It’s hard to imagine Wolfville’s main street without Muddy’s Convenience Store, the sharp light blue bordering the window and door impossible to miss. Stepping through the door brings you to aisles of snacks, some utilities, and regularly friendly workers. On some days one of these workers may be one Purvi Patel. The story of Muddy’s is not entirely her story however, the store has been here long before her, with the previous owner running it from November 1993 until August 2024 when Patel acquired it after looking to run her own business in a “cosey small town.” Her brother happened upon the listing and while the two of them saw their application as a joke they got the store. Of course the owner that gave it to them himself acquired ownership of Muddy’s from somewhere else.
While Patel was not sure of when exactly Muddy’s was first established, she did provide an interesting detail pointing in that direction. Ever wonder where the name “Muddy’s” comes from? It’s a reference to Mud Creek, an old name for the town we know today as Wolfville, which become the name for the town in the 1830’s, which would make a generous estimate of the age of Muddies older than Acadia by several decades. For those who’ve spent their lives in this town the store naturally holds a lot of nostalgia, Patel describes senior citizens coming in and reminiscing about how they came to the store when they were children to buy “penny candy.”
Unfortunately for our wallets, noting in Muddy’s today is quite that cheap anymore, but part of Patel’s vision for the store is to provides products and services at prices that students can afford. Patel’s main priority is to build up Muddy’s inventory to appeal to both the student population of Acadia and Wolfville’s senior citizens who’ve been going to Muddy’s for decades. If you’re a regular customer of Muddy’s you can recall what it sells with direct appeal to students, there is no shortage of chip bags, canned drinks, instant ramen and pizza pockets, and as an old white board used to advertise and entire wall of bulk candies. But there is also a shelf dedicated to office supplies, selling notebooks and pens. There’s a table of dried candies that you might recognize if you’ve ever made it to the farmer’s market.
Muddy’s is in many ways a quintessentially small town, quintessentially Wolfville establishment. It’s a convenience store, something I as someone who grew up in a more urban environment associate with chains of functionally identical stores. Muddy’s itself is directly across the street from a Shoppers Drug Mart, a store that I enter and instantly recall functionally identical stores from my home on the other coast of this country. There is only a single Muddy’s by contrast. It is somewhere you can only go in Wolfville, someplace anyone who’s lived in Wolfville is likely able to name. It would be impossible to do a column series on the “Wolfville Essentials” and not talk about Muddy’s
You can find Muddy’s on 446 Main Street, Wolfville, and online on their Facebook and Instagram profiles.