Tuesday, 20 January 2026

20/01/25 - Beerbohm Lichfield

The Hanging Tree of Hatch Hall


Lichfield is a fine place to start/end a walk.  Plenty of historical interest, a pleasant town centre and a smattering of decent pubs - most of which are within spitting distance of each other.

Lichfield Cathedral
Lichfield's Crown Jewell 

It's just the countryside around it is a bit dull. If it wasn't for the mud, there would be little to remember this walk by.

The route is from my 1951 Guide book, 50 weekend walks around Birmingham. Understanding the hand drawn map is tricky at the best of times.  Let's look at what it hints at;

Elmhurst - nothing there at all.

Kings Bromley - just before arrival, the route heads west to Handsacre. The text provides no indication as to whether it is worth the detour.

Handsacre - The pub, the Crown, is still going strong.  Alas, I arrive at 11:30am and its not open. The text also discusses Handsacre Hall. This has been knocked down for a very dull housing estate. The guide text states that of the Hall "you may hear some surprising stories from local residents". And that is it. Such a tease. There are no locals to ask - as as it was knocked down in the early 1970s, they might not remember. The internet suggest it may be referring to the ghost story of the Grey Lady.

The Crown, Handsacre
Trent and Mersey Canal delivers me to the Crown at Handsacre
HandsacreHall
One of the few photos of the Handsacre Hall before demolition

Longdon - again, the guide book is vague. Described as a delightful village but the route seems to be taking me east and away from whatever charms it may possess. It does appear to be in a bit of a dip, as only the top of the church tower is visible from my paths.

I am keen to track down the location of the Hanging Tree of Hatch Hall. A chestnut tree, that marked the parish boundary and according to folklore, has a ghost dog and was used as the place of execution. It took a little hunting for the exact location but in case this blog comes up on future google searches for wannbe ghost hunters - it's at grid ref SK 100 140.

PXL_20260120_124818079
Looking it's age now.... 300 years old.

And grid ref's are important to this blog. The route guide suggests returning to Lichfield along what is now the A515. Obviously a lot less traffic in 1951 and kust a grass verge that makes this totally unsafe.

Instead there is one footpath running parallel and south. But it looks like the farm has removed footpath signs, installed CCTV and super high gates and padlocked the PROW shut. Staffordshire Council have been informed. It makes you wonder what they need to protect so badly.

A handy bus-stop and only 10 minutes for the on-time hourly bus stops the monotony of more agricultural fields to cross.

And where to go in Lichfield? Today, it is the turn of Beerbohm - a lovely beer cafe, run by enthusiasts and specialising in Belgian and German brews. Oh, and the man was fixing a Bass sign to the handpull.

Beerbohm, Lichfield
A fitting reward

Walk Details

Distance - 10 Miles

Walk Inspiration - 50 Weekend Walks near Birmingham, Walk 3

Geoacaches - 6


Monday, 19 January 2026

19/01/25 - The Talbot at Knightwick

You Know Everything, Jon Snow


A grim, murky day to be completing a figure of 8 walk, where the apex of the walk is the pub. Temptation to call the whole thing off half way through was intense.

So, the photos are not great. The walking was pleasant enough - along the River Teme before an attack on Ankerdine Hill.  Drop down to the pub, cross the river and then follow the Worcestershire Way for a climb over round hill.

The only thing of architectural interest was the small chapel at Knightwick. Even that was doors locked, so impossible to investigate internally.

Knighwick Chapel
A Mortuary Chapel

This leaves the pub. The Talbot is a grand C14th Coaching house that houses its own brewery. Strangely not in the Good Beer Guide. You would consider it a shoe-in. The three main beers are This, That and T'other - with That being my preferred style of English Bitter.

The Talbot, Knightwick
Ankerdine Hill - Behind, in the mist

Kit Harrington - Jon Snow in Game of Thrones - both worked here, and if you believe the Birmingham Live - is still a patron.


