Geocaches - 0
Pub - Watsons Ale House, Knighton, Conwy Brewery Clogwyn Gold
Previous Stages - Stage 1, Stage 2
Still, you get the views. |
Looking down over the Teme Valley at Lloyney |
Walking the UK, ticking off CAMRA Good Beer Guide Pubs and hunting for Geocaches.
Still, you get the views. |
Looking down over the Teme Valley at Lloyney |
Distance - 3 Miles
Pubs - 5
Biblical Rain Sunday, as this day shall be known. Having walked Isleworth, I emerged at Leicester Square tube to be faced with this.
What will end first, the rain or my patience at hiding under a Pret Brolly |
Surprisingly, I do make it back to Archway for a lazy Sunday Evening of Good Beer Guide Pub (other pubs may apply) Ticking.
Shaftesbury Tavern, Hornsey Road
Handsome |
Worth the walk for a GBG Tick #568. It provided excellent London Pride and my tea, where I am just in time for the 7pm closing of the Thai restaurant serving within. They do not skimp on portions. Its a wonder I managed to drag myself off the Chesterfield sofa to continue the walk.
CAMRA Interior of Historic Importance |
Other things of interest? A free jukebox that worked as well as the one in the Temple Bar, Manchester. I was there for an hour. No PJ Harvey was played.
Landseer Arms, Landseer Road
I wasn't sure it would be open (google is never that helpful). My initial joy at seeing a full table of hipster yoof was dashed by them being the staff. The pub is closed due to flooding.
Not surprising. This is the retweet I sent to the Chairman of the Dubious GBG Tick committee to see if I could have a waiver.
Pudding Mill Lane DLR Station pic.twitter.com/s9AkSPHd4H
— Rob Day (@R0bday) July 25, 2021
Image stolen from the Internet.
Also - I had searched Twitter for LDN Storms. I do not follow Tits McGee |
St Johns Tavern, Junction Road
GBG Tick #570. Yes, I claimed the Landseer Arms.
This is the worst of all possible Gastropubs. I felt completely in the way here, sitting at a table set up for diners in a room full of diners.
Five Points XPA was a decent pint and you cannot accuse the Guide of using no other criteria than "Good Beer".
Another lifted photo - Head Chef was dicking around with the awning as I left |
Old Mother Red Cap, Holloway Road
A twitter recommendation that I could not ignore. It is dangerously close to Archway Premier Inn, where I am very much enjoying the air conditioning, at the expense of a drip akin to Chinese Water Torture.
Mother Red Cap, Holloway. This has to be the most beautiful pub interior I have seen for a long time. ❤️Original tiling & mirrors. According to local outside ‘this is the only Irish pub left on Holloway Road.’ ☘️ Great pint of Guinness & friendly welcome. #lovepubs #irishpubs pic.twitter.com/30xpGhXGI8
— Saving London Pubs (@PubsSaving) June 3, 2021
As close to an Irish Pub Experience I have had since charging around Dublin looking for the greatest hostelries available to man.
Too full of Thai to contemplate a Guinness |
The Archway Tavern, Navigator Square
Another Twitter resource that I use in the Smoke is @BeerGuideLondon. Not that I needed any help in finding this huge pub, directly outside the Tube and Lenny's favourite budget hotel.
Magnificent Pub |
I managed to get in just before closing, when the keg dispensers were getting a thorough cleaning and the only other sentient life is an Eastern European Bouncer whose appearance and accent meant he couldn't have picked a better vocation. Oh, and a large very friendly Boxer (dog, not pugilist).
Stiegl on draft, complete with presentation chalice. My Son's favourite. Suddenly, my hobby made sense to him.
I spent a while looking for decent photos on the web and found a bit of history that I thought I would share.
The interior is the cover of the Kinks Album, Muswell Hillibillies.
Pub Life 1971 |
And look at this photo of it's yester-year glory.
