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About Lone Oak

Why Locals Choose Lone Oak Brewing, Again and Again

By About Lone Oak

There is a certain kind of place that earns a specific kind of loyalty.

Not the loyalty that comes from hype, or a loyalty programme, or a well-timed social media campaign. The loyalty that comes from showing up, consistently, for the moments that make up everyday life. The kind that builds quietly, over dozens of visits and different occasions, until one day a place just becomes part of how you live.

For a growing number of PEI locals, Lone Oak Brewing has become that kind of place.

This is not a story about a single visit or a standout experience, though those happen too. It is a story about consistency. About the kind of brand that earns a place in someone’s week, and then keeps it. About what it means to be local in the truest sense of the word: not just located on PEI, but genuinely woven into the life of the Island.

If you have ever wondered why locals keep coming back to Lone Oak, this is the answer. Not one answer, as it turns out. Several.

It Shows Up in the Right Moments

The first reason locals keep coming back to Lone Oak is simple: it is there when they need it to be.

That might sound like a low bar. But for a hospitality brand to genuinely fit into someone’s routine, it has to be more than convenient. It has to be relevant to the actual shape of a person’s life. And life on PEI is varied. The rhythm of a week on the Island does not look the same for everyone, and the occasions that call for a place to eat, drink, or gather are different depending on the season, the mood, and the plan.

Lone Oak fits a surprising number of those occasions.

A Tuesday night when someone wants a good dinner without a long drive. A Thursday at Fox Meadow after a round of golf. A Friday at the Borden taproom because the live music starts at seven and it is the kind of night that calls for it. A Saturday at The Oak downtown when the city energy is right and the DJ does not start until half past ten. A weekday happy hour that makes sense of stopping in before heading home.

“Lone Oak fits a surprising number of the occasions that make up a week on PEI. That is not a coincidence. It is the result of building something with enough range to be genuinely useful.”

Most businesses serve one kind of moment. Lone Oak serves several. And that range is exactly why locals find themselves returning without necessarily planning to. Lone Oak is simply there when the moment arrives.

Because Familiar Feels Like Something

There is a specific comfort that comes from walking into a place and already knowing what you like.

You know the beer you will order. You know which table you prefer if the patio is not busy. You know the general rhythm of the evening and roughly what you will spend. That familiarity is not boring. It is its own kind of pleasure, and it is one of the most underrated reasons people return to the same places.

Lone Oak has built that kind of familiarity for a lot of PEI locals. The beers are consistent, which matters more than most people realize. When someone orders a Lone Oak lager or a seasonal ale, they know what they are getting. That reliability is the foundation of a repeat relationship. A beer that surprises you in an unpleasant way on a third visit is a beer you stop ordering. A beer that delivers exactly what you expected, again and again, is one that becomes yours.

The same applies to the food, the atmosphere, and the service. Lone Oak is not a place that feels different every time. It is a place that feels like itself, consistently, across locations. And that consistency is what makes it easy to return to.

“Familiarity is not the absence of quality. It is the evidence of it. Lone Oak has earned that familiarity across PEI one visit at a time.”

For locals, that familiarity also carries a kind of social shorthand. When someone suggests meeting at Lone Oak, the person on the other end of the message does not need a lot of extra context. They know what to expect. And that ease of reference is part of what makes a brand genuinely embedded in a community.

It Belongs to the Community, Not Just the Industry

There is a difference between a business that operates in a community and a business that belongs to one.

Lone Oak has worked to be the latter from the very beginning. The founding team opened in Borden-Carleton with an explicit goal of helping revitalize an area that needed it. That is not the language of a business plan. It is the language of community investment. And that orientation has shaped how Lone Oak has grown.

It shows up in the events. Wing Wednesday at the taproom is not a calculated promotion. It is a weekly rhythm that gives regulars a reason to show up on a Wednesday. Trivia night is the same. Live music is the same. These are the things that turn a place to drink beer into a place people belong to.

Fox Meadow’s Men’s Night and Ladies’ Night operate the same way. They give members of the golf community recurring reasons to gather, and those recurring reasons become habits, and those habits become loyalty. Street Feast at The Oak is another version of the same logic: be present in the community at the moments that matter, and the community will remember.

Locals notice this. They notice when a business shows up for the Island rather than just showing up on it. And they respond with exactly the kind of loyalty that cannot be bought through a promotional campaign.

The Beer Itself Earns the Return

None of the community investment, the atmosphere, or the multi-location convenience would matter as much if the beer were not genuinely good.

Lone Oak’s product is the foundation of everything else. Co-founder Spencer Gallant, who came from the PEI Brewing Company and is recognized across the country for his craft, built a brewing program that locals can be genuinely proud of. The beers are made on the Island, reflect the Island, and hold up to comparison with anything produced anywhere in Atlantic Canada.

That matters to PEI locals in a specific way. Supporting local beer on PEI is not just a lifestyle preference. It is a form of civic pride. When a local orders a Lone Oak beer, they are supporting something that employs Island people, uses Island resources, and represents the Island to visitors who may be discovering it for the first time.

