American dad and son flooded with ketchup chips after Niagara Falls hunt now donating the crunchy snacks
There were 40┬аbags of ketchup chips in the back of┬аRich Lieberman’s┬аvintage army jeep when he left Niagara Falls, Ont., with his son┬аJacob in July.
But in recent weeks, the American father-son pair have received┬аmore than they could┬аever have imagined.
“We have way too much,”┬аLieberman posted to┬аFacebook in mid-August.
Their two-day road trip┬аsaw them travel from┬аVirginia to a No Frills in Niagara Falls to buy a year’s worth of ketchup chips for┬а15-year-old Jacob, since they can’t get the Canadian snack at home.
An online post about the trip went viral, much to the delight of Jacob, who is deaf and legally blind.
After the family got home, No Frills said it would send them a gift.
“No Frills thought Jacob didn’t get enough chips a couple weeks ago when visiting their store in Niagara Falls. They just shipped him NINE CASES of various [flavours] of chips,”┬аLieberman wrote on Facebook on July 31.
“He and mom will have a sampling party at dinner tonight.”
Jacob had a chance to try all-dressed chips in that shipment and liked them, but not as much as ketchup chips, according to Lieberman.
Not long after that, Old Dutch Foods sent them a shipment of chips.
“Jacob said the chips are great and now we will be getting some of these with the other brand next summer,” Lieberman posted to Facebook.
Then came a delivery from Heinz, which included boxes of bottled ketchup and bright red shirts with the words “Annual┬аLieberman Ketchup Crew Road Trip” on the front.
“The shirts are what he smiled most about. Next was all that ketchup,”┬аLieberman wrote online.
They’re still expecting a care package┬аwith Lay’s chips, but what they already received has been too much for them.
Lieberman┬аtold CBC Hamilton his┬аfamily started donating┬аthe snacks to families in need.
“We have actually donated each shipment to different schools after trying the different chips,” he said.
“I am currently researching several soup kitchen-type places in our area and will donate most of the ketchup┬аthere.”
He said experiencing food insecurity as a young adult also motivated him to share the gifts┬аwith others.
But there’s┬аalso been another gift since the trip тАФ the family has gained somewhat of a celebrity status.
“Jacob is frequently recognized at his new high school and it always makes him smile,” Lieberman told CBC Hamilton.
“Recently I have been recognized as the ketchup guy. Found it funny, especially since I don’t like ketchup.”