A second post from Nottingham, containing a quartet of pubs outside the city centre, a superb pub dog, hanging baskets, live music, and a 6% strong premium ale from Tyne & Wear which slowed me down somewhat.
After visiting several central pubs, I elected to explore further afield, catching a bus eastwards to Gedling.
This one'll do...
After visiting several central pubs, I elected to explore further afield, catching a bus eastwards to Gedling.
This one'll do...
Gedling was once a village on the southern edge of Sherwood Forest, although it has long been swallowed up into the city, a busy collier operating here throughout the 20th century. Gedling Borough is huge, but Gedling itself is home to around 6,800 folk who are very limited pub-wise. Just the Gedling Inn at one point, which explains why Castle Rock spotted this as a location to expand to.

The Willowbrook (13 Main Road, Gedling, Nottingham, NG4 3HQ)
The Willowbrook was a club for many years before being purchased by Castle Rock in 2014, refurbished and opened as their 20th venue.
It's one of the city's Art Deco pubs, although not as striking as the likes of The Crown or Vale.
There were four ales on offer from Castle Rock themselves: ''Harvest Pale', Elsie Mo', 'Preservation' and 'Screech Owl', plus an Adnams football special and Timothy Taylor 'Landlord'. I returned the Preservation as undrinkable and despite an inistance that it only went on that morning this was switched graciously for the Adnams 'Golazzo!'
It's one of the city's Art Deco pubs, although not as striking as the likes of The Crown or Vale.
There were four ales on offer from Castle Rock themselves: ''Harvest Pale', Elsie Mo', 'Preservation' and 'Screech Owl', plus an Adnams football special and Timothy Taylor 'Landlord'. I returned the Preservation as undrinkable and despite an inistance that it only went on that morning this was switched graciously for the Adnams 'Golazzo!'

Most of the late afternoon customers had chosen to sun themselves with a choice of benches out front or a patio area to the rear. So it wasn't especially thrilling sat inside in front of the tennis in what was a very quiet visit.
I strolled back down to the Burton Road, crossing the boundary into Carlton and making my way to the magnificent-looking Old Volunteer pub.
The Old Volunteer (35 Burton Road, Carlton, Nottingham, NG4 3DQ)
You'll have to trust me that the frontage is magnificent - the direction of the sun meant I ended up with a picture focussed on a bright white wall.
The first record of a pub on this site dates back to 1832. It's been tied to Ind Coope and Ansell's breweries over the years until falling into disrepair in the early 2000's. New owners took over in 2014 and revitalised the pub.
There were two banks of 5 hand pumps stretched across a big bar counter from which I picked a Jolly Boys 'Supa Citra', brewed up in Barnsley.
A fine pint, in a cracking pub with Stevie Wonder playing from the speakers and an uncontested best pub dog of the day...
I strolled back down to the Burton Road, crossing the boundary into Carlton and making my way to the magnificent-looking Old Volunteer pub.
The Old Volunteer (35 Burton Road, Carlton, Nottingham, NG4 3DQ)
You'll have to trust me that the frontage is magnificent - the direction of the sun meant I ended up with a picture focussed on a bright white wall.
The first record of a pub on this site dates back to 1832. It's been tied to Ind Coope and Ansell's breweries over the years until falling into disrepair in the early 2000's. New owners took over in 2014 and revitalised the pub.
There were two banks of 5 hand pumps stretched across a big bar counter from which I picked a Jolly Boys 'Supa Citra', brewed up in Barnsley.
A fine pint, in a cracking pub with Stevie Wonder playing from the speakers and an uncontested best pub dog of the day...

Leaving the Volunteer, I caught a bus to take me a little way along Carlton Hill for a new Wetherspoon's tick and a spot of tea.
The Free Man (334-336 Carlton Hill, Carlton, NG4 1JD)
This building spent over 40-years as a Co-Op store before being converted into Carlton's JDW in 2010.
Being a supermarket conversion it's pretty plain - a mainly rectangular room with little natural light and regimented tables and chairs.
Beyond the expected Spoons cask ales only Moorhouse 'Pendle Witches Brew' and Maxim 'Maximus' were showing on the app.
So it was a foolhardy 6% Maximus strong ale that I ordered to accompany my food.
If ever a beer could look like it's capable of causing damage in a picture, it's this one...
The Free Man (334-336 Carlton Hill, Carlton, NG4 1JD)
This building spent over 40-years as a Co-Op store before being converted into Carlton's JDW in 2010.
Being a supermarket conversion it's pretty plain - a mainly rectangular room with little natural light and regimented tables and chairs.
Beyond the expected Spoons cask ales only Moorhouse 'Pendle Witches Brew' and Maxim 'Maximus' were showing on the app.
So it was a foolhardy 6% Maximus strong ale that I ordered to accompany my food.
If ever a beer could look like it's capable of causing damage in a picture, it's this one...

I grabbed a table by the open front doors - the best of both worlds as it was too hot for me on the benches out front in direct sunshine and too hot within the depths of the pub.