“Ordering a Lone Oak beer on PEI is not just a drink choice. It is a small act of Island loyalty.”

The distribution model reinforces this. Lone Oak beers are available at PEILCC locations across the Island, which means locals encounter them not just at the taproom but at the liquor store, at a friend’s house, at a dinner party, or at a local restaurant that carries them on tap. That distributed presence keeps the brand top of mind between visits, which makes returning feel natural.

There Is Always Something New to Come Back For

Familiarity and novelty are not opposites. The best local businesses understand how to offer both.

Lone Oak does this through its events calendar and its seasonal programming. The summer cocktail menu launch at The Oak gives regulars a reason to come back and try something new even if they were just there. The live music lineups at the taproom rotate through the season, which means the experience on a Saturday in May is different from the experience on a Saturday in July, even if you sit at the same table and order the same beer.

The Tractor Pull weekend at Gateway Village in late July and early August is a perfect example of this. It is an occasion that locals build around. The combination of the event and the exclusivity of Lone Oak products on site creates a specific version of the Lone Oak experience that is only available in that window. That kind of limited-time, location-specific programming creates anticipation, and anticipation is one of the strongest drivers of return visits.

The Beer Garden at Avonlea Village operates the same way seasonally. It is a distinctly summer experience, which means locals who visit in July are building a summer memory that they will associate with Lone Oak. By the time the following summer arrives, returning to the Beer Garden is not just a choice. It is almost a ritual.

“The best reason to come back is always a good one. Lone Oak keeps finding them.”

Even the golf calendar at Fox Meadow contributes to this. A tournament on the calendar becomes an occasion. An occasion involves food and drinks. Food and drinks at Lone Oak means another positive association added to the stack of reasons why locals return.

It Works for People, Not Just Outings

One of the quieter reasons locals trust Lone Oak is that the experience does not require a special occasion.

This might seem like a small thing. But it is actually quite significant. Many restaurants and bars are destinations. You go there for a birthday, an anniversary, a celebratory dinner. Those moments are important, and Lone Oak handles them well, particularly at Fox Meadow where the event space is genuinely suited to private celebrations and larger gatherings.

But the other side of that equation matters just as much. Lone Oak also works for a Tuesday. For a post-work drink that does not need a reason. For a casual lunch that was not planned in advance. For a quick stop that turns into a longer stay because the patio is good and the beer is cold.

That accessibility is what turns a restaurant into a local institution. Places that only work for special occasions are respected. Places that work for any occasion are loved. The difference between the two is the difference between a business people admire and a business people belong to.

Lone Oak has built the latter. Not because every visit is exceptional, but because every visit is reliably good. And for locals who are choosing where to spend time on a regular basis, reliably good beats occasionally spectacular every time.

The Island Recognizes Its Own

There is something that happens when a local business genuinely earns its place in a community. People start to feel a kind of ownership over it. Not legal ownership, but emotional ownership. The sense that this place is ours.

That feeling is evident in how PEI locals talk about Lone Oak. They recommend it to visitors with the confidence of someone sharing something valuable. They suggest it when friends visit because they want to show them something that represents the Island well. They return to it across different seasons and different occasions because it has become part of their personal map of PEI.

That kind of word-of-mouth is not manufactured. It grows from the cumulative experience of many visits, many good evenings, many moments where Lone Oak delivered exactly what was needed. And it is the most powerful form of marketing a local brand can earn.

On PEI, where the community is tight-knit and reputation travels fast, that kind of grassroots recognition is everything. It means the next visitor who asks a local where to go will hear the name Lone Oak. It means the next resident looking for somewhere to suggest for a group dinner will think of it first. It means the next community event looking for a local brewery to partner with will reach out.

It means, in short, that Lone Oak has earned its place. Not just on PEI. In PEI.

Final Thoughts

People choose their local places carefully, even when they do not realize they are choosing.

Every visit is a small decision. Every good experience is a reason to come back. Every time a place shows up reliably, in the right moment, with the right quality and the right feeling, it deposits something into an account. Over time, those deposits add up to loyalty.

Lone Oak Brewing has been making those deposits across Prince Edward Island for years now. Through five locations, across every season, for locals who are looking for somewhere to belong as much as somewhere to drink.

That is why they keep coming back.

And that is why, if you have not made Lone Oak part of your own PEI routine yet, there has never been a better time to start.


Frequently Asked Questions

Why is Lone Oak Brewing popular with PEI locals?

Lone Oak Brewing has built a loyal local following because it consistently shows up across the different moments that make up everyday Island life. Its five locations, reliable quality, community-focused events, and locally brewed beer make it easy to incorporate into regular routines rather than reserving it for special occasions.

Is Lone Oak Brewing good for repeat visits?

Yes. Lone Oak is designed for repeat visits. The brand offers consistent quality across all five of its PEI locations, a rotating events calendar that gives locals new reasons to return each season, and a range of settings that suit different occasions, from a casual weeknight drink to a full group dinner or private event.

What keeps locals coming back to Lone Oak?

