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18-07-2013, 08:45
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More hop statistics, this time courtesy of a Grantham newspaper.
I've always thought of Grantham as the evil twin of Newark, where I grew up. Not that I know Grantham particularly well. I can't have visited the place more than half a dozen times. Once was to attend a CAMRA meeting. That the pub was serving the original Barnsley Bitter should give some indication of how long ago that was.
Me and Dolores had to wait an hour or two there once on the way back from Skegness. She wasn't impressed. "It makes Newark look exciting." she said.
Sorry for wandering off there. Hops I should be talking about.
What's interesting about this set of numbers is that not just the prodduction but also the consumption of hops is given. You have to be a little careful with figures like these because most hops aren't consumed in the year they're grown, but the following year. So, for example, if 1892 has there had been a bumper crop in the UK, it might well have been self-sufficient in hops, despite growing fewer in 1893 than were used that year.
That said, the UK wasn't self-sufficient and did indeed depend on imports from, amongst others, the USA.
Hops in 1893 (zentner)
grown
consumed
Great Britain
489,735
594,187
Germany
265,189
417,596
Austria
143,466
135,694
America
418,612
320,533
total
1,696,588
Source:
Grantham Journal - Saturday 18 August 1894, page 7.
This next table shows that Germany wasn't the net importer of hops it appears to be in the first table. The 486,600 zentners uit produced on average exceeds 420,000 or so it needed for brewing. While Austria was a much bigger net exporter than it appeared.
Hop production 1896 - 1900 (zentners of 50 kg)
1896
1897
1898
1899
1900
average
Germany
510,000
473,000
436,000
581,000
433,000
486,600
UK
453,000
417,000
302,000
661,000
353,000
437,200
Austria
230,000
162,000
186,000
254,000
213,000
209,000
USA
309,000
344,000
339,000
380,000
329,000
340,200
Source:
Barth Hop Report 1910
I think I've still a few hop numbers I've not bothered you with yet. I'll try to dig them out.
More... (http://barclayperkins.blogspot.com/2013/07/hops-in-1893.html)
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More hop statistics, this time courtesy of a Grantham newspaper.
I've always thought of Grantham as the evil twin of Newark, where I grew up. Not that I know Grantham particularly well. I can't have visited the place more than half a dozen times. Once was to attend a CAMRA meeting. That the pub was serving the original Barnsley Bitter should give some indication of how long ago that was.
Me and Dolores had to wait an hour or two there once on the way back from Skegness. She wasn't impressed. "It makes Newark look exciting." she said.
Sorry for wandering off there. Hops I should be talking about.
What's interesting about this set of numbers is that not just the prodduction but also the consumption of hops is given. You have to be a little careful with figures like these because most hops aren't consumed in the year they're grown, but the following year. So, for example, if 1892 has there had been a bumper crop in the UK, it might well have been self-sufficient in hops, despite growing fewer in 1893 than were used that year.
That said, the UK wasn't self-sufficient and did indeed depend on imports from, amongst others, the USA.
Hops in 1893 (zentner)
grown
consumed
Great Britain
489,735
594,187
Germany
265,189
417,596
Austria
143,466
135,694
America
418,612
320,533
total
1,696,588
Source:
Grantham Journal - Saturday 18 August 1894, page 7.
This next table shows that Germany wasn't the net importer of hops it appears to be in the first table. The 486,600 zentners uit produced on average exceeds 420,000 or so it needed for brewing. While Austria was a much bigger net exporter than it appeared.
Hop production 1896 - 1900 (zentners of 50 kg)
1896
1897
1898
1899
1900
average
Germany
510,000
473,000
436,000
581,000
433,000
486,600
UK
453,000
417,000
302,000
661,000
353,000
437,200
Austria
230,000
162,000
186,000
254,000
213,000
209,000
USA
309,000
344,000
339,000
380,000
329,000
340,200
Source:
Barth Hop Report 1910
I think I've still a few hop numbers I've not bothered you with yet. I'll try to dig them out.
More... (http://barclayperkins.blogspot.com/2013/07/hops-in-1893.html)