
Have you ever been to this award-winning boozer?

A mainstay of British life.
This community will focus on pubs and the pub trade, hopefully with a focus on more traditional boozers rather than corporate drinking spaces but we'll see where the tides carry us.
If you want a different beverage try:
Have you ever been to this award-winning boozer?
CAMRA’s official pub of the year 2025 is… The Bailey Head in Oswestry, Shropshire! According to the judges: ‘The pub is a rags-to-riches success story after the owners turned what was once a closed local into a haven for the local community.’
That focus on community was really what pushed the Bailey Head into the top spot, as CAMRA’s Awards Director Laura Emson explained; ‘There could not be a more deserving winner for the Pub of the Year than the Bailey Head. In a time when running a pub is a significant challenge, the commitment and enthusiasm Duncan and Grace show should be highly commended and seen as an example.’
The boozer not only sells a selection of quality beers and ciders, it is also ‘a hub for locals to come together for good causes through events like their charity pub quizzes and live music’, and its landlords say that they have a strict ‘everyone welcome’ policy. Owner Duncan Borrowman said: ‘Any person should feel happy and comfortable coming in by themselves an
Unopened can of beer found in Heywood pub ceiling 30 years later
The owners of a pub have been left baffled after finding an unopened can of beer in the roof - dating back more than 30 years.
The tin of Joseph Holt bitter was discovered in the ceiling during a major refurbishment of the pub in Greater Manchester.
The beer is no longer available in cans, only on draught or in mini kegs, and has not been for more than three decades.
It is now being preserved as a piece of history in a display cabinet behind the bar at the Starkey Arms on Manchester Road, Heywood.
Free pint per Nottingham Forest goal offer backfires with 7-0 win
The home team delivered for thirsty punters at the Gedling Inn in Nottinghamshire.
A pub scored an own goal with a promotion offering a free pint every time Nottingham Forest scored - only for the Reds to win 7-0.
The Gedling Inn, in Nottinghamshire, came up with the promotion to spread the word after it started to televise local Premier League games at the venue.
But the incentive backfired after Forest scored seven without reply against Brighton on Saturday - and almost 300 free beers were handed over the bar.
Landlady Beccy Webster said: "When the final whistle went, I just said 'phew!'"
Drinks flow and friends are made as people hunker down overnight at the Tan Hill Inn in North Yorkshire
“Do you want a shot?” asks Katy Sherrington from Durham, offering up a tiny glass of a pink liquid. Nobody is going anywhere at this point, so it would be rude not to accept.
On Saturday night at the Tan Hill Inn, Britain’s highest pub, the snow is falling and the crowd of about 30 people inside know they are probably stuck here for a couple of days. Throughout the place, at the northern edge of North Yorkshire, drinks are flowing and friends are being made.
Weather warnings for snow are in place across much of the UK, and the Met Office has advised the public to only make necessary journeys, with road closures, train and flight cancellations, and rural communities becoming cut off.
That is something the staff at the Tan Hill Inn, which is 528 metres (1,732ft) above sea level, are used to. The pub has a history of what people call “snow-ins” – in 2021, 61 punters who had come to watch an Oasis tribute band were trapped for three days.
So the team are well prepared. Thei
EXCLUSIVE After the Daily Star reported earlier this month that WWE watch parties in pubs and bars across the UK would end, the government has been urged to get involved to sort it out
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/21430053
The UK government is being urged to act now to allow British wrestling fans to watch big WWE shows in bars and pubs. WWE's move to Netflix happens on January 1 which will signal an end to “watch parties” across the country, where wrestling lovers gather inside pubs and bars to watch WWE's big monthly Premium Live Events – or PPVs for the older crowd.
And with WWE launching all of its live content on Netflix on January 6, the parties at pubs and bars will end as they are not allowed to show Netflix-streamed content in the way they were allowed to show content on Sky Sports or TNT Sports Box Office in the past.
One of the main organisers of the watch parties, Hooked on Wrestling, announced that their last set of events took place on last month with the Survivor Series War Games event, which saw fans launch a petition in a bid to force WWE to act on the issue.
