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Hop Press
December 2006
Welcome to the fourteenth electronic edition of Hop Press.
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Contents
EDITORIAL Hop Press index
The last issue, in early May, signalled our
alarm and despondency at the sudden demise
of the Cheriton Brewhouse. Now, barely
half a year on, the picture is vastly
improved with the strong possibility of that
rarest of outcomes — everyone ending up as
a winner.
When the original partnership at Cheriton
came to grief, Paul Tickner the Flower Pots’
licensee, was tempted to relegate ideas of
re-starting brewing and to just concentrate on
running the pub. But fortunately for everyone,
he concluded that the brewery was such
an asset it could not be left idle, and, as he
knew someone with a background in biochemistry
who wanted to go into brewing the
scene was set for a phoenix like renaissance.
The new brewer is Iain McIntosh who had
been working in local government but is now
free to pursue his true interest. First brews
appeared in the summer, just in time to catch
the Flower Pots’ enormous Bank Holiday
beer festival and the home grown beers have
now regained their places behind the pub’s
bar.
The first beers were Flower Pots Ale, 3.8%
session bitter and Goodens Gold, 4.8% premium
bitter. Initially, the beers had a distinctly
sweeter palate than those of the old
Cheriton Brewhouse, this was due to the
different yeast strain needing more oxygenation
during the ferment — a simple fix.
To this sampler’s taste the brews are now
excellent. As readers can now also find out
without having to travel to Cheriton since a
free trade distribution is being rapidly reestablished.
November marked the addition
of a third beer, the welcome return of an
elder flower brew, Flower Pots Elderflower
Ale, 3.8%. The first brew was slightly hoppier
than the Village Elder from the previous
brewery and undoubtedly there will be slight
tweaking from Iain but this one is also sure
to be a firm favourite in the portfolio. Other
occasional beers will follow — one that Paul
would like to try would be a bit specialised,
a high gravity ruby mild — but already this
particular phoenix has fledged and left its nest.
One problem that the new venture had to
overcome was tracking down the stock of
casks, a logistical headache for all brewers.
There are still quite a number missing,
whereabouts unknown, and readers may be
able to help. If anyone knows of a cobweb
encrusted Cheriton cask lying abandoned,
please let the brewer know (01962 771166).
In the mean time another bird is about to
hatch out as the other two original partners
are busy building their own brewery at a site
near Droxford, page 9 has some details of
their progress.
On Friday, November 17th, the final documents
were signed to complete the sale of
one of our popular local Good Beer Guide pubs, the Oak at Bank, near Lyndhurst. This
hardly seems an issue worthy of the second
lead in this issue’s Editorial, but it undoubtedly
is. For the purchasers were Fuller,
Smith and Turner, brewers, of Chiswick in
West London.
This was but one more example of a trend
that has been under way and accelerating for
some time; our regional brewers are assiduously
picking off one-by-one the very limited,
and un-replaceable, stock of free houses
in our area. In recent years the main players
in Hampshire have been Wadworth and Hall
and Woodhouse (‘Badger’), now the even
more powerful London brewer has joined in.
Perhaps their take over of Gales at the turn of
the year has stirred a long dormant empirebuilding
tendency in the property department.
We can conceive of nothing that we can do
to halt the process but from the beer-drinking
public’s point of view it represents a creeping
disaster. Not because there is anything
intrinsically bad with these regional brewers,
they make fine beer, support cask ale, run
splendid pubs but the sparse supply of free
houses are essential to the survival of the
small and micro brewing sector.
Only legislation that reinstates the ‘guest
beer law’ and in a stronger form, can save the
day. CAMRA, along with SIBA (the Small
Independent Brewers Association) have
been lobbying Parliament on this for a long
time but so far the legislators have failed to
grasp the seriousness of the situation. Europe
could be a last lifeline — by effectively
denying small brewers a market the regionals
are operating a policy that is a ‘constraint of
trade,’ something that the Treaty of Rome
forbids. Of course the European legal authorities
are not famous as swift movers, so
breath holding is not recommended!
Just half a year to go — we now have a date,
July 1st — for the implementation of the ban
on smoking in all public enclosed spaces.
Yet many smokers seem to be in a state of
denial, thinking in some confused way that it
will not actually come to pass, but it will.