Several things work together: the quality and consistency of the beer, the range of locations that fit different parts of Island life, the community events and recurring programming, and the general sense that Lone Oak is invested in PEI rather than simply operating on it. Locals often describe it as a place that feels like it belongs to the Island.

Is Lone Oak Brewing considered a community brewery on PEI?

Yes. Lone Oak was founded with an explicit community goal, starting in Borden-Carleton with the aim of revitalizing Gateway Village. It supports local events, hosts recurring community programming across its locations, and distributes its locally brewed beer through PEILCC stores across PEI. It is widely regarded by locals as a genuinely Island brand.

Does Lone Oak Brewing have regulars and a local following?

Yes. Lone Oak has cultivated a strong regular customer base across all five of its locations. Recurring programming like Men’s Night and Ladies’ Night at Fox Meadow, Wing Wednesday and live music at the Borden taproom, and daily happy hour at The Oak Downtown all create the kind of habitual visit patterns that build lasting local loyalty.

Can I find Lone Oak beer outside of their locations?

Yes. Lone Oak beers are available at PEILCC liquor stores across Prince Edward Island, as well as at a number of local restaurants. This Island-wide distribution keeps the brand present in the daily lives of locals even between visits to the taproom or restaurant locations.

A Local’s Guide to Lone Oak Across PEI

By About Lone Oak

The best local knowledge rarely comes from a brochure.

It comes from the friend who knows which patio has the best afternoon light, which night to show up for live music, and exactly which location to suggest depending on where you are on the Island. On PEI, that kind of knowledge matters. The Island is small enough to feel familiar and varied enough that where you are shapes what your evening looks like.

Lone Oak Brewing has become part of that local knowledge for a lot of people. Whether someone is arriving in PEI for the first time, spending a weeknight in Charlottetown, planning a golf outing in Stratford, or settling into a long summer afternoon in Cavendish, there is a Lone Oak location that fits.

This guide is for anyone who wants to know how to use that. Not just what each location is, but when to go, what to expect when you get there, and how Lone Oak fits into the different rhythms of life on Prince Edward Island.

Think of it as the local’s version.

First Stop on the Island: The Brewery Taproom in Borden-Carleton

The moment you cross the Confederation Bridge into PEI, you are already close to the first Lone Oak location. The Brewery Taproom and Golf Simulator at Gateway Village in Borden-Carleton sits just minutes from the bridge, and for good reason.

This is where Lone Oak started. The founders opened here deliberately, with the goal of bringing life back to an area that had been quieter than it deserved to be. Today, the taproom is one of the most recognizable stops for anyone arriving on the Island.

A cold local beer after the bridge is one of those simple pleasures that feels completely right on PEI. The taproom offers exactly that, plus indoor and outdoor seating, live music on weekends, and a golf simulator that makes it easy to stay longer than planned.

“The Borden taproom is the kind of place that turns a quick stop into an afternoon.”

Starting June 1st, the taproom extends its hours seven days a week, running 11am to 9pm Sunday through Thursday and 11am to 10pm on Fridays and Saturdays. That expanded schedule gives you plenty of room to stop in whether you are arriving early or lingering late into the evening.

The music lineup runs across the spring and summer, with artists confirmed through late July. Saturday afternoons in particular bring a relaxed, social energy that fits perfectly with the setting. If you are heading to PEI between now and the end of summer, it is worth planning a visit around one of those performances.

The Stratford Side: Fox Meadow Restaurant and Event Centre

Cross the bridge to Charlottetown and keep going just a little further east, and you find Fox Meadow in Stratford, a location that tells a different side of the Lone Oak story.

Fox Meadow is built around the golf course it sits alongside, and it serves a community that knows exactly what it wants: good food, good company, a venue that works for a quiet dinner and a properly organized event in equal measure. The restaurant is full-service, with a menu that suits a lingering weeknight meal or a weekend gathering. The event space handles everything from corporate tournaments to celebrations.

The golf calendar at Fox Meadow runs deep into the season, with tournaments from early May right through to late October. If you are visiting PEI with a golf trip in mind, Fox Meadow is the anchor. If you are a local, the recurring Men’s Night on Thursdays and Ladies’ Night on Tuesdays offer a rhythm to the week that plenty of members have built their schedules around.

What makes Fox Meadow work as a destination is that it fits a specific kind of PEI day: the kind where you want the full experience. A round of golf, a proper meal, a relaxed atmosphere that does not feel rushed. For locals who spend their summers on the course, it has become a natural home base. For visitors planning a golf-focused trip to PEI, it is an easy recommendation.

A Night in the City: The Brewpub on Milky Way

Charlottetown has its own pace. Especially in the evening, when the restaurants fill up and the streets between the waterfront and the downtown core come alive, the city offers something the rest of the Island does not.

The Lone Oak Brewpub on Milky Way fits into that pace naturally. It is a full restaurant with the brewery’s own beers on tap, a space that works for a longer dinner, a few pints with friends, or the kind of night that starts with food and turns into something more. The atmosphere is relaxed without being quiet.

