What to do on a wet Tuesday afternoon when you're free of work, and the garden is having a long luxurious soak? The pub of course! Several for preference, which is why I found myself thirsty and dripping at Langley Mill station recently, and with a bit of a walk in mind. A walk that got so wet I eventually decided the bus was the only sensible walking option, and in so doing I unwittingly joined the ranks of a growing number of pub and beer enthusiasts doing what's become known as the Rainbow One Route. And I thought I was just out for a stroll and a few pints...
Turns out the 'Rainbow One' is a bus route that runs in a north/westerly direction from Nottingham along the A610, stopping at a number of sizeable settlements before eventually depositing passengers into the Derbyshire towns of Ripley or Alfreton. What turned a standard county bus route into something of a big-day-out for those of us with an interest in beer and pubs is the transformation that the areas drinking scene has undergone in recent years, particularly with regard to those new-fangled Micropubs.
Now I couldn't begin to guess how many micropubs are trading along or near the bus route, suffice to say that just one of the stopping points, the former coal mining town of Eastwood, has no less than five of them! That's an awful lot of speciality beer venues for one small area, and a good clue as to why you'll find the area thick with beer enthusiasts whenever buses are running and pubs are open.
But I wasn't there for the micropubs, which is just as well because many of them are not open on a Tuesday afternoon! No, my interest was in the older, more traditional boozers in the area, and particularly those which maintain the traditions of games play, still relatively common despite the efforts of some of the less 'local' pub-owning companies. Because whilst enterprising individuals and imaginative local brewers are doing their best to create a thriving beer and pub scene in the area, the lumbering national brewers and pubcos seem hell-bent on doing precisely the opposite. Closing, or repurposing pubs with off-the-peg refurbishments that have little regard for individuality or local distinctiveness.
Greene King are now one of the major pub-owning concern in the area, the unfortunate result of Hardys & Hansons, the local brewery based at nearby Kimberley, selling out to them in 2006. When Greene King bought-up and subsequently closed the Kimberley Brewery, they inherited a substantial pub estate made-up predominantly of the kind of solid traditional community locals that national pub companies have little interest in these days. Since day-one of the takeover, the more traditional boozers in the area have been under threat. The New White Bull in nearby Giltbrook is a classic example, a pub that was well-loved by its locals, but despite strong opposition is now yet another pub-shaped Co-operative store. A similar fate was proposed by Greene King for the Foresters Arms in Newthorpe, but thankfully local opposition prevailed this time around, and the pub survives to take its place on the Rainbow One Route.
The Foresters Arms is tucked away in a residential area at the heart of Newthorpe village. Just a short walk from the bus route but well worth the detour (there were beers from Castle Rock, Dancing Duck, and Oakham Ales when I popped in). Under threat of demolition, villagers and locals of the pub rallied round and formed a campaigning group (Save Our Foresters Arms - SOFA), garnering 700 signatures for a petition in very short-order. Clearly Greene King had underestimated the genuine local support for the pub and promptly backed down. Since then, the Foresters has gone from strength to strength, revitalised by a community who clearly value their local pub, under new ownership, and with a much improved beer range. The pub is a smart but traditional two-room pub with a beautifully maintained garden to the rear, which is where you'll also find the pubs well-used traditional Skittle Alley.
As you can see in the images above, Long Alley Skittles in the area north of Derby and Nottingham is distinguished by alleys that are more often than not located outdoors, and sometimes entirely uncovered. The alley at the Foresters is partially covered, only the unfortunate thrower has to brave whatever the English weather is throwing at them on the evening of a match. A good compromise for venues in the local Ilkeston & District and Border Skittles Leagues where some alleys remain entirely uncovered. With skittles often a wet-weather game in the north Midlands, the pins are given a wipe-over with Linseed Oil between games (above). A full set of skittles and balls comes in at around £250, so it's important to keep them in good shape throughout the season.
A wooden return chute for the balls, like the one shown above, is becoming an increasingly rare sight at outdoor alleys now. This one is painted and well-maintained, others have been allowed to rot through neglect or lack of use. Whilst I've seen one or two steel constructions for the job in the Newark area, most have had the wood replaced with a functional, but not exactly attractive plastic pipe, so it's nice to see an older one like this still in use at the pub.
You know you're in a pub where the locals take their Darts seriously when the board comes complete with a deeply-grooved sharpening stone like the one shown above. Darts and Dominoes are played at the Foresters in the Eastwood & Distict Darts & Dominoes League, and with some success judging by the number of trophies and shields on display in the bar.
Turns out the 'Rainbow One' is a bus route that runs in a north/westerly direction from Nottingham along the A610, stopping at a number of sizeable settlements before eventually depositing passengers into the Derbyshire towns of Ripley or Alfreton. What turned a standard county bus route into something of a big-day-out for those of us with an interest in beer and pubs is the transformation that the areas drinking scene has undergone in recent years, particularly with regard to those new-fangled Micropubs.
