Photo: Merridale's hand sanitizer (courtesy of Merridale)
The
following heart-warming story was emailed this week to the customers of
Merridale Cidery and Distillery, the pioneering producer of apple cider on
Vancouver Island.
Shortly
after founder Albert Piggott opened the cidery in 1992, it was acquired by Rick
Pipes, a former Victoria lawyer, and his partner, Janet Docherty.
A
couple with energy, imagination and considerable business acumen, they have
turned Merridale into a major success.
Rick
was among the earliest applicants for a distillery license and had a hand in
helping the government structure regulations that made commercial sense. There
are craft distillers all over British Columbia who might never have opened but
for the work of Rick Pipes and a handful of other early distillers.
The following email from Merridale
recites a tale reflecting how many British Columbia
companies are going the
extra mile in the battle to control COVID-19.
It takes a village, or two, to make hand sanitizer
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Over the last few weeks, a call went out to the craft
distillers to make hand sanitizers for first responders and others.
Merridale and many from the BC Craft Distillers Guild have jumped into
action to figure out how to do this. Most of us have never made a product
like this before, but Guild Members worked together closely sharing
information and recipes, which has been incredibly inspiring.
At Merridale Distillery, our first call for help came from one of our
growers, Dr. Robert Anderson. Hand sanitizer was desperately needed for
Home Care Workers to take with them on their home visits. These workers
are out on the front lines of the pandemic and needed something portable.
Because we pick our fruit in the fall, ferment it into cider, and then
distill the cider into spirits in our small still, we didn’t have the
neutral spirits available to make it. Luckily, our good friends at Averill
Creek, Wendy and Andy Johnston had grain alcohol they
could spare.
We then reached out to Gifty at Shea Butter
Market, a long-time collaborator who has been making our hand
creams, cider soaps and lip balms for years. Understanding how often the
hand sanitizer would be used, we wanted to create something that wouldn’t
dry or irritate the skin.
Gifty brought her skin care expertise to the table, along with her Baraka
Shea Butter, which is hand-made by women and families from the village of
Kperisi in Northern Ghana. She helped us work on a formulation that added
in a little Shea Butter and Coconut oil, so that it would smell great and
feel good.
The second key ingredient in hand sanitizer after the alcohol is aloe
gel. As the supply chain slowed down, there was no aloe to be found
anywhere. We searched. Gifty searched. And, finally we located some at
Voyageur in Surrey. When they learned that the aloe was for hand
sanitizer for Home Care Workers, they jumped into action helping to
ensure that our order was ready before the end of the day on Friday.
Understandably, couriers are extremely busy right now and we couldn’t
find a way to get our newly acquired Aloe Gel to the Island. So, in
jumped Karen, a Vancouver-based member of our family. She picked up the
aloe, packed it up and headed to the ferry terminal. Rick, our owner, in
the meantime had hopped on the ferry as a walk-on. They did a quick
pass-off at Tsawwassen and Rick rode the ferry back to the Island with a
suitcase of Aloe Gel in tow.
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With the last ingredient finally in hand, Gifty’s team
sprang into action, quickly getting an assembly line in place. The hand
sanitizer was made, packaged and labeled in less than 24 hours. The
following afternoon, we dropped off the packaged hand sanitizer for our
nurses in the Duncan hospital.
We would like to extend a huge thank you to Shea
Butter Market, Averill
Creek, Voyageur
Soap & Candle, Karen Symmes, and of course, our local
health care workers and Dr. Anderson for reaching out! Seeing a community
pull together on a project like this is heartwarming. It’s the good part
of the bad that is happening right now.
As we move forward with further production, most of our product will be given
away to first responders, but we will have a limited amount for our
customers. We have stayed open in the eatery supplying take away
foods for your freezer and pantries. Our cider
and spirits
shelves are also stocked. To customers coming into the Farmhouse
for take-away foods, cider, or spirits, we are making one bottle of
sanitizer available per person at our cost of $5. Please support local
during these trying times, whether it be here or another business close
to your home. We want businesses to survive and be there when this
passes. Stay Safe. Stay Positive. Stay supportive.
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