Every Saturday night from 6 to 8pm, there is live music. That two-hour window hits the perfect spot on a Saturday evening, giving you a reason to arrive a little earlier or stay a little later.

“The Brewpub is where a Saturday night in Charlottetown gets a little better.”

For visitors staying in or near Charlottetown, the Brewpub is a natural anchor for the evening. For locals, it has the kind of familiar quality that makes it easy to return to. You know what you are getting, and what you are getting is good.

The Late Night Option: The Oak on Great George Street

Downtown Charlottetown after 10pm has its own energy, and The Oak on Great George Street is built for it.

Where the Brewpub suits a dinner and drinks kind of evening, The Oak suits what comes after. The happy hour runs daily from 4pm to 6pm, which makes it an easy pre-dinner stop on any day of the week. But the Oak’s real identity is the late-night social space it becomes as the evening stretches out.

The DJ lineup runs Friday and Saturday nights from 10:30pm to 1am, with a consistent rotation of names that the downtown crowd has come to know. The summer cocktail and food menu launching around the May long weekend adds another layer, making it a destination earlier in the evening as well.

Street Feast in mid-May is worth noting specifically. Lone Oak will have a booth outside and is planning after-party events on both the Thursday and Friday nights. If you are in Charlottetown that weekend, Great George Street will be the place to be.

For locals who spend time downtown, The Oak provides something no other Lone Oak location does: a reason to stay out. That makes it a different kind of addition to the brand, and one that fits Charlottetown’s downtown character perfectly.

Summer on the North Shore: The Beer Garden at Avonlea Village

PEI summers have their own character. The light is different. The pace is different. Cavendish, on the north shore of the Island, becomes one of the most visited destinations in Atlantic Canada from June through September.

The Lone Oak Beer Garden at Avonlea Village belongs to that season. It is an outdoor space built for warm evenings, for groups that have spent the day at the beach or exploring the area, for the kind of relaxed summer socializing that defines the Island at its best.

Thursday nights bring live music from Taylor Buote and Dennis Dunn from 6 to 9pm, a pairing that fits the Beer Garden’s energy well. The June 21st weekend adds something extra: a 5K and 10K race presented by Lone Oak, with a 15 percent discount on food and drink for participants and live music both Saturday and Sunday evenings.

“The Beer Garden is summer on PEI, with a cold Lone Oak beer in hand.”

The Cavendish Beach Music Festival in July and Sommo in September bracket the summer season with two of the biggest events on PEI’s tourism calendar. Having the Beer Garden active during both means Lone Oak is part of the Island’s biggest moments of the year, not just the quiet weekdays in between.

For visitors who come to PEI specifically for summer tourism, the Beer Garden is often where Lone Oak makes its best impression: outdoor, relaxed, local, and unmistakably PEI.

How It All Fits Together

The reason Lone Oak works as a local institution and not just a collection of venues is that each location fits a different kind of moment without feeling disconnected from the others.

A long weekend on PEI might look like this: arrive at the Confederation Bridge and stop at the taproom in Borden-Carleton for the first round of the trip. Spend a day or two in Charlottetown, catching the Brewpub on Saturday night for the live music and The Oak the following evening for the DJ. Drive north to Cavendish for a few days and find the Beer Garden on a Thursday. If golf is on the agenda, build a day around Fox Meadow in Stratford.

At no point does that feel forced. Each location earns its place in the itinerary because it genuinely fits what that part of PEI is about.

For locals, the picture looks different but is equally coherent. Lone Oak is not one place they go. It is a set of places that show up across the year depending on the season, the occasion, and the mood. Tractor Pull weekend at the taproom in late July. A golf tournament at Fox Meadow in September. Happy hour at The Oak after work. The Beer Garden on a warm Thursday in August.

“Lone Oak does not try to be everything in one place. It becomes relevant in many places, across many moments.”

That is what makes the guide worth writing. Knowing which Lone Oak to go to, and when, is the kind of knowledge that improves any visit to PEI.

Final Thoughts

Prince Edward Island rewards people who know where to go.

Lone Oak Brewing is part of that knowledge now, across five locations that each offer something distinct. Whether you are arriving on the Island for the first time or looking for a reason to get out of the house on a Tuesday night, there is a Lone Oak location that fits.

The taproom in Borden-Carleton for a first-stop arrival experience. Fox Meadow for a day built around golf and a proper meal. The Brewpub for a Saturday night in Charlottetown. The Oak for after-dark downtown energy. The Beer Garden for summer on the north shore.

All five. One Island. One brand that has earned its place in it.

The only question left is which one to try first.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where are all the Lone Oak Brewing locations on PEI?

Lone Oak Brewing has five locations across Prince Edward Island: the Brewery Taproom and Golf Simulator in Gateway Village (Borden-Carleton), The Oak Downtown on Great George Street in Charlottetown, the Brewpub Restaurant on Milky Way in Charlottetown, Fox Meadow Restaurant and Event Centre in Stratford, and the Beer Garden at Avonlea Village in Cavendish.