With a superb roaring fire that can take tree trunks - it certainly has a medieval feel to the place.

The Talbot, Knightwick
Front Room Fire - Unlit
The Talbot, Knightwick
Sharing the chimney - the rear room

Walk Details

Distance - 7.5 Miles

Geocaches - 1

Walk Inspiration - Adventuruous Pub Walks in Worcestershire, Walk 8


Friday, 16 January 2026

16/01/26 - The Delph Run

Angela Marsons writes Black Country fiction 


[BBC executive Tony Hayers has told Alan that he won't give him another series of his chat show but he'll still be open to any other ideas in future, so Alan immediately seizes the opportunity to pitch ideas for programs]

Alan Partridge: [opening a file] Right, OK - Shoestring, Taggart, Spender, Bergerac, Morse. What does that say to you about regional detective series?

Tony Hayers: There's too many of them?

Alan Partridge: That's one way of looking at it, another way of looking at it is, people like them, let's make some more of them.


It was a fellow rambler who told me about Angela Marsons and her crime series set in the Black Country and West Midlands. Incredibly popular and apparently the most loaned-out author from Rowley Regis Library.

A plot was hatched. I would read them and use any recognisable locations as the inspiration for future walks.

I'd struck gold in Book One, Silent Scream. Angela's detective, Kim Stone, conducts an interview in the Bull and Bladder..... Batham's Flagship. 

In the same section of the book, the Delph Run - a pub crawl of 6 pubs around the Delph Road, was documented.

I'll leave you to decide whether Angela actually enjoyed her research.

Trainline fired up and a mile walk from Lye Station to start proceedings.

The Bell

An unexpected Good Beer Guide Tick. Angela says it's in Amblecote. It's in the Brierley Hill section of the bible.

The Bell, Brierley Hill
Lampost casts a shadow

It has a touch of the Black Country Ales about it. A recent refurb in a classic pub style. A roaring log fire. Cobs and other delicacies. The day could turn out to be a "snack crawl".

The Bell, Brierley Hill
Ribblehead Bitter from Settle Brewery. Soz, Fixed Wheel

The Tenth Lock

One for the completists only. One cask on, Hobgoblin and pensioners lunching.

The Tenth Lock, Brierley Hill
Community Local


The Black Horse

Research was meticulously completed. All venues are meant to be open. It looks like the Black Horse is having a bit of a time of it. The last record I could find suggesting it closed down twice in 2025 but was being reopened - by the same Landlord - in December 2025.

Doors firmly closed, 1:30pm, 16/01/26.

The Black Horse, Brierley Hill
Curtains Closed

The Bull and Bladder / The Vine

The Bull and Bladder, Brierley Hill
Blessing of your heart - you brew good ale

Take my advice - bin the Delph Run - spend the afternoon in the front lounge of the Bathams Brewery. Politely ask for the locals to budge up, position yourself behind a tiny round table, spend 10 minutes trying to get the cling film off a black pudding and cheese cob and await the taste of the greatest beer known to man.

The Bull and Bladder, Brierley Hill
Priceless Lunch.... (well £6.20 the lot)

The old boys provided the entertainment with good humour and that just right amount of p*ss taking. I thought the rucksack carrying rambler that I am would have got a hard time but I was saved by a chap with the world's smallest man-bag. Nothing off limits, including every and all medical ailments.

Back to Angela. She paints a very different picture. Questionable hygiene, dodgy geezers and foul smells (that's my lunch, you're slagging Ange). 




I can only assume that she wants the place to herself and is trying to put off would-be tourists. No chance - this is one of the destination pubs in the country.

Or maybe she just doesn't know pubs.  Arthur Connop - the suspect - sinks his daily four pints, then leaves for home and sleep off his drunken coma. Four pints! That was lunch when I started work in the 80s.

Plot spoiler - Arthur gets mown down crossing the road outside the pub by the real killer. He should have pressed the button and waited for the green man.