Talking recently to a number of members in
a working men’s club (with a much higher
than average complement of smokers) the
almost universal sentiment was ‘Oh well, it
won’t affect us, we can just ignore it and
nobody will notice,’ some hopes!
However, from a CAMRA viewpoint and
especially in this part of the country the real
worry is further losses of pubs to the voracious
property market. Greene King have
just announced that they will be selling about
150 of their pubs (nationwide, 6% of their
2600 pub estate) which they describe as
‘wet-led, small freehold properties with development
potential’ and ‘likely to face difficulties‘
in coping with the ban. These are
almost certainly the classic little street-corner
style pubs that so many of us appreciate.
And in Hampshire they will certainly be
priced out of reach of any commercial purchaser,
and will go for private housing,.
The planning application lists are also just
starting to show the impact of the impending
new law, applications for outside decking
areas and canopies have appeared in the last
few weeks and this trickle will presumably
soon turn into a torrent.
Unhappily, this Editorial has to finish on a
very sad note. We have to report the recent
death of one of the branch’s longest standing
members, Derek Markell, at his Freemantle
home on October 8th. Derek was seventy. He
will be remembered by many readers as an
archetypical irascible, bearded, pipe-smoking,
sandal-wearing, old style CAMRA
member, always to be found on duty at the
door of any of our beer festivals. Derek was
buried in the New Forest at the Hinton
Woodland Burial Centre, most appropriately
a modest sample of real ale accompanied the
interment and somewhat larger amounts
were used at the subsequent wake. Derek is
survived by his two daughters and wife Lynn
to whom we extend our thoughts.
WALKING & DRINKING (4) Hop Press index
Ray Massey
This Autumn I would like to suggest a walk
for drinkers based on Copythorne Common.
Copythorne is a small hamlet on the
south side of the A3090 (formerly the A31)
about 2 kilometres northeast of Cadnam.
Why Copythorne, when the delights of the
New Forest are close at hand? Well it is a
nice walk, through pleasant empty countryside
(apart from the motorway), it is very dry
underfoot, you can get there by public transport
and it passes two pubs that are new
entries in the Good Beer Guide 2007. What
more could one ask?
The public transport in question is the 31 bus
from Southampton to Cadnam, which leaves
West Quay hourly from 0820 to 1820 Monday
to Saturday. Alight at the far end of
Pollards Moor Road, at the junction with
Romsey Road (A3090) [1 on the map below].
Retrace your route about 200 metres, and
turn left up Vicarage Lane, past a footpath
sign (FPS), along a good gravel track. Go
past Dell Cottage, through a farm gate, past
a sign to Scammels Farm, and past the farm
itself. When the track turns sharp right, go
straight on along a well surfaced footpath
[2], climbing gently. Soon you reach the
corner of Copythorne Churchyard, with the
church away on the left. Continue on the
path past the churchyard to two more FPSs
[3]. The long walk turns left here, see later.
The short walk continues straight on along
the right hand edge of the field to a stile.
Cross the stile and turn half right uphill along
the right hand edge of a field, going away
from the school on the left. At the far corner
of this field cross another stile into Pound
Lane [4].
You may wish to take a momentary diversion
here, by turning right. The OS 1:25,000
map shows a Roman Road crossing the field
on your left. There may be a slight raise in
the hedge on the far side of the field, but you
certainly wouldn’t notice it without a map to
suggest it.
However, what you really want to do at the
stile [4] is to turn left, slightly uphill, along
Pound Lane for 200 metres. Then turn right
into Copythorne Crescent, a gravel road with
houses on the right hand side. Keep bearing
left, especially at a fork where a track
branches off right. Soon the line of houses
ends with a larger building, you reach the
main Romsey Road, and the building on your
right is seen to be the Empress of Blandings (Badger Beers, open all day, food all day,
large car park).
The second part of this walk is very straightforward.
Leave the Empress, and turn right
into Barrow Hill Road — a quiet road with
houses on the right and a wooded part of
Copythorne Common on the left. Although
the road has no footpath, it is reasonably
wide with verges, and the visibility is good.
