Monday, 23 June 2025

Lichfield Pub Explorations

In which I spend an day in Staffordshire's second city, discovering micro pubs, dictionaries, Bathams, and good value Bass.

As I arrived early on an empty stomach my first stop was in Spoons.
The Acorn Inn (16-18 Tamworth Street, Lichfield, WS13 6JJ)
A reasonable hanging basket effort, perfectly parked mobility scooter, and a good cross-section of morning punters in a pub that stretches a fair way back from those front doors. Lichfield's JDW opened in 1998 and was named after the pub that once stood next to it.
On the bar I spotted local beers from Black Hole and Silhill breweries.  But it was 10:30am, and I was being sensible - a breakfast only visit.  

I made a goof on the app and forgot to add the hot drink to my side of two slices of toast.  Without the 49p coffee it's not a bargain item on the menu - in fact, you could almost get a pint of Jaipur for the price of these two slices of bread.  And to top it off they had one of those rotten toasters that only toasts one side.  Bah. 

Let's make up for it with a bit of sightseeing...
Everything was looking glorious in the May sunshine that preceded the Great Drought of 2025.
I ambled through the pedestrianised city centre streets with a market in full swing.
Then past Minster Pool and on to the cathedral and Erasmus House.

If the tourist board had been beaming out a 'come to Lichfield' message over the years I've completely missed it.  It was the powers of Life About Football who tempted me to visit with tales of bargain Bass.

I looped back to where I'd started at Spoons, straight across the road from Beer Guide entry Beerbohm.
Beerbohm (19 Tamworth Street, Lichfield, WS13 6JP)
This is very much a Belgian-style cafe bar.  Local CAMRA-type folks in the window boldly tackling the Sarah Hughes 'Dark Ruby Mild' before noon, plenty of other customers on a mix of pints and pots of tea, sat under a busy wall of pictures and mirrors facing the bar counter.
Surprisingly busy so early.  Relegating me to the least convenient, least comfy table in the room.
To be fair, the website does say there's "A large comfortable upstairs room", but I figured I'd be all by myself up there.
Other than the ruby mild, cask options came from Salopian, Peakstones Rock, and this little political hot potato from Church End...
 
I liked the pump clip but didn't fancy the beer, opting instead for the Peakstones 'Pugin's Gold Bicentenary Ale'.
Sipping that first beer of the day, I could see the Beacon just across the road, so figured I'd call in once I'd finished. 

The Beacon (20 Tamworth Street, Lichfield, WS13 6JJ)
This was previously a pub called the Pug, prior to Titanic taking over in the autumn of 2024.  It's a bold place to open a pub - two GBG bars across the road (more on the second one later), Spoons as neighbours, and the Quill and Scholar two doors down with happy hour cocktails.  I figure you could complete a Tamworth Street pub crawl in less than 200 steps.

The problem with the Beacon is that it was oh so painfully quiet.  Two other customers around a corner, a staff member lurking behind the pork pie counter, no TVs, no music.
I enjoyed a half of Titanic 'Plum Porter' but it wasn't a thrilling visit.
For the record, alongside six Titanic real ales, there were guest ales in the form of Cameron's Motorhead-themed 'Road Crew' and Salopian 'Oracle'.

Heading back outside, I decided to poke my head into Samuel Johnson's birthplace, now a museum and bookshop.  He looked a little bit like this...

The museum contains a replica of Johnson's dictionary, allowing me to look up 'contrafribularities' and 'pericombobulation'.
After that literary and cultural aside, it was time to find another pub, this time a Good Beer Guide regular on a quiet street just beyond the shopping streets.
I have no answer as to why the Horse & Jockey has an elephant on its roof. 