One sweet potato chickpea and spinach curry later, straining at the belt a little, I was ambling along the road and deciding it would be a good idea to duck into the Lincoln Green-run Brickyard pub, a recent Good Beer Guide entry.
The Brickyard (1A Standhill Road, Carlton, Nottingham, NG4 1JL)
The second pub on this post which used to be a social club. In this case, the Latvian Social Club which sat empty for a couple of years before Lincoln Green stepped in, opening in the spring of 2018. It's almost as if something utterly catastrophic happened in 2016 causing the Latvians to abandon their club...hmmm.
The pub is neatly designed with a central bar creating several seating areas out of a single room.
The name is a nod to the big Thorneywood Brick Works which supplied the bricks to build St Pancras station, and would have been nearby prior to the 1960s when the works were replaced by housing.
Here's the beer list...
A Lincoln Green 'Meadow Song' for me - the one they've put the most effort into, utlisiing all the colours of chalk pens to recreate flowers of the meadow. Unsurprisingly, a floral pale ale.
This is a pub I was comfy in - a decent number of punters in early evening, the odd Forest shirt and pub dog, a bit of decent '60s music, and a staff member who recognised the obscure band on my t-shirt and began talking to me about psyche rock and music venues in Brussells.
The Brickyard (1A Standhill Road, Carlton, Nottingham, NG4 1JL)
The second pub on this post which used to be a social club. In this case, the Latvian Social Club which sat empty for a couple of years before Lincoln Green stepped in, opening in the spring of 2018. It's almost as if something utterly catastrophic happened in 2016 causing the Latvians to abandon their club...hmmm.
The pub is neatly designed with a central bar creating several seating areas out of a single room.
The name is a nod to the big Thorneywood Brick Works which supplied the bricks to build St Pancras station, and would have been nearby prior to the 1960s when the works were replaced by housing.
Here's the beer list...
A Lincoln Green 'Meadow Song' for me - the one they've put the most effort into, utlisiing all the colours of chalk pens to recreate flowers of the meadow. Unsurprisingly, a floral pale ale.
This is a pub I was comfy in - a decent number of punters in early evening, the odd Forest shirt and pub dog, a bit of decent '60s music, and a staff member who recognised the obscure band on my t-shirt and began talking to me about psyche rock and music venues in Brussells.

As is often the case, there are a couple of less obvious pubs I'd like to have visited in Carlton, but time was flying by. Another bus took me back to Sneinton market where I hopped off and made my way to this stunner...

Bath Inn (1 Handel Street, Nottingham, NG3 1JE)
I wondered how I'd never been here before, but then discovered the Bath Inn only reopened in 2021 after a long period of closure.
Well...they're making sure no-one will miss it now with an extravagant display of hanging baskets, flags, bows and whistles. Possibly not whistles.
I didn't really explore the interior of this pub properly because it was fairly busy and the effects of the Maxim Maximus hadn't worn off. It's a place that deserves a return visit.
Cask beers available were all local: Pheasantry 'Best Bitter', Black Iris 'Endless Summer', Lenton Lane 'Twist & Stout' and Blue Monkey 'BG Sips'.
An 'Endless Summer' for me - it's beginning to feel like one - the Basford brewery's session IPA.
Enjoyed on a comfy side table with plenty of quirky pub decorations to look at whilst the soundtrack was Glenn Miller, Sinatra, Bobby Darin, and The Andrews Sisters.
Great music, great pub.
A short walk took me to Billy Bootleggers, proudly advertising itself as a Dive Bar.
Well...they're making sure no-one will miss it now with an extravagant display of hanging baskets, flags, bows and whistles. Possibly not whistles.
I didn't really explore the interior of this pub properly because it was fairly busy and the effects of the Maxim Maximus hadn't worn off. It's a place that deserves a return visit.
Cask beers available were all local: Pheasantry 'Best Bitter', Black Iris 'Endless Summer', Lenton Lane 'Twist & Stout' and Blue Monkey 'BG Sips'.
An 'Endless Summer' for me - it's beginning to feel like one - the Basford brewery's session IPA.
Enjoyed on a comfy side table with plenty of quirky pub decorations to look at whilst the soundtrack was Glenn Miller, Sinatra, Bobby Darin, and The Andrews Sisters.
Great music, great pub.
A short walk took me to Billy Bootleggers, proudly advertising itself as a Dive Bar.

If you think Billy Bootleggers is a dubious name, it used to be called Percy Picklebackers!
No cask ale, so I sat with a Goose Island 'Midway IPA'.
I ended the evening here - rather than in Nottingham's central cask ale pubs - because the bar offered a couple of live bands playing on a corridor free-of-charge.
No cask ale, so I sat with a Goose Island 'Midway IPA'.
I ended the evening here - rather than in Nottingham's central cask ale pubs - because the bar offered a couple of live bands playing on a corridor free-of-charge.

In the picture above is a band called Skorts from Brookyn, NY, playing a sort of nineties shoegaze/post punk mash-up.
That ended a good day out in Nottingham, a city I've visited so many times yet still manage to find new venues.
Including the next morning's breakfast stop in the Spoons by Trent Uni.
That ended a good day out in Nottingham, a city I've visited so many times yet still manage to find new venues.
Including the next morning's breakfast stop in the Spoons by Trent Uni.

A very average breakfast, if I'm honest, in a pub that was maybe resting on it's laurels since the students went home for summer.
But it fuelled an epedition to try and find football stickers for all the European clubs that had visited the City Ground last season...
But it fuelled an epedition to try and find football stickers for all the European clubs that had visited the City Ground last season...
Ah well, not all of them.
I really should have gone to some of those games.
I really should have gone to some of those games.




















