After about 600 metres the road bends very
sharply right [5]. Continue uphill; when the
road then bends left, the houses end and there
are now fields on the right. The route of the
Roman Road is in the first field, but I could
see no sign of it. Continue to the junction
with Winsor Road, and straight ahead of you
is the Compass Inn (Ringwood Best, Fullers
London Pride, HSB and Greene King Abbot
Ale; open all day, food available daily and
with a small car park).
Most conveniently the 31 bus back to Southampton
stops outside the pub, hourly from
0907 to 1807 Monday to Saturday.
If you want to take the longer walk, which
makes a complete circuit of the northern part
of the common, here are the details: Turn
left at the two FPSs [3] along the left edge of
a field, aiming for a newish wooden gate by
a building. Go past the scout building and
through 2 gates to reach the A3090, to be
deafened by the motorway noise. Turn right
along Romsey Road, past Copythorne Infants
School to the school car park. Opposite
the middle of the car park turn left across a
single track bridge over the motorway.
Immediately after the bridge [6] turn left past
a FPS, along a neat tarmac track. After 200
metres, just before a house, turn right over a
stile into pleasant open conifer plantation,
and climb gently with a wooden fence on
your left. At the top of the rise turn slightly left (ignoring a tempting grassy ride that
follows the property boundary) and continue
for 200 metres through open woodland to a
straight gravel track crossing your route.
Look for the FPSs by a metal gate at the
highest point on the gravel track [7]. (I think
that this is the route of a very old road from
Cadnam to Romsey via Paultons Park.) Go
over the stile by the gate and along a pleasant
grassy path through private woodland. The
path ends at the corner of a large field. Go
over a stile onto a well marked path edged by
fences, under a line of mature oaks and then
Scots pines. The path continues downhill to
end with some steps leading down to Newbridge
Road [8].
Turn right towards Newbridge, past a telephone
box. When the road bends left continue
straight ahead along the no-through road
to the quiet Edwardian hamlet of Newbridge.
When the road bends left and becomes private
[9] follow a FPS half right along a track
between hedges. After 150 metres cross a
stile into an avenue of small trees, and then
rhododendron bushes. Ignore a left fork just
before the next stile. The track gradually
reduces to a small but still well defined path,
then grows to a track again as you approach
Lyndhurst Lodge on the left [10].
Cross the gravelled track (the old Paultons
Park road again) and enter coniferous woodland
(Copythorne Common) past a Hamp7
shire Wildlife Trust sign. Continue straight
ahead along a pleasant grassy avenue for
about 500 metres. Just as you begin to see
and hear the motorway traffic again look out
for a FPS directing you right [11] across an
open space. The path runs along a very small
embankment, under some local power lines,
and continues straight on to meet the motorway
fence [12]. Bear right with the fence
and follow it back to the motorway bridge [6].
Cross the bridge to the far side of the Romsey
Road (A3090), and turn left beside it.
Walk past Copythorne Garage, and at Pound
Lane either continue along Romsey Road for
another 200 metres to the pub, or for a more
peaceful short detour go down Pound Lane
about 150 metres, and turn left into Copythorne
crescent to join the short walk.
Note on maps: I definitely recommend the
OS 1:25,000 maps for walking. Most good
stationers carry a limited supply, Sussex Stationers seem a pound or so cheaper than
others. Gorman’s Map Centre in Freemantle
near the Shirley Road / Payne's Road
junction is an OS agent that carries a very
good supply (not far from the Waterloo
Arms either). The number of the New Forest
Sheet is Explorer OL22.
Note on seasons: The woodland of Copythorne
Common is mainly coniferous so
doesn’t change much seasonally. The Common
is good for fungi, and early autumn is
best for those. I saw my first goldcrest on the
common, and that was probably in the
spring. Personally I would like to try the
walk after a hard frost or with a sprinkling of
snow on the ground.
Note on times: The short walks from the bus
stop to the Empress, and from the Empress to
the Compass are both about 1.6 km, about
20-30 minutes for each part. The loop
through Copythorne Common adds about 4
km, which would take a full hour more.