What time does Lone Oak Brewing open?

From June 1st, the Borden-Carleton taproom is open Sunday to Thursday 11am to 9pm, and Friday to Saturday 11am to 10pm. Hours vary by location. Check the Lone Oak website or individual location pages for current hours at The Oak, the Brewpub, Fox Meadow, and the Cavendish Beer Garden.

Is there live music at Lone Oak Brewing?

Yes. The Borden-Carleton taproom has live music on Friday evenings and Saturday afternoons through the spring and summer. The Brewpub on Milky Way in Charlottetown has live music every Saturday night from 6 to 8pm. The Cavendish Beer Garden features live music from Taylor Buote and Dennis Dunn on Thursday evenings.

Does Lone Oak host events in Cavendish?

Yes. The Lone Oak Beer Garden at Avonlea Village in Cavendish hosts a range of events including the 5K and 10K race on June 21st weekend (with a 15% discount for participants), live music during the Cavendish Beach Music Festival (July 9-11), and events during Sommo in Cavendish (September 11-12).

Is there a happy hour at Lone Oak Brewing?

The Oak Downtown on Great George Street in Charlottetown offers a daily happy hour from 4:00pm to 6:00pm. Check with individual locations for current promotions, as offerings vary across the five Lone Oak venues.

Does Lone Oak Brewing have golf?

Yes. The Brewery Taproom in Borden-Carleton includes a golf simulator. Fox Meadow Restaurant and Event Centre in Stratford operates alongside a full golf course, with a tournament calendar running from May through October and recurring Men’s Night (Thursdays) and Ladies’ Night (Tuesdays) for members.

What Makes Lone Oak Different from Other Breweries in PEI

By About Lone Oak

Prince Edward Island has no shortage of places to grab a cold drink.

The Island’s food and hospitality scene has grown steadily, and craft beer is part of that story. Locals and visitors alike have more options than ever when it comes to breweries, taprooms, patios, and places to settle in for the evening.

So the question is worth asking: what makes Lone Oak different?

Not just what makes it good, but what makes it stand apart from the other options on the Island. Because to understand why Lone Oak has grown the way it has, and why it has become a recognizable name across PEI rather than just in one corner of it, you have to look at what the brand has built and what it represents.

The answer is not a single thing. It is a combination of scale, authenticity, variety, and something harder to define: a sense that Lone Oak belongs to the Island in a way that has to be earned over time.

This is what that looks like in practice.

One Brand, Five Locations Across the Island

Most breweries on PEI operate from a single location. That is completely reasonable. Running a craft brewery well is demanding, and doing it in one place with focus and care is often the right call.

Lone Oak made a different decision.

Rather than staying in one spot, the brand grew across the Island in a deliberate and considered way. Today, Lone Oak operates five distinct locations: the Brewery Taproom and Golf Simulator in Gateway Village (Borden-Carleton), The Oak Downtown on Great George Street in Charlottetown, the Brewpub Restaurant on Milky Way in Charlottetown, Fox Meadow Restaurant and Event Centre in Stratford, and the Beer Garden at Avonlea Village in Cavendish.

That kind of Island-wide presence is unusual. And it changes the experience of the brand in an important way.

“Lone Oak is not a place you visit once and leave behind. It is a brand you encounter across the Island, in different contexts and different moments.”

For a visitor, that might mean discovering the taproom after crossing the Confederation Bridge, then catching a Lone Oak beer at a restaurant later in the trip. For a local, it might mean that Lone Oak is already a familiar name whether they live in Charlottetown, Stratford, or anywhere in between. The repetition builds recognition, and recognition builds trust.

No other craft brewery on PEI operates at that scale across the Island. That alone makes Lone Oak different.

Each Location Has Its Own Character

Multi-location hospitality brands can sometimes feel repetitive. When every location looks the same, sounds the same, and offers the same experience, there is less reason to seek them out more than once.

Lone Oak takes a different approach.

While the brand identity stays consistent, each location is shaped by the place it is in and the kind of experience people are looking for there. The result is five venues that feel connected to the same brand without feeling like copies of each other.

Gateway Village in Borden-Carleton carries a particular energy. It is a first stop for many visitors to PEI, positioned right at the Island’s main entry point. The brewery taproom fits that moment perfectly: a place to arrive, breathe in the Island air, try a locally crafted beer, and settle into the PEI experience before heading further inland. The addition of a golf simulator adds a dimension that makes the taproom a destination in itself, not just a stop along the way.

“The Oak Downtown in Charlottetown fits a completely different rhythm. It is a bar for the city, for the evening, for the walk home after dinner or the first stop before the night gets started.”

The Brewpub Restaurant offers a fuller dining experience within Charlottetown, with the feel of a place where you can linger over a meal and a few pints without feeling like you should move on. Fox Meadow in Stratford adds a restaurant and event dimension that suits a community where people are looking for a neighbourhood-quality venue that can handle everything from a casual dinner to a private celebration. And the Beer Garden at Avonlea Village in Cavendish brings in a distinctly summer feeling, shaped by one of PEI’s most visited tourism destinations and the long evenings that define the Island’s peak season.

