Walking the UK, ticking off CAMRA Good Beer Guide Pubs and hunting for Geocaches.
Saturday, 25 November 2023
25/11/23 - South Staffordshire Railway Walk for the Round Oak, Wombourne
Saturday, 18 November 2023
18/11/23 - Good Beer Guide Ticking in Halifax, West Yorkshire
Never have so many beers been available
Meandering Bear |
A Beer Cafe |
Proper looking pub |
The site of the Three Pigeons was previously occupied by an older pub, which was demolished in the late 1920s to make way for a new building. The current pub was designed by local architects Jackson & Fox and opened in 1932.
The Three Pigeons is a fine example of Art Deco architecture. The interior features a number of distinctive Art Deco elements, including:
- An octagonal drinking lobby
- Geometric patterns and motifs
- Streamlined furniture and fittings
- Stained glass windows
- Chrome and glass fixtures
Lobby action |
Friday, 17 November 2023
17/11/23 - Greater Manchester Ringway - Stage 8
Ancient paths, wild moorland and £5 pints in Oldham
I asked AI to provide a summary of this stage of Greater Manchester's boundary path;
Not bad..... this is a proper walk - the first half on ancient paths, with names on the OS Map like Hague Road and Coach Road. Ahead, you can see what awaits.
In the far distance, the Arnfield Moors |
Hollingworth is the last place to bail out for civilisation. Should you press on, you are in wild moorland country of crashed aeroplanes and vague paths. You see no one. Anything goes wrong and you are on your own. Look behind, and you get the occasional glimpse of the Manchester skyscrapers. The city looks alien. Alas, it was directly into the sun, so photos were hopeless but will stay in my memory
Looking away from the Sun on Arnfield Moor |
There is a "diversion" that runs for 1/2 mile to Chew Reservoir, only to immediately double back. On plotting, I thought this is because the walk designers really wanted you to see the body of water. On arrival, there is no choice - its a high ridge path over the waterfalls, with the exit - the access road - far below. Stunning walking.
Chew Hurdles - with Chew Road feint on the RHS |
Chew reservoir - seen one, seen them all |
The access road is picked up, forever downwards and becoming the Oldham Way.
My destination - Greenfield. Home of two Good Beer Guide Pubs;
The Wellington is a solid enough locals pub.... a handful of pensioner diners in one room and locals hovering around the bar, outdoing each other with infectious but cheesy jokes. I should take notes, there was a cracking one about a pirate with the punchline "cause they arrrrrrrrr".
The End of Terrace Wellington |
Most of the cask was from Millstone brewery. Their pump clips offer no clue as to what the style of each beer is. Asking about Tiger Rut was met with "Bitter".
Takes too much time to use Untappd at the bar |
It was a Golden Ale and exceptionally cold.
Next to the station is the imaginatively named The Railway
You can see the trains pulling up. Usually delayed |
I decide my starting my conversion by asking if they all the beers on the board available. I am assured they are.
Walk Information
Start - Broadbottom
Finish - Greenfield
Previous Stages - Stage 1, Stage 2, Stage 3, Stage 4, Stage 5, Stage 6, Stage 7
Distance - 12.5 Miles
Geocaches - 3
Good Beer Guide Tick - #917 and #918
Thursday, 16 November 2023
16/11/23 - Manchester Tap to Tap, via Gullivers and Bar Fringe
Every City should have one
I mainly looked to the fridge and in a panic to order, asked for a bottle of Delirium Tremens.
Sunday, 12 November 2023
12/11/23 - The White Hart, Hartlebury
The Wheel of Fortune leads to the familiar
I decide to embrace the element of surprise and let chance guide me. Throwing caution to the wind and using randomness to choose my destination. An on-line random number generator is chosen, the book's page numbers programmed and the wheel of fortune activated. Around and around it goes and where it stops, nobody knows. Until it lands on 107.
Walk Details
Saturday, 4 November 2023
05/11/23 - Centenary Way - Stage 22 - Edgehill
Gauging the impact of inflation on hospitality
Guide Dog in Training Ivy loving a free run through the woods |
It's a beautiful day |
Finally getting Ivy to pose |
Walk Information
Distance - 5 Miles
Geocaches - 0
Pub - The Castle, Edgehill
Previous Stages - Stage 1, Stage 2, Stage 3, Stage 4, Stage 5, Stage 6, Stage 7, Stage 8, Stage 9, Stage 10, Stage 11, Stage 12, Stage 13, Stage 14, Stage 15, Stage 16, Stage 17, Stage 18, Stage 19, Stage 20, Stage 21
04/11/23 - A Random Birmingham Pub Crawl
Using Google AI to create a pubby adventure
Please plot a 4 pub crawl starting at Birmingham Snow Hill Station?
The results better than expected. I get recommendations for two previously unvisited pubs, one that has just re-enterted the Good Beer Guide and yes, I cheated with the 4th. Sorry Sun on the Hill, you are getting swapped over.
The tool reports back a summary map, route directions between stages and a little overview of each recommendation. Then it wishes me a great time. I could be worried about my hobbies as well as my career are being replaced by technology but someone has actually got to go and visit them to report back the truth.
The Royal, Church Street
A 10am opener - and by the time I burst through the door 75 minutes later, there's already a small group of other Baggies fans. Breakfasting like gods. On Guinness and Madri.
Corner Pub |
This is an ornate Victorian Corner pub. Smart in a hotel bar kind of way. Leaded windows and some rather comfy faux Chesterfield wingback chairs.
No cask. And the Guinness was colder than most slush puppies.
Took me a while to battle through |
The Old Contemptibles, Edmund Street
A handy sign to tell the nomenclature |
In many ways, a sister pub to the Royal - another corner pub, sharing the same external architecture. I've got the Pevsner guide to the City and one day I will read it.
The OC's |
This Nicholson pub has just re-entered the Good Beer Guide. I can see why, with some very interesting cask on offer. I missed out on a Red Ale by choosing a Northern Monk too quickly.
I move to the furthest extremity, to take in the decor and evaluate other punters that come through the door. A lot of away fans from Hull. This pub ticking is taking off, as groups of men tour the country finding the finest pubs available.
Eyes peeled for "you know who" and "you know who's Dad".
Fine Ceiling... Chandeliers... Handsome |
I think I may become a more frequent visitor here.... even closer to the station home than my usual Old Joint Stock. But I may miss the ESB.
The Bull, Price Street
The new looms over the old |
My replacement for the Sun on the Hill. I've been before but wanted to give this GBG regular a second chance. Mainly to see if anyone was actually using it at lunch time.
Alas, no.
One elderly chap that in the 30 minutes I demolished my Old Hooky with quavers chaser, did not touch his pint once. At one point, I was convinced I had entered a museum and he was a Madame Tussaud style exhibit. With little else to do other than sing along to 70s pop and count jugs, I kept a close eye for movement.
Looking for life in the Bull |
I was correct to keep an eye out and Simon visited post match. Sounds like the atmosphere builds after dark, but we had a quite similar experience.
Bull, Birmingham. Re-visit and an absolute tonic after a day which has been painful in every way. Thankfully, a proper pub atmosphere, Oakham Citra and bacon fries make everything ok. Bit of ABBA too for the win! pic.twitter.com/s8BLeQHPum
— Si BRAPA Everitt (@StymieSi) November 4, 2023
I need tips on how they got from the Hawthorns so quickly!
Queens Head, Steelhouse Lane
To prove that AI is not infallible, its final recommendation was the Jekyll and Hyde. I'd never heard of it, despite Birmingham being my home City.