Our Oxford quartet convened at a sensible hour and trekked to the surprisingly busy and hectic Wetherspoon's for a leisurely breakfast and several coffee refills.
By quarter-past 11 I realised The Anvil had been open for 15-minutes already.
What were we playing at?!
The Anvil (Dorning Street, Wigan, WN1 1ND)
This is a very proper-looking town centre pub, a big red brick affair with Tudor gables, located on a corner close to the bus station.
It had a fair few punters in for a pre-noon Friday, spread out over three drinking areas from the quiet end with a wall of CAMRA awards to the bright corner room with big TV and multiple satellite boxes.
The eight hand pulls served up some big brand brews alongside the local Moorhouse 'White Witch', and Chorley micro Ben's Brewery 'Mosaic'. I picked the 4.4% IPA from Heywood, Greater Manchester brewery Phoenix, an easy-going first beer of the day.
We took our drinks though to a table in the corner with red leather cushioned bench seating, dumpy stools and beer mats, Wigan rugby and football memorabilia adorning the walls, a chap reading his paper and a white wine-drinking lady pampering her poodle on the seat next to her.This is a very proper-looking town centre pub, a big red brick affair with Tudor gables, located on a corner close to the bus station.
It had a fair few punters in for a pre-noon Friday, spread out over three drinking areas from the quiet end with a wall of CAMRA awards to the bright corner room with big TV and multiple satellite boxes.
The eight hand pulls served up some big brand brews alongside the local Moorhouse 'White Witch', and Chorley micro Ben's Brewery 'Mosaic'. I picked the 4.4% IPA from Heywood, Greater Manchester brewery Phoenix, an easy-going first beer of the day.
There was a lesser-seen pairing of Maiden's Number of the Beast and cricket on the TV. Actually, the music was very rock for early doors. None of the clientele looked like they wanted to hear Metallica's 'One', not that they were taking much notice of it. I guess you need a bit of metal on the playlist when your pub is called Anvil.
Next to be marked off on the Ale Trail leaflet was a nearby micro in an alleyway in the Victorian Quarter.
It's been a while since my pub pictures were let down by scaffolding...
Tap 'n' Barrel (16 Jaxon's Court, Wigan, WN1 1LR)
We were afforded a friendly cheerful welcome at this former local award winner where we found a solid Lakes and Dales cask line-up of Hawkshead 'Pale', Abbeydale 'Deception', and Wensleydale 'Semer Water'.
One of our party skipped the sensible ales and delved into the fridge for a lunchtime 8.4% cherry chocolate imperial stout. Let's take a guess that this was Tanya, who was already planning a return visit to the Chophouse having been promised something special in the cellar. We assumed this referred to a craft can selection.
Seating in the ground floor room was limited to stools lining one wall, with the bar taking up a good bit of the space. There are tables upstairs, but who sits upstairs? So we gravitated to the bright patio area, covered and sealed to keep the cold out, heaters and old guitars attached to the walls.
The soundtrack was very 00's indie rock, with a bit of Bastille and Dandy Warhols. John may have an encyclopaedic knowledge of Thin Lizzy but was surprisingly blank on recognising The Killers when not one but two of their tracks drifted out the speakers.
Here's a random WC sticker picture...how did 1.FC Kӧln find their way to Wigan?
After visting those couple of venues we decided to make our way back to the Beer Festival.
This was Friday's vintage transport which put a smile on our faces, even if we were overtaken by a small child in an electric toy jeep on the bus station concourse.
After a mellow and easy-going afternoon session at the beer festival, we found ourselves back in the centre of Wigan.
A short walk from the bus station took us into a quieter part of town, where our next destination was a craft bar in the former British Legion building.Real Crafty (9 Upper Dicconson Street, Wigan, WN1 2AD)
This was the Greater Manchester regional pub of the year in 2022 and appears to be the place to get your unusual Untappd check-ins. There were 30-or-so taps lining the back of the bar, necessitating some staring at the TV screens as the beer listing looped around.
