Saturday 29 October 2022

29/10/22 - London Spiral Walk - Stage 8

Distance - 10 Miles

Start - Shepherd's Bush Market

Finish -  Clapham Common

Areas Walked - Hammersmith, Putney, Wandsworth

Geocaches - 2 and an Adventure Lab Cache

Pubs - 2 (Good Beer Guide #728-729)

Previous Walks - Stage 1Stage 2Stage 3Stage 4Stage 5Stage 6, Stage 7


The day the clocks change. The final days of October. No jacket required on Stage 8 of the London Spiral Walk. It's not normal.

It does of course, make for pleasant walking.  And this is a much improved stage over Stage 7.

Nondescript streets lead me to Hammersmith.  It's early, but a Good Beer Guide Tick, the William Morris,  is open and provides breakfast on a blue plate.  Oakham Green Devil with the hastily ordered traditional breakfast, without realising black pudding (2 slices) could be added for an extra £1.20.

William Morris, Hammersmith
The William Norris

One of the grimmer JDW's visited but service was swift, prices keen.

A cursory look around Hammersmith.  The "Bottom Bench", the flyover, the Damned playing at the Apollo. 60 year old punks turn up very early for their gigs.

Hammersmith Flyover
Do you think the planning permission was challenged?

Hammersmith Bridge is still handsome and closed to traffic. Trivia point, the most bombed bridge in London. 

Hammersmith Bridge
Hammersmith Bridge

A lengthy section of Thames Path walking - past the wetlands centre, the rowing clubs, under Putney Bridge and through Wandsworth Park. Discipline is maintained easily. It's still too early for the Bricklayers Arms, The Cat's Back and the Sam Brooks Brewery Tap.

River Thames from Putney
Thames Path - always a pleasure
Putney Boat Clubs
Lots of riverside activity at the many boat houses

Through King George's Park and onto Wandsworth Common. It's only after a post walk review of Bob Steel's London Pub Crawls book that I determine the magnificent Le Gothique building hosts a recommended bar amongst it's facilities. There's one for another day.

Le Gothique, Wandsworth
London's First Gastropub

And finally, into Clapham.  An adventure lab cache takes me on a bit of local psycho-geography.  Clapham looks worthy of more detailed investigation - a number of independent shops and with the unseasonal weather, outdoor diners providing a cosmopolitan feel.

With the sort of serendipity that I live for, it transpires that my Oxford based son is in the same part of London. We arrange to meet at one of the Good Beer Guide Ticks available, the Abbeville.  

And its a pub that has run out of Cask. On a Saturday. Round 1, I try and introduce my son to Harvey's Best Bitter - one of the greatest pints known to all humanity. They manage to squeeze one from the barrel before pronouncing it dead and flipping the pump clip. The alternative - a Landlord - which not wishing to mar a memory, I hand to my son. The Harveys is dismal vinegar, and after a longer than warranted argument, I manage to swap over.

Abbeville, Clapham
The Pub where Cask goes to die - Harveys at half mast, about to be joined by Landlord

Round 2 and the Landlord is off.

Thank god for keg and hello to £12.40 rounds of Camden Hells. 


Saturday 22 October 2022

22/10/22 - Centenary Way - Stage 13 - Kenilworth for the Good Beer Guide Pubs

Distance - 9 Miles

Geocaches - 4 and an Adventure Lab Cache

Pubs - The Gauntlet, The Ales Rooms, The Old Bakery and the Virgins and Castle

Previous Stages - Stage 1Stage 2Stage 3Stage 4Stage 5Stage 6Stage 7Stage 8Stage 9Stage 10Stage 11, Stage 12


The Centenary Way leaves from a major town. Might as well complete some advanced Public Transporting. 1xBus and 4xTrains goes better than expected, for a day when Avanti Staff are on strike.

Stage 13 is easily the best walk of the Centenary Way (so far). An exact replica of one the better stages of the Millennium Way.

A Warwickshire countyside ramble, with Kenilworth Castle the obvious highlight.

Around Kenilworth Castle Walls
A Circuit of the Castle Wall - Looking for ALC clues
Kenilworth Castle main entrance
Kenilworth Castle from the main entrance
Alpaca Farm at Gospel Oak
Through Gospel Oak Alpaca Farm
Same sign as 7 years ago
Where the same happy signs exist at Goodrest Cottages

Exercise completed - three Good Beer Guide Pubs to aim for.

The Gauntlet has a description in the bible as offering Good Home Made food... an obvious candidate for lunch.  Micro-pubs only have crisps.