Pre-Predestrianisation of Navigation Square |
Distance - 4 Miles
Geocaches - 1
Walk Inspiration - Walking Village London
My primary reason for being here on a Sunday morning was to tick off another of the pubs that Len Deighton recommended in his book, London Dossier. I think this is number 7 out of the 11 that remain. Progress being made.
It nearly didn't happen. I enjoyed some Adventure Lab Caches in the City and kept an eye on the trains to Isleworth. The Pingdemic had taken its toll, with many cancellations. Yet the 10:50 was on time and I had 5 minutes to scuttle from the London Eye to Platform 16, carrying a hot sausage roll, a black coffee and an precariously balanced oyster card. I made it into the first carriage, with seconds to spare.
I then relaxed with my delayed breakfast, hearing the train guard announce something about the last set of doors not opening at one station but not getting past his guttural mumbles to know which.
Of course, it was Isleworth. I was there furiously pressing an unlit button, seeing the station below. Another Jame Bond move and I am successfully leaping through closing doors in the next carriage along, rolly-pollying onto the platform.
All that excitement - for an OK Walk.
Duke of Northumberland River |
First views of Isleworth Ait |
Could have been a multi pub walk |
The Church - Don't blame the Germans |
The Background
Pre-plague, I was reading Len Deighton's London Dossier. A 1967 Guide to the Smoke. There was a section on pubs. I thought to myself, that would make an interesting list to tick off. The list is here.The Bar, The Coal Fire |
Getting close to last orders. Which can be anytime in LDN |
Distance - 9 Miles
Start - Kings Cross
Finish - Paramo Shop, Melcombe Street, Marylebone
Areas Walked - Kings Cross, Euston, Finsbury, Camden Town, Regents Park
Geocaches - 2
Pubs - 3
First an introduction to this latest Long Distance Orbital Path of London.
I thought I had completed the lot - The Capital Ring, The London Loop and even the unmarked, nearly lost in time London Countryway.
Then I stumbled on the London Spiral Walk, possibly a variation of Inspiral London.
An indication to my future trips to the Smoke |
The concepts are the same - six loops of the City - starting at Kings Cross and moving out to end at Gravesend (same as the Countryway). The creator's purpose was to encourage urban walking, with an aim to discover public artworks.
It's just the sort of Psychogeography that I love. As much as I love public art, I will be adapting the route to take in Good Beer Guide Pubs, Geocaches and Adventure Lab Caches.
You've got to make pilgrimages personal.
So Kings Cross the start - and as well as admiring some very desirable housing in Keystone Crescent, I am also on the hunt for breakfast. Hard to believe such as quiet, pretty street is a stone's throw from Spice central.
Kings Cross Square - Spice Central |
Close to Gorgeous Keystone Crescent |
The trail provides an old school cafe, next to a pub converted into a mosque. Sitting outside, you cannot help eavesdrop a conversation between two scots that covers everything from Raith Rovers winning 6-0, to the original bass player in Ultavox to how they kill dogs for food in China. I'm always alone, never lonely.
Blue River - recorded for future posterity. Free tea and toast with the F.E.B. |
First surprise of the day is the Regents Canal just to the North of Kings Cross. I've never seen Coal's Drop Yard before but is looks an oasis of calm for shopping, eating and drinking. A place to come back to when I have more time.
Coal Drop Yard |
Through St Pancreas Church Yard - another quiet spot - and south past the side of Euston and into the top of Bloomsbury. Hotels, Tavistock Square, Greys Inn Road and I didn't realise how close Angel/Upper Street are to Kings Cross. It seemed just as quick to walk as it is to take the tube.
The north, through Somers Town is certainly edgy and more of what you would expect from inner city landscapes. Ghost Tube Stations, graffiti and hoping the marked route will get me across railway lines and the canal. It does, although its not necessarily obvious in Springbank Walk.
Ghost Tube - York Road |
Regents Canal - and into Camden |