Now I couldn't begin to guess how many micropubs are trading along or near the bus route, suffice to say that just one of the stopping points, the former coal mining town of Eastwood, has no less than five of them! That's an awful lot of speciality beer venues for one small area, and a good clue as to why you'll find the area thick with beer enthusiasts whenever buses are running and pubs are open.
But I wasn't there for the micropubs, which is just as well because many of them are not open on a Tuesday afternoon! No, my interest was in the older, more traditional boozers in the area, and particularly those which maintain the traditions of games play, still relatively common despite the efforts of some of the less 'local' pub-owning companies. Because whilst enterprising individuals and imaginative local brewers are doing their best to create a thriving beer and pub scene in the area, the lumbering national brewers and pubcos seem hell-bent on doing precisely the opposite. Closing, or repurposing pubs with off-the-peg refurbishments that have little regard for individuality or local distinctiveness.
Greene King are now one of the major pub-owning concern in the area, the unfortunate result of Hardys & Hansons, the local brewery based at nearby Kimberley, selling out to them in 2006. When Greene King bought-up and subsequently closed the Kimberley Brewery, they inherited a substantial pub estate made-up predominantly of the kind of solid traditional community locals that national pub companies have little interest in these days. Since day-one of the takeover, the more traditional boozers in the area have been under threat. The New White Bull in nearby Giltbrook is a classic example, a pub that was well-loved by its locals, but despite strong opposition is now yet another pub-shaped Co-operative store. A similar fate was proposed by Greene King for the Foresters Arms in Newthorpe, but thankfully local opposition prevailed this time around, and the pub survives to take its place on the Rainbow One Route.
The Foresters Arms is tucked away in a residential area at the heart of Newthorpe village. Just a short walk from the bus route but well worth the detour (there were beers from Castle Rock, Dancing Duck, and Oakham Ales when I popped in). Under threat of demolition, villagers and locals of the pub rallied round and formed a campaigning group (Save Our Foresters Arms - SOFA), garnering 700 signatures for a petition in very short-order. Clearly Greene King had underestimated the genuine local support for the pub and promptly backed down. Since then, the Foresters has gone from strength to strength, revitalised by a community who clearly value their local pub, under new ownership, and with a much improved beer range. The pub is a smart but traditional two-room pub with a beautifully maintained garden to the rear, which is where you'll also find the pubs well-used traditional Skittle Alley.
As you can see in the images above, Long Alley Skittles in the area north of Derby and Nottingham is distinguished by alleys that are more often than not located outdoors, and sometimes entirely uncovered. The alley at the Foresters is partially covered, only the unfortunate thrower has to brave whatever the English weather is throwing at them on the evening of a match. A good compromise for venues in the local Ilkeston & District and Border Skittles Leagues where some alleys remain entirely uncovered. With skittles often a wet-weather game in the north Midlands, the pins are given a wipe-over with Linseed Oil between games (above). A full set of skittles and balls comes in at around £250, so it's important to keep them in good shape throughout the season.
A wooden return chute for the balls, like the one shown above, is becoming an increasingly rare sight at outdoor alleys now. This one is painted and well-maintained, others have been allowed to rot through neglect or lack of use. Whilst I've seen one or two steel constructions for the job in the Newark area, most have had the wood replaced with a functional, but not exactly attractive plastic pipe, so it's nice to see an older one like this still in use at the pub.
You know you're in a pub where the locals take their Darts seriously when the board comes complete with a deeply-grooved sharpening stone like the one shown above. Darts and Dominoes are played at the Foresters in the Eastwood & Distict Darts & Dominoes League, and with some success judging by the number of trophies and shields on display in the bar.
4 comments:
What a great post. Good to get the GK takeover background and I'm sure I remember Alan sharing a similar view... rainbow route looks great addition and within my range! Of all your posts I reckon that is possibly the best maintained skittles alley
Britain Beermat
Thanks for that Beermat. Of course it's quite possible that if Hardys and Hansons were still brewing they may have closed and demolished as many pubs as GK have. Either way it's a lot of very traditional old boozers changed for the worse or closed forever. It doesn't help that the GK brewed 'Kimberley' beers, and other brands that these pubs are selling now are nowhere near as drinkable as the originals. I consider myself very lucky if I find the XX Mild in a former Kimberley pub, one of the very few I like from GK. The skittle alley is a beaut.
Fantastic to see the outside Long Alley. It seems bizarre to us Southern softies (we're in the South West really but nevertheless...) that a game should be played outside where everyone is stood around in the cold. The only time 'rain stopped play' in our version of skittles was when in the pub where we were playing, a cold riser parted company with the cistern in a loo upstairs and water poured though the ceiling onto the alley!
Many are being covered over now, it is after all becoming a game for the more senior pub-goers. It's also predominantly a Summer game so avoids the really harsh weather. Traditionally play would have retired to the bar during the winter, and I'd imagine practically every pub in the area would have had a Devil Amongst The Tailors at one time.
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