A shiver of fear/excitement, on arrival at the first flat roof tick of 2022.  Points lost for lack of roof-mounted, patrol dogs.

The Gauntlet, Kenilworth
1960's estate pub - the book has got them all.

My spider senses tell me that it's devoid of life. The weeds at the front door look a bit too high.  The signage suggests lunch time opening but the doors looked bolted. A quick check with the next door newsagents and it closed down last week.

For good?  He seemed to think so. I get the honour of informing the pubsgalore website, even if my stomach is rumbling.

The Gauntlet, Kenilworth
Revised opening...... shut

The Ale Rooms and Gin Bar is a neat enough micro. Unsure if it is affiliated with the bar of the same name in Knowle.  Nothing unsual stocked (maybe in the Gin Section) and a choice of 5 hand-pulls. Which seems overkill when the other patrons (lads, lads, lads) are all on Euro-lager.  Will anyone, ever, choose the Bombardier? 

Ale Rooms, Kenilworth
Ale Room Micro
Ale Rooms, Kenilworth
Purity Mad Goose - always a handsome pint

The Old Bakery adds to the trio of Good Beer Guide Ticks.  This is the guide in a nutshell, three venues all quite different.

I'm not really sure what MO the Old Bakery are going for. It's a hotel. You would think it did food, but alas, the charcuterie board that the one other punter said used to be available is now discontinued. The barman did offer crisps.

Old Bakery, Kenilworth
Not your classic looking "pub"

Four handpulls on - and all unusual.  I was the 6th person in the world to check in Buckeye Brown from Derby Brewing Company. Looking at check-in number 5, it was in the same venue, in the same Wye Valley glass on the night before.

An rather odd experience, not helped by the lack of punters on a Saturday afternoon.

Old Bakery, Kenilworth
Posher than your average Micro

I'm not leaving for an epic 4 train journey home without sustenance.  When in doubt, head for the oldest pub in town.

Virgin and Castle, Kenilworth
Collective noun for Virgins?
Virgin and Castle, Kenilworth
Hoorah - they have fishfinger sarnies.. and Everards Tiger


Sunday 16 October 2022

16/10/22 - Pen-Y-Ghent

Distance - 7 Miles

Walk Inspiration - Country Walking Magazine, July 22, Walk 20

Geocaches - 5

Other Yorkshire 3 Peaks - Whernside, Ingleborough


Third day of the long weekend and the third mountain. For my money, Pen-Y-Ghent is the most handsome of the Yorkshire 3 peaks. As its a Sunday, this is also the shortest walk of the trio.  Everything is meticulously planned for maximum pleasure.

Back to Horton-in-Ribblesdale, short road walking to the Church and out into the countryside, via Horton Scar.

Horton-in-Ribblesdale
Horton-in-Ribblesdale Church, with Pen-Y-Ghent looming on it's shoulder
Geocaching on Horton Scar
Geocaching on Horton Scar

There's no problem with route finding. A flagged path leads ever upwards, although its not always clear how you actually get to the top. Transpires that the path runs around the back of "the snout" and there's some hands on rock scrambling required. Nothing a 53 year fueled by a full English cannot manage.

Pen-Y-Ghent
Easy route finding
Pen-Y-Ghent
But how do you get up the shapely snout?

An absolute minimal amount of time on the top - once the trig point is touched, a photo is taken of a group of youth (their camera not mine, I am not a weirdo, will look on the gram for it later, OK maybe I am) and I am marching back down the Pennine Way. Super views and easy navigation.

Route Down
Walking down the Pennine Way

A geological feature to break up the walk. Who wouldn't want to know what happens to Hull Pot Beck? I'm unsure whether I have seen a stream disappear into nothing on a map before.

HullPot
Nature's Magic Trick?

Turns out it disappears into a great big hole in the ground.  Where the water goes next, anyone's guess!  

Hull Pot
Hull Pot Beck - Side On
Hull Pot
Hull Pot - End On

And then its just a mile and half of walking between stone walls. Every step savoured as every step brings me closer to Microsoft Teams misery.  

Its been a fine weekend of good Yorkshire walking and good Yorkshire drinking.

Route Home
The Yellow Brick Road to on-line collaboration software

Saturday 15 October 2022

15/10/22 - Skipton Pub Crawl

Call off the hunt - for I have found best bar in the world.

I'm in Yorkshire and have ticked off 2 of the 3 peaks. Settle, as pleasant as it was, has run out of evening entertainment options so I have relocated to the Gateway of the Yorkshire Dales, Skipton. A town dripping in history and a smattering of Good Beer Guide Ticks.

