Do any of you have any experience ordering wine or spirits online?

I'm
> looking for a particular wine I can't find locally and I would like

to
> know if anyone has had good results with an online store?
>
> Thanks.


Lawton Winery in Newberg, Oregon

http://www.lawtonwinery.com
Limited selecton, but excellent wine, and very nice folks.

-L.


-L. 14-01-2005 05:35 AM


Cherrybounce wrote:
> Do any of you have any experience ordering wine or spirits online?

I'm
> looking for a particular wine I can't find locally and I would like

to
> know if anyone has had good results with an online store?
>
> Thanks.


Lawton Winery in Newberg, Oregon

http://www.lawtonwinery.com
Limited selecton, but excellent wine, and very nice folks.

-L.


Leonard Lehew 14-01-2005 11:44 AM

On 13 Jan 2005 14:47:44 -0800, "Cherrybounce" >
wrote:

>Do any of you have any experience ordering wine or spirits online? I'm
>looking for a particular wine I can't find locally and I would like to
>know if anyone has had good results with an online store?
>
>Thanks.

I have ordered from on-line stores occassionally, from wine brokers,
and directly from wineries. No problems in any case. Shipping can be
pretty expensive, but it can still make sense for difficult to obtain
wine. In some situations the price can be low enough to more than
offset the shipping costs.

There are a bunch of on-line wine retailers now that sell pretty much
anything. Wine brokers tend to be more selective in what they carry
and tend toward more expensive wines with smaller distributions.

There is considerable variation in state laws that affect whether you
can get wine shipped to you legally. In my experience, wine brokers in
another state don't worry about that too much. I guess they figure
that an out-of-state prosecution is unlikely. On the other hand,
wineries tend to follow the law more carefully.

It is possible to receive wine now in most states. The larger on-line
merchants and wineries have taken the time to figure out how to comply
with individual state laws in a way that is pretty transparent to
customers.

There are also shipping companies that will deal with these legal
requirements in a way that is transparent to both the shipper and
customers. Smaller wineries often depend on the shipper to handle
this. It makes the shipping cost higher, but at least makes it
possible to get limited-production wines.

If you use a larger merchant like wine.com, you will see that their
prices are adjusted based on the destination state.

Cheers,

Leonard

Leonard Lehew 14-01-2005 11:44 AM

On 13 Jan 2005 14:47:44 -0800, "Cherrybounce" >
wrote:

>Do any of you have any experience ordering wine or spirits online? I'm
>looking for a particular wine I can't find locally and I would like to
>know if anyone has had good results with an online store?
>
>Thanks.

I have ordered from on-line stores occassionally, from wine brokers,
and directly from wineries. No problems in any case. Shipping can be
pretty expensive, but it can still make sense for difficult to obtain
wine. In some situations the price can be low enough to more than
offset the shipping costs.

There are a bunch of on-line wine retailers now that sell pretty much
anything. Wine brokers tend to be more selective in what they carry
and tend toward more expensive wines with smaller distributions.

There is considerable variation in state laws that affect whether you
can get wine shipped to you legally. In my experience, wine brokers in
another state don't worry about that too much. I guess they figure
that an out-of-state prosecution is unlikely. On the other hand,
wineries tend to follow the law more carefully.

It is possible to receive wine now in most states. The larger on-line
merchants and wineries have taken the time to figure out how to comply
with individual state laws in a way that is pretty transparent to
customers.

There are also shipping companies that will deal with these legal
requirements in a way that is transparent to both the shipper and
customers. Smaller wineries often depend on the shipper to handle
this. It makes the shipping cost higher, but at least makes it
possible to get limited-production wines.

If you use a larger merchant like wine.com, you will see that their
prices are adjusted based on the destination state.

Cheers,

Leonard

Siobhan Perricone 14-01-2005 12:10 PM

On Thu, 13 Jan 2005 20:23:08 -0500, George > wrote:

>JimLane wrote:
>> Siobhan Perricone wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> In a lot of states it's illegal to mail order liquor because it's
>>> transporting booze across state lines. :)

>>
>>
>> More often than not, states with official package stores do not like the
>> loss of revenue when it comes from outside and not through their stores.


>Yes, there are only 2 of those states left and I am in one of them (PA).


No, that's not true. There are 19 control states in the US. Every state
that became a control state after prohibition is, in some sense, a control
state still.

My husband works for our state department of liquor control. :)

--
Siobhan Perricone
Humans wrote the bible,
God wrote the rocks
-- Word of God by Kathy Mar

Siobhan Perricone 14-01-2005 12:10 PM

On Thu, 13 Jan 2005 20:23:08 -0500, George > wrote:

>JimLane wrote:
>> Siobhan Perricone wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> In a lot of states it's illegal to mail order liquor because it's
>>> transporting booze across state lines. :)

>>
>>
>> More often than not, states with official package stores do not like the
>> loss of revenue when it comes from outside and not through their stores.


>Yes, there are only 2 of those states left and I am in one of them (PA).


No, that's not true. There are 19 control states in the US. Every state
that became a control state after prohibition is, in some sense, a control
state still.

