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Rebecca Weslowski and Kimberly Racine will roll their mobile bar — a converted horse trailer —to your event.
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Weslowski and Racine had help from their significant others in transforming the horse trailer into chic bar.

Two Sisters Spirits Mobile Bar Customizes Your Experience

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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Two Sisters Spirits doesn't supply the alcohol but they'll help you determine what you need for your event. 
CHESHIRE, Mass. — You bring the spirits and Rebecca Weslowski and Kimberly Racine will bring the fun. 
 
The bartending duo started Two Sisters Spirits Mobile Bar in a converted horse trailer that travels throughout the county.
 
"We had seen something similar at my cousin's wedding quite a few years ago, and thought maybe it was something we could do. And so the only person crazy enough to do it with me is my sister," Weslowski laughed.
 
One she broached the idea, they started working immediately to make it a reality.
 
"It's kind of an untapped market around here. A lot of outside wedding venues are happening now. They don't often have a lot of bar availability ... we thought would be a good idea," she said, adding the trailer "allows us a lot of versatility, and we're not stuck in one place, bartending for a venue."
 
The sisters were inspired by their late mother's love of horses. Their packages are horse themed -- Mane, Mustang and Stallion -- and the horse trailer is named Stormy after one of Claudia Randall's favorite horses.
 
"We had lost our mother the year before we decided to do this, and she was a big horse lover, and so we decided to do a converted horse trailer, instead of just a tow behind camper," Weslowski said.
 
The two bought the trailer in New York in 2023 and started converting it with the help of their partners, Chip Kleiner and Mike Weslowski. They started doing events in spring 2024.
 
This is the sisters' side quest as Weslowski is a nurse manager and Racine works for Unistress.
 
"It's a lot of work, but it's fun work. It's something I would love to do as a full time job, if I could get to that point. It's just fun. I love meeting new people and it's always a happy environment," Weslowski said.
 
One thing they don't do is supply the alcohol. That must be supplied by the customer since they don't have a liquor license and can only serve alcohol.
 
The bar does sells lemonade they they freshly squeeze. 
 
"We are considered a driver. We don't carry a liquor license, and so if somebody is looking for us to do alcohol, it's usually that they're supplying the alcohol, and we're basically a service for them," Weslowski said. "So we're like a luxury service. And we come and we roll up and we do everything. They give us the alcohol and we serve. We don't sell."
 
The packages include service and set up, two ServSafe certified bartenders, liability insurance, ice, disposable glasses and utensils, a framed menu, complimentary water, and sodas and juices. They'll travel within 25 miles. 
 
All service includes beer and wine and the difference in Mustang and Stallion packages is the number of signature cocktails. 
 
"Each package is customized to the event, to the person, like we're doing a 60th birthday party next month, and it's very personalized to her," Weslowski said. "She is a very glitzy glam girl, and so we're gonna roll up with the glitzy glam."
 
The mobile bar can be seen at some community events — they were just at Motorama — and they specialize in weddings, birthdays, and graduations. They ask that you give them a couple weeks in advance if you would like to hire them. 
 
More information can be found on their website

Tags: new business,   alcohol,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Cheshire Considers Making Flaherty One-Way; Police Chief Update

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
CHESHIRE, Mass. — Town officials are considering making Flaherty Road one way following requests from street residents. 
 
The road is a short narrow residential street that connects the start of Wells Road and the end of East Main Street. 
 
There are a total of five residents on the street and two have come forward with the request claiming that their neighbors all agree to the change, Corey McGrath, public works director, told the Select Board last week. 
 
The residents explained that a one-way street would make the area safer because the bridge on Windsor Road restricts visibility. 
 
The change would make the street a one-way heading towards Wells Road, McGrath said. 
 
He said he has not talked to all of the residents personally but wanted to start the process of considering it as long as there is an understanding that plowing the street would still be done both ways. 
 
"It is a bus route. When there's a car on it, it's a mess," McGrath said.  
 
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