COMMUNITY, THE FABRIC OF A NATION Hop Press index
Mancunian realism in the Rover’s Return, an
East End cultural kaleidoscope in the Queen
Vic, true Yorkshire grit in evidence at the
Woolpack and even the fey agricultural fantasies
at the Bull all have one common
thread. These nationally treasured (or
loathed?!) pubs, centre pieces in their respective
soaps, are all depicted as traditional
community locals — none has even a whiff
of being a ‘circuit pub, all have completely
mixed clienteles, identifiable licensees and
act as the focal points to all the sundry activities
of their fictional communities.
Sadly ‘fictional’ is fast becoming the key
word since in real life such essentials of
community life are disappearing fast. One
such pub is closing, for ever, every day and
this rate is accelerating. For hundreds of
years community pubs have proved their
worth as hubs of their surrounding localities
and, if gone, can never be re-created.
Saving community pubs will become a key
element in CAMRA’s national campaigning,
starting with ‘Community Pubs Week’ in
February.
In our early days CAMRA’s fear was the
disappearance of traditional, living beer. In
the thirty or more years since, it has gradually
become clear that, in reality, this threat is
just a part of the real battle — to save the
pub. A brewery can be switched back to
producing real ale at the stroke of a marketing
man’s pen but real pubs require generations
of use to grow organically. Yet, just the
glint in a property developer’s eye is enough
to lose one. For ever.
BOWMAN ALE Hop Press index
Pat O'Neill
Wallops Wood sounds a pretty good place to
find some beer and so it is likely to prove in
the coming months.
On the ordnance map it appears as a potentially
tranquil green dell above the Eastern
side of the Meon Valley. However, on approach,
it might more likely be taken as a
major production plant As, truly, it once was,
a huge egg factory, happily now disused as
battery hens are being freed from their lives
of slavery, and it is being converted into a
myriad small business ventures, one of
which is a new 25 barrel brewery.
When the Cheriton Brewhouse partnership
broke up earlier this year, it looked as if we
might lose some of our favourite beers, from
a splendid brewery, for ever. As we are
pleased to report in this issue’s Editorial,
brewing is underway again at the Flower
Pots and the former brewers, Martin Roberts
and Ray Page are now establishing their own
totally new brewery at this John Parker
Farm’s former poultry unit.
The site is a little over a mile South-east of
Droxford, just off of the B2150 Hambledon
road (map reference 630180 for the anoraks);
only two miles for a healthy crow from
Stumpy’s brewery, which of course also replaced
some pensioned off hens.
At our visit in mid-November conversion
work had been in hand for about a month and
the site was a hive of activity — the roomy
building was fully insulated and lined out
and most of the major stainless steel vessels
(all newly fabricated) were in place. Services
were being put in and secondary walling was
being installed to form the cold store, conditioning
room, cask wash and storage, hop
and malt stores, office etc., etc. At the rate of
progress so far the first trial brews should be
possible before Christmas week
Martin and Ray emphasised that they will
not be rushed into marketing beer too early,
if necessary a number of brews will be made
and destroyed until they are entirely satisfied
with taste and quality. Three beers are in line
for the first offerings — a 3.8% session bitter,
provisionally named Swift One; a best
bitter, Wallops Ale, in the 4.0-4.5% range
and a powerful 5% beer to be called Quiver.
When ready to their satisfaction, the first
brews from Bowman Ales as the brewery
will be known, will appear at the Hampshire
Bowman at Dundridge and then follow in
free houses (if the predatory bigger brewers
have left any!).
GOODBYE TO THE CROWN Hop Press index
Calm down hopeful republicans out there, it
is not the start of your long hoped for revolution!
More than three hundred years of history has
come to an end without ceremony or pomp.
The official crown ‘Government Stamp’ on
pub glasses will be replaced from now on by
the ubiquitous European CE mark.
The crown mark was introduced in the seventeenth
century by the 1699 Act for Ascertaining
the Measures for Retailing Ale and
Beer. However the last two major British
glass makers closed in 2001 (and here lies
another story, how on earth can such a major
manufacturing country not be able to profitably
make a simple pub beer glass?) and the
last stamping office, at Bury in Lancashire,
now only approves glasses from small specialised
makers.
The big French, Belgian and Czech makers
who now produce almost all of our pub glass
stock all have self-verification schemes approved
by the UK’s National Weights and
Measures Laboratory so direct measurements
are now no longer conducted.