The Horse and Jockey (8-10 Sandford Street, Lichfield, WS13 6QA)
"Over 21s only" says the a-board outside, so lucky I've got some ID on me.  Other than the young chap behind the bar, there were few folks inside the Horse and Jockey who were likely to fall foul of the age policy.  But it was doing a decent early afternoon trade in real ale and cobs.
I perused the pump clips and ordered a pint of Batham's Best.
Somehow I missed the fact that this is a Bass stronghold.  It has its own hand pump hidden around the corner and I'm not observant enough to spot the chalk-board hung right in front of me with 'Bass served here' written on it.  Never mind - the Bathams is something I'd never see back home and is a cracking pint.
Plus, I had the Life After Football backup for Bass...

George IV (34 Bore Street, Lichfield, WS13 6LU)
I get a scowl from the fella outside who spotted me taking the pub picture.  Freddie McGregor 'Just Don't Wanna be Lonely' playing on arrival.  Horse-racing on the TV next to a wallpaper print of an old map of Lichfield.
Bass on the bar (bad luck, Wainwright fans).
No bar staff.  "She'll be back in minute" promises the local next to me between swigs from his bottle of Katy cider.

There was a wide mix of life in the George - tradesfolk in trousers with lots of chunky pockets, a chap with a whippet, an old boy with his crossword, heavily tattoed youngsters on the Peroni.
There was a moment of action in the front room when a chap barely managed to stay on his feet after sending furniture toppling.  
"It's his fault," he said (possibly with some more colourful language) indicating the absentee whose chair was upended.  "He's hung all his heavy shopping bags on the back of the chair and made it top 'eavy.  Now I've gone and trod on his sausages!"
 
And that Bass?
Not a bad pint, whilst not being quite good enough to tempt me to change plans and stay for a second.
Even at a bargain £2.95.

One last port of call before heading to the train station.
The Whippet Inn (21 Tamworth Street, Lichfield, WS13 6JP)
This was back on Tamworth Street again - one door down the road from Beerbohm.
The Whippet is about as good lookin' as micros get - plus top marks for the signage above the door.  Inside there is reputedly s
pace for 45 - 25 on the benches - although I wouldn't fancy squeezing in as the 25th patron.  It felt pretty cosy with half that number in.
They served up another great selection of cask ales from which I picked the Sureshot porter 'Don't Get In the Kiln'.  Sat on the bench by the window, reading the local CAMRA mag with a quality bluesy rock soundtrack, this was a superb final beer.
Having arrived in Lichfield without really clicking that it was such a picturesque and pleasant sensibly-sized cathedral city, I came away a happy visitor. 
Highly recommended for a spot of tourism and pub patronage.  Just don't hang your sausages on the back of your chair when you're popping for that Bass refill in the George IV.

Thursday, 29 May 2025

Horsham Pub Explorations

A trip to West Sussex to a town that I've been keen to visit for some time, tempting us with good looking pubs and bars and two brewery tap rooms.

My pre-noon day started in Wetherspoon's which I seem to be subconsciously ticking whenever there's one nearby.  Mrs PropUptheBar and the dog hung out in the sunshine by the mini-waterfall in front of the Olive Branch, on account of Spoons not liking the dog and him not caring much for them either. 
The Lynd Cross (1 Springfield Way, Horsham, RH12 2PJ)
They weren't missing much, to be honest.
This is an old retail unit that used to be Horsham Pine Shop.  Now everyone in Horsham can have a £2.29 pint of Jaipur, but no-one's got any pine furniture.
It was in a bit of a state of chaos as the staff tried to juggle app orders, clearing the tables, and getting muddled on the till when the chap before me changed his mind from Freedom Breakfast to Large full English.
There wasn't much in the way of unusual guest beers, with an old South West favourite - Bays 'Devon Dumpling' - being the only lesser-seen ale on offer.  On reasonable form and just £1 for my swift half. 

Right, let's do the first Good Beer Guide pub...
The King's Arms (64 Bishopric, Horsham, RH12 1QN)
This used to be the King & Barnes tap, when the local brewery still existed 100 yards away.  It looks like it's gone through a few incarnations since, currently a wet-led free house.

It's a cracker.
Pianola in the doorway; 'bring your own food' sign; second-hand books on the fireplace (very Dean Koontz heavy); a mellow pub dog; and an enthusiastic chap behind the bar pointing out his local craft offerings.
On our visit, the cask line-up looked like this:
I went with the Downlands 'Cascade', a 3.8% recreation of the original Hophead.
A lovely flavoursome pale ale with a crisp bitter finish.