My digs are 2 miles from the action but the Dales 66 drops me off at the bus station and before I fire up Google Maps to get my bearings, I am seduced by the music and excitement coming from Sound Bar.  

A blue print for bars going forward.

By day, a record shop.

Sound Bar, Skiption
Vinyl delights

By night, possibly a live music venue.

Sound Bar, Skiption
Stage is set at Sound Bar

And there's more.... at the far end, thronged with people, a real ale bar.... expertly manned by enough staff to deal with the thirsty hordes. In next to no time, I am taking a first Dark Horse Brewery, Craven Bitter to the only place with space. The stage.  A perfect location to take in the atmosphere.

Sound Bar, Skiption
It's swinging

The DJ is creating a superb atmosphere with a selection of Mod Tunes. Small faces, runs into the Kinks and as you may have heard, Green Onions.

I've got some great ideas on what the superstar DJ can play next.

Sound Bar, Skiption
Which I will take to the grave

I've peaked far too early.... it's a filthy night in Skipton, but I have to drag myself out into the rain to see what else is on offer.  Alas, there is little chance of a pre-bus home night cap - Sound Bar is a 9pm closer.

To The Regiment!  It's on to Early Doors micro pub, on the quest for unusual beers, craft or foreign.  As with other Yorkshire Micro pubs, I only find top quality cask bitters. A Reedley Hallows Brewery Pendleside, taken in more sedate surroundings on the only comfy sofa. Strangely unoccupied in a packed out former shop, I thought it could only be a trap, that would surely collapse under the weight of an unaware pub ticker.

Early Doors, Skipton
Early Doors - An 8pm Closer

Onto the Good Beer Guide Pubs....  The Narrow Boat provides the beer I have been searching for the last 48 hours.  A soft and juicy West Coast IPA brewed as a collab between Osset and Lakes Brew Co. I've not had a bad beer in Yorkshire but I needed some variety from the classic bitters found so far.

Narrow Boat, Skipton
At last, murk
Narrow Boat, Skipton
With Other Choices Available

A comfortable, multi roomed boozer with a mezzanine floor for pint-pot chucking, Begbie wannabes.

As much as I'd like to, I'm not going to award this IPA pint of the weekend. Almost next door is The Beer Engine who have a Thornbridge Tap Takeover. Jaipur on Cask. It's going to win every time.

Beer Engine, Skipton
To be fair, everyone's a winner.  But look at the colour!

Beer Engine, Skipton
Beer Engine People

A chance to try a Jaipur X on Keg was shunned.  I may regret missing out. Then again, 10% beer may have been regretted in situ... there's another mountain to climb tomorrow.

One last Good Beer Guide Tick to get - The Boat House - calling last orders at 10pm. I have no fear, the penultimate bus back is 10:20pm.

Rounding off the night back with another well respected pint.  Marble Brewery Lagonda.

Boat House, Skipton
People ask me where I get my walk inspiration from.  Everywhere, I reply.

There's a lot of early closing venues but I've got to say, Skipton has fast become one of my favourite beer towns.

Besides, these days, I like to be tucked up in bed before 11pm.


15/10/22 - Ingleborough from the Crown, Horton-in-Ribblesdale

Walk Inspiration - Country Walking Magazine, July 22, Walk 19

Geocaches - 4

Distance - 11 Miles

Yorkshire 3 Peaks - Whernside


Torrential rain is not what you want to hear lashing against your B&B window, when you know you have a 5 hour walk ahead. The forecast had it going on all day and its rather a nice surprise to find it blown over by the time I have had my breakfast rated on Facebook.  

Harts Head Hotel, Gigglewick, Breakfast
People Liked the bean separation.  But disliked the raw black pudding.  And "toast"

A short drive from Gigglewick to Horton-in-Ribbesdale, which has everything needed.  Paid parking, which can be for the 48hours.  A pub.

Country Walking Magazine suggests that Ingleborough is the superstar of the Yorkshire Three peaks.  They go as far as to say that if the mountains were Destiny's Child, Ingleborough would be Beyonce.

I'm not so sure - its a long entry walk from Horton - and you do pass some stunning geological features on route but for my money, Pen-y-Ghent is the most handsome.

Ingleborough
Ingleborough, from the approach

The walking is (relatively) easy. The gradients are kind, as I walk through the limestone pavement of Sulber and continually climb on well flagged paths, keeping my boots nice and dry. Its only the final approach that can be described as "lung busting".