Old glasses with their regal markings will
continue to be legal of course until the last
one finally succumbs to the glass washer’s
mercies. Without a doubt they will become
collectable items as their numbers decrease.
Anoraks (none of those in CAMRA surely?)
will probably initiate trips to see the last
specimens in use, it could be like the end of
steam traction all over again...
COMPETITION CROSSWORD Hop Press index
QUETZALCOATL (printable version here 111KB download)

Across
All across solutions are a set so are mostly only partially clued.
8. Wear, Tyne? More on the west coast (8)
9. Welsh in cut-throat horror (5)
10. Middle Eastern road ends here (4)
11. Is there a shrine to Satchmo here? (10)
12. Mesh high power and office complaint (6)
14. 442 (8)
15. American returns captured bear (but not dancing!) (7)
17. Able to walk tall in East Midlands (7)
20. Another Athens has been read into this (8)
22. Early street maps with nothing north of the river (6)
23. UK surely? No, nearly a world away! (10)
24. Favourite food, not timid — capital! (4)
25. Rhodes’ dream start for a trip south (5)
26. US energy supplies end here. (8)
|
Down
1. Forest liquidation: gets into the papers. (4,4)
2. Astound without more ado (4)
3. Support the queen, a creationist (6)
4. Lewd island woman, topless! Cry panic,run! (7)
5. ‘Cuff pair at fault (8)
6. Drunken orgy is a natural state (10)
7. Fussy, cross Greek pair (6)
13. Enhancing effect of city’s green ways(10)
16. A kind of loathing (7)
18. Travel reporter emoted or showed confusion (8)
19. Left a green salad to grow (7)
21. Butter upon cloth ends mealtime (6)
22. Our Navy is saintly! (6)
24. A herd in relative ecstasy (4) |
Prizes to the first two correct entries drawn. Closing date: 1st February 2007.
Send to:
The Editor
Hop Press
1 Surbiton Road
Eastleigh,
Hants.
SO50 4HY
May's Solution & Winners

An excellent entry, twenty-five solvers with
several new names appearing for the first
time and coming from as far afield as Essex.
Winners: J E Green, St Albans;
Stephen Harvey, Chandler’s Ford
Other correct solutions were from: Pauline Alderson; K T Bartlett; Jocelyn Britcher; C F Bussell; Kate Chessman; Rich Christie; Nigel Cook; Robin Cork; Ken Crawford; Trevor Crowther; Roy Garraway; Mike Hobbs; Bob Howes; B E Judd; Ash Mather; Al Mountain; Tim Parkinson; Nigel Parsons; Harvey Saunders; John True; D B Wallis; Andrew Withnall; John Yalden
ADVERTISING IN HOP PRESS Hop Press index
It is the advertising within Hop Press that enables us to print and distribute it free to some 250-300 local pubs and clubs in the Southern Hampshire area.
The print run is 3000 and these are entirely distributed to establishments in the licensed trade. Taking your message to a very selective audience of pub users.
Edition frequency is two to three per year although we would like to make this strictly quarterly if we could overcome the Editor's lethargy and the contributors' indolence.
Rates are:
Full page: £80 Half page: £50
Rear cover: outside £100, inside £80
Front cover: inside £90
£10 (£5 half page) early payment discount is available.
Sizes (H x W maxima) are:
182mm x 126mm and 90mm x 126mm
In most cases we can generate artwork to suit requirements although a 'cameraready' electronic file is always preferable. From experience, faxes never produce worthwhile artworks, colour photographs can be difficult and half-tone pictures will usually cause 'aliasing' problems . When preparing artwork it is essential to use a high definition – 300dpi or better. Input in a TIFF or a PDF format is usually good.
E-mail: hop-press@shantscamra.org.uk or ring the Editor on: 023 8064 2246
CAN CYCLOPS SEE HIS WAY? Hop Press index
Pat O'Neill
The Great British Beer Festival this year, at
their new Earls Court venue, saw the launch
of a brewing industry initiative that it is
hoped will have far reaching and long lasting
implications. This was the rather curiously
named Cyclops scheme.
Supermarket and off-licence customers have
become accustomed to examine labels on
their wine bottles and expect to find an easy
to understand, more-or-less universal, set of
indicators of the wines’ taste, body,
dryness/sweetness, flavour elements and so
on. Nothing of the sort has existed for beer.