We had quite a trek to our next destination.  Through the busy town centre - past the railway station and over the train lines - round Harwood Way through the Horsham 'burbs until we found an alleyway into an industrial estate.
Brewery tap?  You guessed it...
Horsham Brewery Tap (22 Blatchford Close, Horsham, RH13 5RG)
This was of the more basic variety of tap rooms, just a couple of beer-fest-style benches outside and more seating and a darts board inside next to the brewing kit.

I wasn't sure if the hand pumps on the bar were just for show, but happily one of them dispensed my pick of 'Mick's Mild', a 5.2% smooth smoky brew.  Not the cheapest at £5.80, but such a great ale that I'm not grumbling.
Other than that, plenty of choice on the keg lines...

The tap room needed a few more customers to liven up our visit.  I ambled across the yard to investigate the vintage street lights laid out on the ground at what turned out to be the heritage lighting specialist neighbours.  The barman came out five minutes later and picked up the barrier which had blown over with it's 'no entry' signs, lest we spy on secrets of the heritage lighting trade.

Nothing to do, then, except admire the welly art...
Turns out everyone was at the other brewery tap nearby on this particular afternoon.
It's a 6 or 7 minute walk to get to Brolly Brewing - just follow the blokes from the next table at the Horsham Brewery who've set off moments before you. 
Brolly Brewing (Unit 8, Redkiln Close, Horsham, RH13 5QL)
Brolly have a pretty nifty set-up: their outdoor space about as pleasant as you can get on an industrial estate, complete with food van, musician, and perches on beer barrels.
Step inside the unit and it's divided in two with bar and seating on one side, brewery beyond stools and a propping ledge.
Shiny brewing kit picture alert!

There was a great line-up here at this 2025 Good Beer Guide destination.  Four cask hand pulls with two of their own brews alongside guests from Verdant and Oakham. Plus lots of tempting stuff on the keg lines including a sour and a double IPA.

I tried both the casks - happy to see another dark mild, the super 'Lifeline' being a more sensible 3.8%, the 'Spanky McDanky' hitting the spot too.
And we filled up with Mexican street food from the Saltio food truck.  Just don't ask Mrs PropUptheBar how her tummy was the next day after the super-hot salsa sauce and sour beer.

We could have sat all afternoon at Brolly - a lovely place with a very relaxed and friendly atmosphere on a Sunday afternoon.
But we needed to check in to our hotel and complete the beer guide pubs of town.
The first of which was a Brunning & Price, looking very rural in my picture, despite being just a few steps away from the modern pedestrianised shopping streets.
The Black Jug (31 North Street, Horsham, RH12 1RJ)
You already know what it looks like inside - several spaces surrounding a central bar, robust furniture, excessive old pictures, 'Reserved' signs on every single table.
But I've rarely had a bad beer in Brunning and Price and was pleased to see my third mild of the day - Langham Brewery's 'Triple XXX' 4.4% mild being another winner.
 
In the posh environs of B&P you get artistic heritage mild smut in the gents WC...

But never mind those sepia ladies in a state of undress.
I'm more concerned about where that Albert Brenot champagne cork is going...
We survived the Black Jug, steering clear of any late afternoon diners or reserved tables and sipping our ales in the secluded leafy courtyard out back.
The afternoon was rolling by alarmingly quickly and it was time for us to get checked  into the Travelodge.
I had apparently not ticked the ;room with a view' box... 
But a fine vista, balcony, jacuzzi and mini-bar would have been wasted on us.  There was no time for loitering as we had pizza and porter in mind at the Malt Shovel.
Handily just a few minutes walk from the hotel.
The Malt Shovel (15 Springfield Road, Horsham, RH12 2PG)
Another fine establishment, even if it wasn't especially busy on a Sunday evening.  The Malt Shovel is a fine town centre pub split into two halves with stone floor, dark wood panels, collection of old bottles on a high shelf, guard dog to navigate at the front door.