Together, these locations cover different moods, different needs, and different parts of the Island. That range is one of the clearest ways Lone Oak stands out.

Genuinely Local Beer, Made on PEI

The word local gets used a lot in the craft beer world. Not every brand that uses it earns it.

Lone Oak earns it.

The brewery was founded in part because of the brewing talent already on PEI. Co-founder Spencer Gallant, who came to Lone Oak from the PEI Brewing Company, is widely regarded as one of the most skilled craft brewers in Canada. That reputation was a major reason the founding team shifted from their original cidery concept to a brewery: the talent was there, and the opportunity to build something exceptional around it was real.

The result is a product line that reflects genuine craft. From the flagship beers to the seltzers and seasonal offerings, Lone Oak brews are made with care and distributed across PEI through PEILCC locations and the brand’s own venues. You can find them at restaurants across the Island, in liquor stores, and of course on tap at every Lone Oak location.

“When you order a Lone Oak beer, you are drinking something that was made here, by people who know PEI, for people who love it.”

That provenance matters to a growing number of drinkers, both visitors who want to taste the Island and locals who take pride in supporting what is made at home. Lone Oak delivers on that expectation consistently.

More Than Beer: Food, Events, and Experiences

Craft breweries are often primarily about the beer. Lone Oak is about more.

Across its locations, the brand offers full dining experiences, private event hosting, and a range of reasons to visit beyond the tap. That breadth is part of what makes Lone Oak function as a hospitality brand rather than just a brewery with a taproom attached.

At the Brewpub, a full menu runs alongside the beer program. Fox Meadow offers restaurant-quality dining and the space to host everything from birthday celebrations to corporate events to weddings. The Beer Garden at Avonlea Village is built for summer, for groups, for long evenings with people you enjoy. Even the taproom in Borden-Carleton, with its golf simulator, is designed to give people more than one reason to stay.

That breadth of experience is deliberate. It means Lone Oak can show up in more moments of Island life. A Tuesday dinner. A Friday night out. A summer outing with visiting family. A private event that needs a venue with character. A casual stop after a day of exploring.

“Lone Oak does not ask people to fit into a single kind of visit. It fits around the different ways people move through PEI.”

That flexibility is genuinely rare in the craft brewery space, and it contributes significantly to why Lone Oak has built the following it has.

A Brand Rooted in Community

What ultimately separates a business people like from a brand people feel connected to is community. And Lone Oak has built that connection in a way that goes beyond marketing.

It started with a founding mission that was explicitly about place: the goal was to help revitalize Borden-Carleton, to be a catalyst for an area that had been struggling. That is not a tagline. It was the actual reason the brewery was planted where it was. And that kind of founding intention has a way of shaping everything that follows.

Lone Oak grew from a place of genuine investment in PEI. Not as a backdrop for a brand, but as a community worth building something for. That shows up in where the locations are, how the spaces are designed, what is on the menu, and how the brand talks about itself.

For locals, that community orientation reads as authenticity. Lone Oak feels like a PEI business, not a business that happens to be on PEI. That distinction may seem subtle, but people feel it, and it shapes whether they come back.

For visitors, it shows up as something harder to name but easy to recognize: the feeling that a place genuinely belongs where it is. Lone Oak has that feeling across all five of its locations.

Why Island-Wide Presence Matters

Scale alone does not explain what makes Lone Oak different. Plenty of brands have multiple locations without building the kind of recognition that Lone Oak has earned.

What makes the multi-location model work in Lone Oak’s case is that each location adds something real to the brand’s overall picture of PEI. Borden-Carleton anchors the gateway experience. Charlottetown anchors the urban and dining experience. Stratford adds a neighbourhood dimension. Cavendish adds a summer tourism dimension.

Taken together, those locations create a map of the Island that nearly any visitor or resident can find themselves in. That is the advantage of growing with intention rather than just growing.

It also creates something valuable for the brand’s long-term reputation: familiarity. People who encounter Lone Oak in Borden-Carleton and then again in Charlottetown and then again in Cavendish do not just remember it as a place they visited once. They remember it as part of the Island. That is a very different and much stronger relationship.

“Familiarity built across five locations over time is what turns a good experience into a brand people trust and recommend.”

Final Thoughts

Ask what makes Lone Oak different from other breweries on PEI, and you could start in a few different places.

You could start with the beer, which is crafted by people who are recognized across the country for what they do. You could start with the locations, which span the Island in a way no other craft brewery does. You could start with the experience, which goes well beyond the taproom into dining, events, and a range of moments that fit different kinds of visits.

But the most honest answer might be this: Lone Oak is different because it was built to be part of PEI, not just to operate on it.

That distinction, between belonging to a place and simply being in it, is what creates the kind of brand loyalty that follows Lone Oak across the Island. It is what makes a local recommendation feel genuine. It is what makes a visitor’s experience feel worth repeating.

And it is what makes Lone Oak, across five locations and counting, something that stands apart.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Lone Oak Brewing?