Corn Exchange

After the Lord Mayor's Show we get a Sizzling Pub and Grill, where they stuff half a Golden Hen into a Peroni glass.

I told you to stay where you were

The Corn Exchange, Brierley Hill
The steaks were probably fine.

The Brickmakers Arms

Another one that online resources - including their own website - say is open but is firmly shut. 

Brickmakers Arms, Brierley Hill
Lights not on - continue downhill for Cradley Heath station

I'll be back to investigate book 2 in the series, where Kim Stone probably describes the Old Joint Stock as an absolute dump.

Tuesday, 13 January 2026

13/01/26 - Liverpool's Religious Buildings

With one in the Good Beer Guide

Walk 10 of Liverpool's Hidden City Walks takes me on a crawl with a difference. Not my usual pub type, but one of the significant religious buildings in the City. A fantastic city that is always throwing up surprises, not least with St Peters. The City's oldest church and also a Good Beer Guide 2026 entry. That must be a first!

Hope Street divides the two Cathedrals. The Anglican Cathedral, the biggest in Britain and the Metropolitan Catholic. 

Looking down Hope Street
From the Catholic down to the Anglican

Another surprise is how modern the two Cathedrals are. The Catholic one completed after 40 years in 1967. The Anglican started in 1904 and completed in 1978. Only one way to determine the reason for this. Ask ChatGPT.

Liverpool’s two cathedrals are relatively new because the city itself rose to prominence far later than England’s historic cathedral centres. For centuries Liverpool was a modest port, only expanding rapidly in the 18th and 19th centuries with Atlantic trade and industrial growth, and it did not become an Anglican diocese until 1880. When Liverpool Cathedral was begun in 1904, it was conceived as a bold statement of civic and imperial confidence, though its completion was stretched across wars and economic hardship well into the late 20th century. The Catholic cathedral is newer still, reflecting the long suppression of Catholic cathedral building in England after the Reformation and the city’s expanding Irish Catholic population in the 19th century. Together, the two buildings are less the product of medieval inheritance than of modern history, shaped by industrial expansion, migration, war and changing religious confidence.

In the interests of space - simple pictures. Until we reach the pub.

Liverpool Cathedral
The garden below the Cathedral well worth a visit
Liverpool Cathedral
Inside, where it is unlucky to still have Xmas decorations up
German Church
German Church - started out on a disused boat on the Mersey
Liverpool Synagogue
The Synagogue
Vincent De Paul Catholic Church
A rare Bellcote Tower at Vincent De Paul Catholic Church
Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral
Metropolitan Cathedral peeping through the trees
Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral
Modern flying buttresses
Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral
All about the light

St Paul's Tavern should have been discovered on the Ropewalks journey from this guidebook. Down Seel Street in St Pauls Tavern - hosted in the first church in the City, built in 1788.

St Peters Liverpool
More than mild on offer

In a City of great pubs, here is another unique offering. Inside, it maintains much of its religious paraphernalia - the altar, the stained glass windows, the crypts, candles and even the memorial stones. A lengthy bar offers enough cask to get it noticed by CAMRA. The Timothy Taylor Landlord Dark in good enough condition to warrant its inclusion on the 2026 Good Beer Guide.

St Peters, Liverpool
Classy
St Peters, Liverpool
The altar

One of those pubs that warrants a wander around, pint in hand. You can go upstairs, into booths in side crypts, admire the art, admire the memorial dedications. All this and a quality pint for £4.50.

As usual for Liverpool, there was more to do. The 'spoons are back in the GBG. There were mosques. There were controversial sculptures of Christ. There were churches bombed out by the Luftwaffe.

The blog could have turned into an epic.

Walk Details


Distance - 6 Miles

Geocaches - 5

Walk Inspiration - Liverpool A-Z City Walks, Walk 10

Previous Liverpool A-Z City Walks - Walks 1 and 2Walk 3Walk 4Walk 5Walk 6 and 7, Walk 8 and 9