So, funny thing, in the world of craft beer (or rather, in the super small arena of true craft beer nerds), there is use of certain nomenclature that has similarity to a term used here on Steemit: whales.
Now, I'm incredibly new to Steemit, at least in my use of it. I've actually known about it for a while because of a friend of mine
Anyway, last night I was reading through trending topics, and came across an article about Whales on Steemit. I'm familiar with the term because of
It was an interesting read, and while I didn't agree with all of it (everyone starts out as a minnow, so a whale should never forget that), I thought it had an interesting relation to craft beer.
In the world of craft beer, the term whale is used in reference to actual beers. There are even beers called White Whales, in a nod to 'ol Mr. Dick. Whales are beers that are incredibly rare, very high in quality, and typically low in number, which therefore makes them relatively expensive and highly coveted. I think you may see where I'm going with this...
If you want to drink a whale, you're going to have to pay your dues. In the craft beer culture, you generally start by drinking beers off the shelf at your local liquor store. Then maybe you go to some limited releases at breweries in your area, from there you meet some people that have come from other areas and you start trading beer you can get for beer you can't get. Eventually you go to enough releases and share enough beers with the right people, that you get to drink a whale.
And now we've come full circle to Steemit. If you bide your time, upvote the right people, generate interesting content, and share your experiences, eventually you'll meet and befriend a whale.
Here's to hoping I meet a whale sooner rather than later.
And if not, I can always just go grab one to drink out of my cellar...