Lone Oak Brewing is a locally owned craft brewery and hospitality brand based on Prince Edward Island, Canada. It operates five locations across PEI, including a brewery taproom, two Charlottetown venues, a restaurant and event centre in Stratford, and a seasonal beer garden in Cavendish.

Where did Lone Oak Brewing start?

Lone Oak Brewing started in Borden-Carleton, PEI, at Gateway Village near the Confederation Bridge. The founders chose the location with a specific goal: to help revitalize an area that had been experiencing decline and to create a welcoming destination for visitors arriving on the Island.

Are Lone Oak beers made locally on PEI?

Yes. All Lone Oak beers are brewed locally on Prince Edward Island. The brewery is led by co-founder Spencer Gallant, who is widely recognized as one of the most talented craft brewers in Canada. Lone Oak beers are available at their own locations and at PEILCC liquor stores across PEI.

Why is Lone Oak Brewing popular on PEI?

Lone Oak is popular because it combines Island-wide presence, genuine local craft beer, and a range of hospitality experiences across five distinct locations. It serves both tourists and locals with spaces that fit different occasions, from a casual pint to a full dinner or private event.

How many Lone Oak Brewing locations are there on PEI?

There are five Lone Oak locations across Prince Edward Island: the Brewery Taproom and Golf Simulator in Borden-Carleton, The Oak Downtown and the Brewpub Restaurant in Charlottetown, Fox Meadow Restaurant and Event Centre in Stratford, and the Beer Garden at Avonlea Village in Cavendish.

What makes Lone Oak different from other PEI breweries?

Lone Oak stands out through its Island-wide presence across five locations, its reputation for high-quality locally brewed craft beer, and its range of hospitality offerings that go beyond the taproom to include full dining, event hosting, and seasonal experiences. No other craft brewery on PEI operates at this scale across the Island.

Lone Oak Founders Photo

How Lone Oak Brewing Started, and Grew Across PEI

By About Lone Oak

Some businesses open. Some businesses take root.

Lone Oak Brewing took root. Not in the most obvious location, not with the most straightforward plan, and not without a few pivots along the way. But from the moment it opened in Borden-Carleton in 2019, Lone Oak became something more than a craft brewery. It became part of the Island.

Today it spans five locations across Prince Edward Island, from Gateway Village to Charlottetown, Stratford, and Cavendish. But to understand why Lone Oak matters on PEI, you have to start at the beginning: a small town that needed a spark, three founders who believed in what it could become, and a vision that went well beyond selling beer.

Why Borden-Carleton?

Before Lone Oak arrived, Borden-Carleton was at a crossroads. The area had been seeing a slow decline, with vacant buildings and a Gateway Village that was not living up to its potential, and then the pandemic made things harder still.

To most, that would have looked like a reason to look elsewhere. To co-founder Jared Murphy and his partners, it looked like an opportunity and a responsibility.

“Our goal was to be a catalyst to bring back life to the area,” Jared explained in a feature published by CBDC. That intention shaped everything about how Lone Oak was built, from its location at the gateway to PEI, to the destination experience they set out to create for every visitor crossing the Confederation Bridge.

Gateway Village, positioned right at the Island’s entry point, had obvious potential. Thousands of visitors pass through every year. What was missing was a compelling reason to slow down, stay a while, and experience something local. Lone Oak was built to be exactly that.

How the Idea Came Together

The founding of Lone Oak began with Jared Murphy, and an idea that started somewhere different entirely.

Jared’s path toward entrepreneurship started while managing a retail store during university. After graduating, he went on to work in marketing and communications at Sport PEI, where his interest in building something of his own only grew stronger. As he put it, the competitive nature of sport translated directly into how he thought about business: “In sport you are training all the time, you are working towards goals and it’s a very competitive nature, but I think that translates well into business.” (CBDC)

The original plan was a cidery. But when Jared connected with Spencer Gallant, a brewer at the PEI Brewing Company, the conversation shifted. The more they talked, the clearer it became that craft beer offered stronger market potential, and Spencer already had the expertise to back it up. Jared was candid about what Spencer brought to the table: “He’s widely recognized as one of the most talented in the industry not just in PEI but also within Canada, so that was exciting for me.” (CBDC)

The third co-founder, Dillon Wight, rounded out the team. His experience bartending at Gahan gave him hands-on knowledge of the hospitality and sales side of the industry. With Jared handling vision and marketing, Spencer leading the brewing, and Dillon grounding the business in front-of-house experience, the three had a well-rounded foundation from day one.

After roughly a year and a half of planning and preparation, Lone Oak Brewery opened in 2019.

Building Something Worth Staying For

The founders built Lone Oak to be a destination, not just a stop. The facility was designed to give people reasons to arrive, stay, and return: indoor and outdoor seating, a taproom, live music, trivia nights, and on-site food through The Abby, operated by Terry Nabuurs.

As Jared described it: “So now you can come in and enjoy the space, enjoy a beer, get a bite to eat, and listen to some live music.” (CBDC)

Lone Oak also became something of an event venue, with the space available for private bookings including weddings.