Beer is just brown(ish) liquid that, in sufficient
quantity, produces inebriation. Even
worse, over generations, there has been an
attitude from many brewers that, in some
way, it was impertinent for customers to
even ask about the details of their products!
CAMRA’s lengthy battle to get alcohol content
displayed was a telling example.
Now, a regional family brewer, Everards of
Leicester, have come up with what they hope
will become a widely adopted system for the
simple description of a beer’s characteristics.
The idea came from the brewery’s head of
marketing, David Bremner, and is aimed at
new, first-time drinkers, who are notoriously
wary of the supposed arcane mysteries of
cask beer.
The scheme aims to cut through the complexities
and to eliminate the more highflown,
pretentious language used by some
beer writers and brewery PR departments.
Seven key one-line descriptors are included.
A zero to five scale of hop symbols will
show the bitterness and a similar scale of
sugar lumps the sweetness. Stylised symbols
for an eye, a nose and a pair of lips will
precede short descriptions of colour, aroma
and taste respectively. Finally, perhaps for
the slightly more knowledgeable, the varieties
of malt and hops will be listed
Cyclops has met with a great response from
the brewing industry and many other independent
brewers have recognised the benefits
of joining a standardised scheme. In our
area companies such as Fullers, Wadworth
and Hall and Woodhouse (Badger) have
agreed to join in. SIBA, the smaller brewers’
organisation, is enthusiastically promoting
the idea and even the giant multinational
Scottish and Newcastle have made approving
noises and may take it up to help their,
rather limited, commitment to cask beer.
CAMRA has, of course, welcomed the idea
and we will do what we can to further its
aims. It chimes directly with all of our objectives.
Another important , although not immediately
obvious, benefit is toward the education of
bar staff. Almost everywhere customers are
inhibited from enquiring about aspects of the
beers on offer by the expected response of
“dunno” to any question asked. In any other
form of business an intending purchaser expects
to be able to ask simple questions about
a product, why not in a pub? Cyclops, if it
can engage the imagination of pub staff,
could be the answer.
An area still needing some work is the presentation
of the information. Everards have
started with beer mats but they are a bit stark
and functional. An opportunity for media
creativity to meld the information into, for
example, artistic pump clips.
And the choice of name is still a mystery...
WHERE DID THEY GO? Hop Press index
1. Mixed drinks. Anyone with a bus pass in
their pocket will have been brought up in a
pub scene when boilers, black and tans, light
splits, platers and many, many more were the
common currency of orders across the bar.
Now, to ask for one of these would be as
likely to be successful as if one had addressed
the bar staff in Anglo-Saxon! Why
have these drinks, which are all various mixtures
of draught and bottled beers, fallen out
of fashion?
This question should be recast as ‘why did
they come into fashion in the first place?’
The answer is quite sad. An age ago, when
all draught beer was real ale a great deal of it
was served in very poor condition. Poor cellar
hygiene and management and particularly
the evil practice of ‘putting back’ were rife.
This was so prevalent that the general drinking
public came to assume that this was just
how draught beer was and to overcome the
flatness and to mask the poor flavours it
needed a carbonated bottle to perk it up (the
same considerations were largely responsible
for the rise of keg draught beers).
The, almost, total ascendancy of keg and
lager beers (which are essentially just bottled
beer in rather large bottles) in the ‘60s and
‘70s more or less put an end to the mixed
drink era and the recognition now of cask ale
as a high quality product in its own right
should prevent any renaissance.
[Historical notes: Black and Tan — bottled
Guinness and Bitter, named in the ‘20s after
the colours in the uniforms of the brutal
British mercenaries recruited to suppress the
nationalist Irish. Boiler, or more accurately
Boilermaker — bottled Brown Ale and Mild.
A number of mixtures have supposedly humorous
names like Mother in Law — Old
and Bitter or Grandma — Old and Mild.
There are many more, some just popular in
particular areas or particular brewer’s
houses.]
2. Nips (all the other ones). Although not
strictly a matter concerned with real ale, part
of the vastly varied pub scene in the past was
the great number of strong beers in the form
of bottled, third pint nips. Usually described
as Barley Wines or Strong Ales and with
alcohol content of 6% to 9%. Virtually the
only survivor, and by no means the best of
them, is Gold Label.
