HWY 3A W - NELSON. is a service station located in NELSON area.
This service station has a variety of fuel products including Shell V-Power Diesel, Silver and Bronze.
This station includes a Shop.
Villager's Inn is a locally owned and operated hotel, restaurant, liquor store and pub. The hotel offers comfortable and affordable accommodations, the restaurant has excellent fresh food, and the pub has a relaxing environment where you can enjoy a cold
Independently owned full service general grocery stores in rural communities or major tourist destinations can operate as Rural Agency Stores (RAS) and offer retail sale of liquor (spirits, wine, beer, cider and coolers). Services such as bottle return and chilled products as in regular BC Liquor Stores may also be offered depending on availability.
Rossland Beer Company is set in the heart of the Monashee Mountains and 5 minutes from the award winning Red Mountain Resort and Redstone Golf course. We appreciate our surroundings and are committed to safe and environmentally friendly brewing practices. We are proud to be Rosslands Local Brewery and are committed to the freshest ingredients and highest of standards.
Since its inception in 1991, the Nelson Brewing Company has been dedicated to producing all natural, traditional, full-flavoured ales. In 2006 we decided to let the brewery evolve to an even more natural state, and by October of that year we were granted Certified Organic status. In a sense, we were getting back to our roots. People have been brewing organically for over 6000 years; the current practice of large-scale industrial farming with synthetic fertilizers and pesticides is an aberration of traditional farming, and therefore brewing, practices. Choosing organic production is also in keeping with the spirit of our home town of Nelson, a laid-back, progressive community nestled in the heart of the Kootenays. With limitless backcountry skiing and hiking at our back door, as well as a host of other outdoor activities year-round, brewing an organic beer in Nelson just seems like the natural thing to do.