Once tourism returned after the pandemic, the effect was visible. Weekdays at Gateway Village had a new energy, with visitors stopping straight off the bridge for a cold beer and a meal. The place that had been quiet was becoming the destination the founders had envisioned.

Getting Through the Pandemic and Preparing to Grow

Like every hospitality business, Lone Oak navigated serious challenges through the pandemic years. When the prospect of a returning tourist season came into view, the team knew they needed to be ready.

They applied for the Tourism Activation Grant through the CBDC. As Jared explained: “Obviously coming out of a pandemic and heading into what you hope to be the next busy season, that grant essentially allowed us to be better prepared for tourists entering PEI.” (CBDC)

The funding went toward building improvements: a new steel roof, renovated bathrooms, taproom upgrades, and a better outdoor patio. But the most meaningful impact was on inventory. In Jared’s words: “The biggest thing for us was building up our inventory. We needed quite a bit of cash to be ready for the busy season because otherwise all of our cash would have been tied up in products which can be a little bit scary. The Tourism Activation Grant relieved some of that stress heading into the season.” (CBDC)

That first real tourist season confirmed what the founders had believed. The experience they had built was connecting with people. And the ambition behind it had not changed. As Jared put it plainly: “The dream is to be one of the most recognized micro breweries in Canada.” (CBDC)

Growing Across the Island

From that foundation in Borden-Carleton, Lone Oak grew.

Today the brand includes five locations across PEI: the Brewery Taproom and Golf Simulator in Gateway Village (Borden-Carleton), The Oak Downtown on Great George Street in Charlottetown, the Brewpub Restaurant on Milky Way in Charlottetown, Fox Meadow Restaurant and Event Centre in Stratford, and the Beer Garden at Avonlea Village in Cavendish.

Each location was added with intention. Charlottetown connects the brand to the Island’s downtown scene, with The Oak and the Brewpub serving different needs within the city. Fox Meadow in Stratford adds a dining and events dimension for a community looking for a neighbourhood-quality destination. The Beer Garden at Avonlea Village in Cavendish reaches visitors during PEI’s busiest summer season.

Together, these locations create a presence across the Island that feels natural, because each one fits the place it is in.

What Makes Lone Oak Stand Out

There are plenty of good places to eat and drink on Prince Edward Island. What makes Lone Oak different is the combination of authenticity, Island-wide presence, and a founding story rooted in genuine community purpose.

It started because three people saw potential in a place others had stopped noticing. It grew because the experience they created made people want to come back. And it expanded because each new location was built with the same care for place and community that defined the original.

For visitors, Lone Oak is often a first taste of PEI: a local beer after crossing the bridge, a meal made with Island ingredients, an evening that feels like it could only happen here. For locals, it is something different: a reliable part of the week, a place to bring out-of-town guests, a piece of the Island’s fabric.

Final Thoughts

Lone Oak Brewing started with a pivot, a partnership, and a purpose.

A cidery idea became a brewery. An acquaintance became a co-founder with one of the strongest brewing reputations in Canada. A declining stretch of Borden-Carleton became a destination.

And a brewery that opened in 2019 became a name that now stretches across Prince Edward Island, known for beer that is genuinely local, spaces that feel genuinely welcoming, and a story that is still going.

That is how Lone Oak Brewing started. And it is a pretty good reason for how it grew.


Frequently Asked Questions

Who founded Lone Oak Brewing? Lone Oak Brewing was co-founded by Jared Murphy, Spencer Gallant, and Dillon Wight. Jared brings a background in marketing; Spencer is the head brewer, widely recognized across the Canadian craft beer industry; and Dillon contributes hospitality experience from his time working in the industry on PEI.

When did Lone Oak Brewing open? Lone Oak Brewing opened in 2019 in Borden-Carleton, PEI, following about a year and a half of planning by the founding team.

Why did Lone Oak open in Borden-Carleton? The founders saw an opportunity to help revitalize an area that had been experiencing decline. Co-founder Jared Murphy described their goal as wanting “to be a catalyst to bring back life to the area.” Positioned at Gateway Village near the Confederation Bridge, the location offered high visitor traffic and a chance to create a genuine arrival experience for anyone coming to PEI.

Are Lone Oak beers brewed on PEI? Yes. All Lone Oak beers are brewed locally on Prince Edward Island by co-founder Spencer Gallant, recognized as one of the most talented craft brewers in Canada.

How many Lone Oak locations are there? Five: the Brewery Taproom and Golf Simulator in Borden-Carleton, The Oak Downtown and the Brewpub Restaurant in Charlottetown, Fox Meadow Restaurant and Event Centre in Stratford, and the Beer Garden at Avonlea Village in Cavendish.

What is Lone Oak’s long-term vision? Co-founder Jared Murphy has stated the goal is to become one of the most recognized craft breweries in Canada, while remaining rooted in Prince Edward Island life and hospitality.


Quotes attributed to Jared Murphy as published by CBDC (cbdc.ca).