The real ale options were Burning Sky 'Waves Away' or 'Aurora', Downlands 'Oatmeal Stout', Surrey Hills 'Three Peaks' and a Thornbridge 'Lukas'.
A fine selection from which I went with the stout, brewed at Small Dole just inland from Brighton (they have an interesting and rather harsh policy on random brewery visitors on their website!)
No local CAMRA mags to read, so I had to make do with the first couple of volumes of the Licensed Houses and their Management books...

I really liked the Malt Shovel - a local music venue too - so was sorry to read local reports that the longstanding tenants are seemingly being ousted, putting its future of gigs and quality beer in doubt.

Next up, Piries Bar defeated us, plunging the Horsham Good Beer Guide completion into jeopardy.  How the heck had this small bar down an alleyway got a queue and two security guards on the door?  Sunday Karaoke, I later discovered.

So that just left us with the Anchor Tap...
The Anchor Tap (16 East Street, Horsham, RH12 1HL)
A stylish modern ale house with a lovely tiled floor and impressive selection of craft and cask. Enough chocolate porters and Vault City sours to keep Mrs PropUptheBar here for a second, as we settled into the quieter back room.
I stuck with a sensible cask, a well-kept Vibrant Forest 'PUPA' pale ale.
Horsham had proved a bit of a winner for a sunny Bank Holiday Sunday afternoon.
Good beer throughout our trip.  A decent varied selection of venues from the rickety bench outside the brewery tap to the cushioned leather benches in the ale house.
I just can't believe I didn't get to all the GBG pubs because I was beaten by karaoke.  Karaoke!  Bah! 

Tuesday, 27 May 2025

Wide Awake in Herne Hill

A whistle-stop pub crawl preceding the 2025 Wide Awake Festival in Brockwell Park.
A year ago, I managed to wear myself out before seeing any bands by racing around Spoons, pubs and a brewery tap in Brixton.  Surely I've learnt a lesson?

Veering east of Brixton, I intended to approach Brockwell Park by overground rail to Herne Hill.
Via Spoons, pubs and a brewery tap.  Of course.

Navigating across London on the Bakerloo line, I surfaced at Elephant & Castle, somewhere I haven't been for years and which is now completely unrecognisable to me.
My early-doors destination was a JDW in a sixties block that once housed the DHSS.
The Rockingham Arms (119 Newington Causeway, Elephant & Castle,London, SE1 6BN)
This is one of those pubs that elicits the CAMRA description "draws a mixed and lively crowd".  Yep, it certainly looked like it did, busy before midday with a diverse clientele.
The guest beer selection wasn't overly exciting with the only lesser-seen beer being Portobello 'Buckingham Best'.  Which was quite possibly past its best.

I just about made room for my pint amongst the table clutter...

Then passed 20-minutes frowning every time I took a sip of the beer and checking out the stage times and site map for the rest of the day.
Who'd be a festival organiser? 
Wide Awake! has been beset by problems this year. 
Unceremoniously shoved out the Saturday slot to a Friday by Field Day fest (who got the sunshine though, eh?!). 
Threatened by some local residents who won a legal challenge against Brockwell Live which could have prevented a whole series of outdoor events in the park going ahead. 
Under fire from some quarters for featuring headliners Kneecap, whose Mo Chara had been charged with terror offences. 
And I think I'm having a hard day at work when my headset stops working during a Teams meeting.

Luckily the festival was still going ahead, and to get me one step closer to the festival entrance, I boarded a train at Elephant & Castle overground and travelled the two stops to Herne Hill.  Step out the station and the 2025 Good Beer Guide listed Commercial is right in front of you.
The Commercial Tavern (210-212 Railton Road, Herne Hill, SE24 0JT)
Doing a decent pre-festival trade with all outdoor seats taken and a fair number of punters spread throughout the two rooms within. 