And now MP Mike Reader – who has taken part in wrest
British pubs are worried they’ll run out of Guinness
The Irish stout, known for its distinctive warm brown color, creamy foam head and unique method of being poured (a proper pint of Guinness takes 119.5 seconds to pour), has long been known as the drink of choice for rugby lads and men at the pub.
Yet in the past two years, Guinness has skyrocketed in popularity, especially among young people and women.
From July to October, sales of beer decreased 0.5% in the UK, according to CGA, a data insights firm for food and drink businesses. Yet across the same period, sales of beer increased by 23.2% for Diageo, which owns the Guinness brand. Specifically, sales of Guinness in kegs grew by 20.9%.
By the end of October, Guinness was the top-selling beer in the UK by volume across 2024, according to Nielsen data that was shared with CNN.
With the sudden increase in demand, Diageo has told some pub owners that it would set allocation limits on Guinness to ensure distribution can last through the holiday season.
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“Over the p
Critics respond to PETA's suggestion The Sly Old Fox should change its name because its derogatory.
An animal rights group has been accused of undermining real issues after asking a pub to change its name, claiming it is offensive to foxes.
The People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals group (Peta) wrote to owners of The Sly Old Fox on Hurst Street, Birmingham, saying the name was "derogatory".
Instead, Elisa Allen from the campaign group asked them to consider swapping "sly" with "clever".
People on social media have said the request trivialised animal rights issues, but Ms Allen has hit back saying critics were getting their "knickers in a twist"
After the Oasis ticket row, experts say fluctuating charges could become the norm in other industries
Paying a premium for a flight during the school holidays or a cab at peak hours might be expected but fluctuating charges – otherwise known as surge pricing – could become the norm in other industries, say experts.
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The Wardour Street branch of O’Neill’s pub in Soho, central London, has implemented an additional £2 charge to pints ordered after 10pm. This means a pint of Brewdog IPA that costs £7.40 during the day will cost £9.40 after 10pm. The policy has been in place since 2022 to comply with the licensing requirement for more security staff.
Some customers expressed their disappointment on social media at the price bump. One wrote on X: “This new idea of dynamic pricing is ridiculous, greedy and needs calling out. Very shortsighted.”
However, another noted that charging more during busier periods was similar to discounts and offers at quieter times. “I was going to say I thought it was awful, but is it not simply ‘happy hour’ in reverse? ”
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Restaurants
Great Western Arcade venue is still displaying messages saying profits go to good causes even though that has never yet happened
A city centre pub which has pledged to give all its profits to good causes has donated none five years after launching - despite still marketing itself as "supporting charity". The Good Intent opened in Birmingham's Great Western Arcade in October 2019 after successfully crowdfunding nearly £18,000.
The stylish pub, founded by Stourbridge-based Craddock’s Brewery, was described at the time as the UK's 'first not-for-profit bar' and promised to donate all profits to local charities. However, its financial statements have revealed it has failed to make any profit since opening.
Owner David Craddock told BirminghamLive it had not been possible to donate to good causes - other than "little bits here and there" - because the bar was not in profit. He said the pub was still struggling to recover from the pandemic but hoped it would find itself in the black next year.
Despite not being in the position to donate as promised, beer mats inside the pub state "ten per cent goes to char
Pubs are closing at an alarming rate, but a new list of London’s best reveals a preference for traditional ‘wet-led’ venues, with Irish music nights and seat-stealing cats
In the Palm Tree pub, east London, barman Alf is taking only cash at the rattling 1960s till. The building, which is Grade II-listed, stands in the middle of Mile End Park, and Alf has worked here since 1976. “It’s a wonderful pub,” he says.
It is also ranked fifth in Time Out’s 50 Best Pubs in London list, published this month, and marks a clear preference that has emerged for traditional boozers.
The majority of pubs in the top 50 are old-school, with carpets, karaoke or Irish music nights. Pickled eggs are often the extent of the culinary output. Some – whisper it – even sell pints for under a fiver.
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According to the British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA), “wet-led” pubs, which rely on their beverage offering and often don’t have a food menu, have closed at faster rates than food-driven establishments.
When pubs do open – especially in the capital – many pitch themselves as a gastropub: £30 roasts, Aperol spritz, posh crisps and pints north of £7. Among Lon