Just looking at the Good Beer Guide updates on the CAMRA website now (It’s wet outside) I was saddened to read of the closure of the Prince of Wales in Greasbrough near Rotherham, due to an accident to the licensee. This is the pub where I began a long appreciation of John Smiths, before the… Continue reading A PINT OF JOHNS*
Month: November 2015
GAINS AND LOSSES ON THE A1
Ram Jam (closed) I get odder looks about my perpetual travel plans than I do my early(ish) retirement. Friends in Cambridge still refuse to believe the journey to, say, North Yorkshire is a mere two hours (within the speed limit). It’s not just Londoners who never travel north (North Norfolk doesn’t count). I timed it between the county… Continue reading GAINS AND LOSSES ON THE A1
(This Is) What We Call Progress
There was one other pub I revisited in Kentish Town last Sunday. It got a bit lost among a cluster of gems but deserves it’s own post. It’s hidden just off the main Fortess Road, in one of those streets straight out of Mary Poppins. The Pineapple is one of the country’s most beautiful mid-Victorian… Continue reading (This Is) What We Call Progress
KURT VILE @ LEEDS UNI
I seem to be favouring gigs in Leeds this year, which says something about the quality of the developing pub scene as much as the drawing power of 30,000 students. It might also reflect on the attraction of perfectly good Ibis Budget rooms for £25 in mid-week. Kurt Vile at Stylus, in the mysterious rabbit… Continue reading KURT VILE @ LEEDS UNI
HIGHGATE HILL
No big walks last week due to a gammy leg, but by Sunday afternoon I was up for a proper stretch. Mrs RM had chosen Mansfield over Camden the day before, so it only seemed fair to give North London another chance to impress. London’s micro-climate meant ideal conditions for an aimless ramble north of King’s Cross,… Continue reading HIGHGATE HILL
GARDEN CENTRES AND WETHERSPOONS
I took my Dad to the giant Van Hage Garden Centre just off the A10 at Ware. He wanted to go back for the first time in 30 years, and revisit some of the attractive Hertfordshire villages he used to drive through when delivering to the old Spitalfields. Visiting garden centres is somewhere below cutting… Continue reading GARDEN CENTRES AND WETHERSPOONS
TOP 100 PUBS – SOUTHAMPTON ARMS, KENTISH TOWN
I’ve never had great things to say about North-West London, outside of Euston anyway, so I gave it a short re-evaluation yesterday afternoon. A fuller post to follow, but it was the Southampton Arms that made the greatest impression. 5 years ago, not long after it opened, I rated it as highly as anywhere in London,… Continue reading TOP 100 PUBS – SOUTHAMPTON ARMS, KENTISH TOWN
MANSFIELD – ALL MICROPUBS & MACCHIATO
I gave Mrs RM a couple of enticing choices for the day – Camden Town or Mansfield and she looked at me like I was daft. I obviously chose my wife well. She probably had equally fond memories of our memorable weekend there 20-odd years ago. It must have been our anniversary as I distinctly remember paying £15… Continue reading MANSFIELD – ALL MICROPUBS & MACCHIATO
INDEPENDENTS IN T’OTHER BURY
The southern Bury (St Edmunds) is a wonderful town for an afternoon amble, with more attractive streets than Cambridge, if not Norwich. It’s also only a 40 minute hop on the train for me, a bit quicker than the northern version, though no doubt HS2 will remedy that just as I finally get to move… Continue reading INDEPENDENTS IN T’OTHER BURY
NEW BRUM
Beginning my appreciation of Birmingham in the early ’90s with trips to St Andrews, Villa Park, and the old Bullring wasn’t a good idea; though the Balti houses always were. Over 25 or so years I’ve grown to love the Regency and modern architecture, the gigs at the Hare & Hounds, the IKON Gallery, and many more… Continue reading NEW BRUM