It's a nice enough pub, with a few traditional features disguised by the paint job and modern furnishings.  And seabass fillets and sandwiches for over a tenner aren't traditional pub fare.
There were three handpumps, the Harvey's 'Sussex Best' being pulled through when I arrived, leaving me with a choice of 'Wainwright' or Sharp's 'Twin Coast'.
In a plastic glass, 'cos you can't trust all these folks on their way to a music festival.

One reasonable pint of Twin Coast later, it was just a minute-or-so walk from the pedestrian street that the station and Commercial are located on to the railway arches with a brewery tap.
Bird House Brewery and Tap Room (Arch 1127, Bath Factory Estate, 41 Norwood Road, Herne Hill, SE24 9AJ)
This was the former home of one-time Canopy Brewery, prior to Bird House re-opening the railway arch in March 2024.
It's probably better to enjoy your cocktails, beer and pizza al-fresco on tables in the pleasant passageway running past the two arches that house Birdhouse.
But I'm a sucker for sitting by the brew kit under a corrugated ceiling.

There were six of the breweries own beers on draft: lager, pale, white, gold, amber, and stout.
Despite the weather tempting me towards the pale brews, I enjoyed the robust stout, entertained by a playlist featuring a host of the artists set to play the main stages later in the day.

Time for one more before sitting in a field drinking (marginally more) expensive beer in paper cups?
Yep, I figured I could squeeze in the three star ★★★ heritage pub.
The Half Moon (10 Half Moon Lane, Herne Hill, SE24 9HU)
The last time I was in here was in 2010 when space rockers Mugstar played in a back room launching their latest album (which isn't quite as impressive as it would be if I could tell you I saw U2 when they appeared here in 1980). 
Its time as a music venue came to an end in 2013, the back space now opened up to bright airy dining.  But it's the front snug that you really want to go and sit in.

The run of hand-pained mirrors is something else...
There was an inn on this site back in the 18th century but the pub we see today dates back to 1896.  It was designed in a luxurious Jacobethan Revival style by architect J.W. Brooker, its opulence due to the surrounding area being a prosperous home to the merchant classes, further enhanced by the arrival of the railway.

Fullers took over the pub in the 2010's and gave it a make-over.
So no surprise to see Pride and Hophead as the cask choice.
I know, I know...Dark Star 'Hophead' isn't the beer it once was, but I'm pretty impressed by the glass...
That was a decent and enjoyable pint, sat in a spectacular pub, 'Across 110th Street' playing in the background.


Right, onward to the music festival.
No repeat of the enormo-queue that we had to stand in last year, this time waltzing in through the south entrance via a sniffer dog that got tangled around me in overexcitement about my hay-fever tablets.
The craft beer bar was set up with a run of London brewery counters, featuring Brew By Numbers, Queer Brewing, Five Points, Anspach & Hobday, and several more that are skipping my mind right now.
I headed to one that I was unfamiliar with, Blondies, who brew their beer in the NE of the city in Lea Bridge.
Stout at a festival is a rarity and was my pick of the bunch.
That was a really tasty brew, although I'm skeptical what sort of measure I was getting for my hefty £7.90, unable to see quite how much froth you have in those paper cups.
Top marks for the Biriyani food stall who quite possibly filled me up with one of the best tubs of food I've ever had a festival.
I veered very much toward the guitar end of the music choice on a diverse bill.  Gurriers in the Shacklewell Arms tent made enough of a racket to wake up anyone who'd got a bit carried away on a lunchtime pub crawl.  As they finished, I nipped across to the Moth Club marquee to catch the last few tracks by reformed seventies Zamrock group W.I.T.C.H.

Martin Rev confounded.
CMAT was country-pop perfection.
Mannequin Pussy and Sprints were loud and angry about stuff.

L.A's Frankie & the Witch Fingers were my undoubted festival highlight.
And this was the best t-shirt I saw all day.
Everything came to a close with the nation's current most controversial band, Belfast rappers Kneecap drawing a big crowd to the main stage as dusk fell.
Another great day out at this music festival.
I'll be back next year, if they've got the energy to organise it all over again, but where will it be?