My husband works for our state department of liquor control. :)

--
Siobhan Perricone
Humans wrote the bible,
God wrote the rocks
-- Word of God by Kathy Mar

Siobhan Perricone 14-01-2005 12:15 PM

On Thu, 13 Jan 2005 20:51:50 -0500, "Jessica V." > wrote:

>> Yes, there are only 2 of those states left and I am in one of them (PA).

>
>Maine finally closed the state run liquor stores two years ago. Still


Maine is still considered a control state. They decide what products will
be listed, how much they will cost, and where they'll be distributed. They
also still do all the licensing. The only thing Maine privatized was the
warehouse and distribution.

In many states that are control states there are private agencies that work
for the state to sell liquor in their businesses, but they are still
considered control states because the states still set prices, determine
what will be sold, etc. The private agencies are essentially acting as
salesmen earning a commission; in most states they don't even purchase the
stock.

Every state which became a control state after Prohibition ended is still a
control state, though parts of their operations have been privatized in
many cases (most states started allowing private businesses to act as
agents back in the 40s or 50s), up to and including the warehousing
operations, as in the case of Maine. But the state still controls the
business, and the reason for this is simple: it works. Year after year
with perfect consistency, every significant measure of responsible use of
alcohol (rates of DWI, underage consumption, health care costs, etc.) is
lower in every control state than in every open state. It's as simple as
that.


--
Siobhan Perricone
Humans wrote the bible,
God wrote the rocks
-- Word of God by Kathy Mar

Siobhan Perricone 14-01-2005 12:15 PM

On Thu, 13 Jan 2005 20:51:50 -0500, "Jessica V." > wrote:

>> Yes, there are only 2 of those states left and I am in one of them (PA).

>
>Maine finally closed the state run liquor stores two years ago. Still


Maine is still considered a control state. They decide what products will
be listed, how much they will cost, and where they'll be distributed. They
also still do all the licensing. The only thing Maine privatized was the
warehouse and distribution.

In many states that are control states there are private agencies that work
for the state to sell liquor in their businesses, but they are still
considered control states because the states still set prices, determine
what will be sold, etc. The private agencies are essentially acting as
salesmen earning a commission; in most states they don't even purchase the
stock.

Every state which became a control state after Prohibition ended is still a
control state, though parts of their operations have been privatized in
many cases (most states started allowing private businesses to act as
agents back in the 40s or 50s), up to and including the warehousing
operations, as in the case of Maine. But the state still controls the
business, and the reason for this is simple: it works. Year after year
with perfect consistency, every significant measure of responsible use of
alcohol (rates of DWI, underage consumption, health care costs, etc.) is
lower in every control state than in every open state. It's as simple as
that.


--
Siobhan Perricone
Humans wrote the bible,
God wrote the rocks
-- Word of God by Kathy Mar

Kswck 14-01-2005 09:40 PM


"Cherrybounce" > wrote in message
oups.com...
> Do any of you have any experience ordering wine or spirits online? I'm
> looking for a particular wine I can't find locally and I would like to
> know if anyone has had good results with an online store?
>
> Thanks.
>


Yopu have to check you individual area. Some US states will not allow wine
from other states to be shipped into them-presumably to fortify the own
states industry.



Kswck 14-01-2005 09:40 PM


"Cherrybounce" > wrote in message
oups.com...
> Do any of you have any experience ordering wine or spirits online? I'm
> looking for a particular wine I can't find locally and I would like to
> know if anyone has had good results with an online store?
>
> Thanks.
>


Yopu have to check you individual area. Some US states will not allow wine
from other states to be shipped into them-presumably to fortify the own
states industry.



Dennis Spexet 15-01-2005 01:50 AM

I live in rural Wisconsin, and tried to order some Calvados from bevmo.com.

When I tried to submit the order, I was told that I could only have beer and
wine shipped to Wisconsin. Hard spirits were not allowed.

It looks like they can ship anything within the state of California. Beer
and wine can be shipped to certain states. I'm not sure if any states can
receive hard liquor though. (Wisconsin definitely wasn't one of them.)

-Dennis Spexet,

"Bob" > wrote in message
...
> Cherrybounce asked:
>
>> Do any of you have any experience ordering wine or spirits online? I'm
>> looking for a particular wine I can't find locally and I would like to
>> know if anyone has had good results with an online store?

>
> I've ordered both wines and spirits online, and never had a problem. I
> live
> in California, if that makes a difference. The wine merchants from whom
> I've ordered have all been in California, but I've also shipped wines to
> my
> sisters in Florida without mishap. I had spirits (a macadamia liqueur)
> shipped to me from New Zealand, and I got it just fine. (Now I'm trying
> to
> track down a litchi liqueur.)
>
> As someone else noted, Beverages & More has an online store, and I've used
> it, but only to have them put a package together for pickup. (The nearest
> Beverages & More was about an hour's drive away back then, so I only did
> that occasionally. But they just built a MUCH closer one.)
>
> In general, though, I'd recommend online wine/spirit merchants, provided
> you
> follow the same precautions that apply to ANY online merchant (e.g., make
> sure that you don't give your credit card number on form unless the form
> is secure). If it would make you feel better, most online merchants have
> a contact phone number, so you can place your order by phone.
>
> Bob
>





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