I'm usually wary of any bar with an office-like suspended ceiling, but the beer selection more than excused this feature.
Ooooh! Cheesecakes reimagined as a beer, you say? From Nottingham's Neon Raptor? That'll do.
The 8% 'Love Taker' pastry stout may not have been the most sensible pick on this long day out, but it was quite marvellous. Should you prefer to stick with the cask, Marble, Ossett and Wigan Brewhouse provided the selection on this visit. Real Crafty is somewhere I'd linger for longer on a less full-on day.
But this was a full-on day and we were soon making a half-mile walk north along the side of Mesnes Park, on our way to another of Wigan's current Good Beer Guide entries.
Sherrington's (57 Kenyan Road, Wigan, WN1 2DU)
This was doing a roaring Friday evening trade with all tables on the ground floor and outside on the patio on a balmy March evening taken. That relegated us to sitting upstairs away from the action, which probably dampened my enthusiasm for the place a little. It certainly scuppered my photography, although no denying that the ale selection is fairly satisfying.
Cask ales on the bar were local Wily Fox 'Crafty Fox' and 'Dublin Up', alongside Bowness 'Swan Blonde' and Fyne 'Jarl'.
A half of Crafty Fox and a half of the keg 7% Rivington 'Monte Carlo's and El Dorado's' was my order. That'll be the strongest beer on offer - I'll never learn.
Gareth had spotted that we'd passed another venue on our Wigan Ale Trail leaflet on the walk to Sherrington's, although it had cunningly changed its name to confuse us.
Docs Alehouse had become the Yellow Monkey...
The Yellow Monkey (85 Mesnes Street, Wigan, WN1 1QJ)
We entered to the sound of Billy Idol, two dogs provided trip hazards, and there was a buzz of jovial conversation in this converted shop unit turned micro pub.
Cask ales on offer were a second sighting in a row of local Wily Fox 'Crafty Fox' an Fyne Ales 'Jarl'. Being as I'd just sampled the local brew, I opted for a pint of Argyll's finest, served in tip-top condition.
The two dogs greeting us on entry - or any of those on the patio at Sherrington's for that matter - were no match for this fella called Bobby, who'd made himself comfortable at the back of the Yellow Monkey.
No you ask him if he wouldn't mind moving so we can sit on the sofa...
That left us with a walk through the dark streets back into town, where we figured we'd tick off The Raven from the Ale Trail leaflet.
No you ask him if he wouldn't mind moving so we can sit on the sofa...

I really enjoyed our time in this laid-back micro, chatting to the dog owners ("How much does Bobby eat? A shit-load"), enjoying the beer, stroking dogs and being treated to a decent music playlist.
The Raven (5 Wallgate, Wigan, WN1 1LD)
Ossett 'Silver King' was my pick here, the other choices being Wainwright and Plum Porter. This may be a more pedestrian selection of ales than the places we'd been earlier (and the Bay City Rollers 'Give a Little Love' made for less appealing background music) but the Raven was well worth a visit. It featured some great green tiling on the corridor and wooden panelling around the seats we took in the front room, renovated and restored in 2012.
Not that I dared take any pictures, having been quizzed by the staff about why I'd snapped a photo of the pub from outside.
Ossett 'Silver King' was my pick here, the other choices being Wainwright and Plum Porter. This may be a more pedestrian selection of ales than the places we'd been earlier (and the Bay City Rollers 'Give a Little Love' made for less appealing background music) but the Raven was well worth a visit. It featured some great green tiling on the corridor and wooden panelling around the seats we took in the front room, renovated and restored in 2012.
Not that I dared take any pictures, having been quizzed by the staff about why I'd snapped a photo of the pub from outside.
We still somehow found our way back to the John Bull Chophouse for a rock-sound-tracked end of the evening and that extra pint of Thwaites that would guarantee a fuzzy head in the morning.
Next up: one more Holt's heritage pub in Wigan and a quick side-trip on the train to St Helens.
Next up: one more Holt's heritage pub in Wigan and a quick side-trip on the train to St Helens.