The Fox at Wilbarston has already featured on this blog, but that was more than eight years ago now and as we all know, eight years is a very long time in the pub trade. Since then the pub has changed hands more than once, and typically for a rural village pub, some of that time has been spent closed, future uncertain. The nearby George at Ashley is the current mothballed pub in the Welland Valley, its own future far from certain, the Queens Head down the road at Sutton Bassett has almost certainly closed for good, and whilst my own old village local the Red Lion in Middleton may be in better shape, it's currently trading as an Indian Restaurant, not a pub. So you'll perhaps understand why it's so pleasing that the Fox Inn has emerged from the recent national lockdown largely unscathed, and is now open for safe, socially-distanced trade.
The age and importance of the pub as a wayside Inn can be gauged from the substantial size of the cellar, which unusually has two barrel drops, the lower of which is shown in the foreground here |
In truth, these ups and downs in recent years have done little to affect my appreciation of the Fox. It remains a typical and very traditional village local, thankfully avoiding the kind of serious decline that so often leads to permanent closure or inappropriate gentrification. It's also one of just a handful of pubs in the area where the connection with the regions most traditional pub game has been maintained. It wasn't so long ago that practically every pub in the area had a Northamptonshire Skittles Table. The George in Ashley, Royal George Cottingham, Plough Inn Drayton, Sun Inn Great Easton, Talbot Gretton, Red Lion Middleton, Sondes Arms Rockingham, and White Horse Stoke Albany all had tables until relatively recently. Now only the Spread Eagle in Cottingham and the Fox Inn maintain the tradition of skittles play locally.
These two photographs were taken several years ago when the Skittles Table and Dartboard were located side-by-side in the busiest part of the pub, just to the right of the front entrance and adjacent to the bar counter. In fact this would have been around the time I was playing for a Red Lion midweek team, and if I remember correctly we actually used the Fox as a home venue for a short time following the untimely closure of Middletons village pub at the halfway point of the season. I certainly recall playing either a league or cup match on this table at some point, and used to cycle to the pub on occasion to get a bit of practice in during the quieter afternoon sessions.
The skittles table sat neatly in the bay of a window, hence the sturdy metal grill across the back to stop wayward cheeses smashing into panes of glass. When a match was being played the rattle and clunk of cheeses crashing into boxwood pins would tend to dominate the bar area, so both the Skittles Table and Dartboard have now been removed from the main trading area of the pub to somewhere less intrusive.
So the only major change in the layout of the Fox is the creation of a Games Room (below) in what was originally a separate dining area. Now don't get me wrong, I think there's nothing better than having traditional games like these situated at the heart of the pub, on show and part of the general goings-on that make pubs such special social spaces, but in this case I think this is a good move that makes a lot of sense. There's no doubt that at many pubs, dining and pub games (and skittles in particular) make for uneasy bedfellows, so moving the noise of play away from the main bar areas will undoubtedly make the pub a more attractive space for those not actually playing. It should also help safeguard traditional games like these at the Fox, something that could so easily have been lost in the refurbishment.
The skittles table sat neatly in the bay of a window, hence the sturdy metal grill across the back to stop wayward cheeses smashing into panes of glass. When a match was being played the rattle and clunk of cheeses crashing into boxwood pins would tend to dominate the bar area, so both the Skittles Table and Dartboard have now been removed from the main trading area of the pub to somewhere less intrusive.
So the only major change in the layout of the Fox is the creation of a Games Room (below) in what was originally a separate dining area. Now don't get me wrong, I think there's nothing better than having traditional games like these situated at the heart of the pub, on show and part of the general goings-on that make pubs such special social spaces, but in this case I think this is a good move that makes a lot of sense. There's no doubt that at many pubs, dining and pub games (and skittles in particular) make for uneasy bedfellows, so moving the noise of play away from the main bar areas will undoubtedly make the pub a more attractive space for those not actually playing. It should also help safeguard traditional games like these at the Fox, something that could so easily have been lost in the refurbishment.