No hanging around at the top - its exposed, the winds are viscous and the rain starts up.  Two summit geocaches have to be shunned - it's simply too dangerous to go looking under rocks on the edge of a mountain.  

Ingleborough Summit
From the top of Ingleborough

Drop down the southern side of the mountain to Little Ingleborough and work my way to geological items of interest.

Gaping Gill - a 100 metre deep pothole - is not going to show much at ground level. Have a google. Or come back in May, when the potholing club will lower you down on a chair.

A little further on is Trow Gill, which provides a suprise for the unaware. The path winds down through a narrow path between 200ft cliffs. Very reminiscent of Lud's Church in the Peak District, and just as slippy underfoot.

Trow Gill
Trow Gill, as it opens out

Easy walking back through limestone pavements to pick up the walk-in route at Sulber. The return to Horton shows what needs to be conquered tomorrow - Pen-Y-Ghent.

Pen-Y-Ghent
Tomorrow's Adventure

5.5 hours and 11 miles after setting off, I am ready for refreshment. Like the announcement of a new pope, I took the smoke rising from the Crown's chimney as a positive sign. 

The Crown, Horton in Ribblesdale
The Crown, Horton in Ribblesdale - For Sale Sign had me worried

All punters were ramblers, so there was a decent buzz of post walk chatter in the main room.

The Black Sheep was pouring rather well.

The Crown, Horton in Ribblesdale
Post Walk Refreshment


Friday 14 October 2022

14/10/22 - The Pubs of Settle, North Yorkshire

An attempt to do the Yorkshire 3 peaks over a weekend saw me use Settle as my first nights base.

A pretty little Market Town, set in some glorious countryside.  2 Good Beer Guide ticks available but that's not quite enough for a man with a thirst.  Fortunately, others are available to make up a pub crawl (minimum of three required, them's the crawl rules).

I start the evening at a Micro Pub - Bar 13.  

Bar 13, Settle
Starting in day-light

The more I travel around the country, the more I am spotting the differences in the MO of micro pubs.  In the Midlands, they distinguish themselves in the market by offering drinks that you cannot get in the mainstream pubs.  Kidderminster has 3 micros and on my last crawl I went from a Deya Steady Rolling Man to a keg Schlenkerla Rauchbier to a bottle of St Bernardus 12 ABT.

In Yorkshire, the Micros stock nothing unusual and really are just small pubs. A full review of cask and keg and then the fridges (where a nod to Belgium is in the shape of Leffe) before settling on cask Moorhouses Witches Cauldren. Perfect condition, but I could have killed for a juice bomb West Coast IPA.

Bar 13, Settle
View from the far end of a Micro

Next door is the Golden Lion, the first of the Good Beer Guide Ticks.

The Lion, Settle
The Golden Lion, by Night

This is my second visit to this 1670 Coaching Inn and with an identical order placed, I have probably identified my death row meal.

Thwaites Original in superlative condition, washing down a suet pudding, filled with steak, vegetables and more Thwaites Original. Accompanied by thick cut chips and an individual jug of gravy.

I need to keep my strength up for tomorrow's mountain assault.

The Lion, Settle
Taking my coat for dinner.  2 minutes later, I could have brought you the Suet Pudding

A smart brightly lit hotel bar, setup for dining may not be everyone's cup of tea but there's no doubting the quality of their fayre.

For a drinking den, I'd have to recommend the next Good Beer Guide recommendation - The Talbot Arms.  A free house claiming to be the oldest pub in Settle.  Packed solid, with a queue of potential diners hovering for a table, I had to make my home at the bar, of sufficient length to avoid bar-blocker accusations.

The Talbot, Settle
Talbot Arms

Bar blockers may be a pain in the arse but its the best place for blogging material.  A first time granddad, toasting his new family member by ordering two pints, drinking them both in more or less one gulp and then leaving to pick up a curry.  Then, I was treated to a running commentary by the staff who were watching a drunk in the beer garden on the CCTV monitor overhead.  "He's going, he's going, he's gone" laugh the workers, as the star of the small screen eventually fell over.

You don't get this entertainment sat at the back of Micro pubs.

The Talbot, Settle
Started with a Settle, moved on to a Pennine Brewery Pacific.  Both excellent

Third high quality beer location and a tempting list of "coming on soon" clips, that would definitely make this place my local.

Finally, before heading back to my Gigglewick digs, I popped into the Royal Oak - the party place in town.  

Royal Oak, Settle
Loud Music, Disco Lights, I'm going in

Only one person could save me from the twin evils of karaoke and halloween decorations.

Royal Oak, Settle
The Landlord