[Local note: In Hampshire we have lost
some fine little gems. Watneys (really) Stingo and Courage Imperial Russian Stout were two once widely available dark nips.
Two paler but beautifully warming beers
from Dorset were Devenish’s Crabber’s Nip and Eldridge Pope’s Goldie whilst the Pompey
brewed Little Bricky still evokes many
fond memories.]
3. Scottie dogs made of Players cigarette
packets (!). My up-bringing (in Weymouth)
introduced me to pubs in the 1950s and probably
more than 50% of the town’s pubs then
sported a full size model of a terrier, woven
from the fronts of Players packets (the
sailor’s head surrounded by a life belt).
Whether this was a local thing (from Naval
connections?) or national, I do not know.
The real question though is not so much
‘where did they go?’ — with the cardboard
packets no longer available, supply of dogs
had to dry up. The real question, which has
puzzled me for decades, is ‘where did they
come from in the first place?’ Follow up
questions then include ‘why always Scotties?’
and ‘Who made them? (they were all
identical)’ Even Google fails on this one, if
anyone out there knows, let us in on it.
ETHICALLY DOES IT Hop Press index
CAMRA has been banging on for years
about the iniquities of capitalism and how
the money-grubbing policies of breweries
are usually detrimental to the real interests of
the beer drinking public — who are the part
of society that we are dedicated to support.
Now we seem to be setting up a plan to
defect to the other side, for we are proposing
to establish a Venture Capital Trust (VCT) to
channel investments into brewing or pub
related projects. However, we have not
thrown out any of our principles, this VCT,
although only investing in projects that make
sound business sense, will also only do so in
ideas that it finds ethical from the
consumer’s viewpoint.
For a number of years CAMRA has had its
Investment Club, a cooperative movement of
ordinary CAMRA members who contribute
small monthly sums towards buying investments
in the country’s brewing companies
and which operates on the lines of a unit
trust. In its initiation the intention was to give
us a say at all shareholders meetings. It has
been very successful (on the back of the
generally bullish performance of the
pub/brewing sector of the economy) and its
fund now stands at more than £10 million.
The Investment Trust is now in discussions
with an investment firm with a view to setting
up the separate VCT, also with a £10
million initial kitty. The Investment Trust
will contribute a £50,000 seed and will then
canvas for individual investments of £1000
plus. Once the details of the scheme are
settled they then have to be reviewed by the
FSA (Financial Services Authority). The
public launch should be next summer.
The ability to arrange ethical investments,
although they would be on strictly commercial
terms, dovetails with our campaigning
aim of also encouraging social ownership or
cooperative ownership of pubs to help maintain
the free house base and to counter the
ever increasing power of the big pub chains.
The Society of Independent Brewers has
already welcomed the initiative which will
give their members another route to development
financing.. Obviously this represents
only a very small drop in a pretty large financial
ocean but it demonstrates CAMRA’s
firm commitment to the industry.
IS PRIZE OLD SAFE? Hop Press index
Fullers of Chiswick have taken the last Horndean
brewed batch of the wonderful 9%
Prize Old Ale up to their West London brewery
where it is still quietly maturing prior to
being bottled early in the New Year.
Many local CAMRA members have expressed
fears that Fullers’ takeover of Gales
would be the end for this fine strong, dark
beer. To allay these fears the brewers have
issued a statement confirming that they will
continue to brew the old ale into the future.
The one thing not clear is whether any will
be bottled in the old style half pint corked
bottles or if it will all go into the crown
corked nips.
Future brews, however, will not be made in
the original Gales fermenter — an 80 year
old, copper-lined wooden vessel made from
rare New Zealand kauri pine — this has been
sold to Ringwood, not to use but to form a
major exhibit in a museum of Hampshire
brewing that they are setting up in their
brewery yard.
PUB NEWS Hop Press index
Rob Whatley
The landlord of one of the most popular pubs
in Winchester had two reasons to celebrate
recently. David Nicholson has obtained planning
permission for an outside seating area at
the Black Boy on Wharf Hill, which he has
run successfully for over ten years. He has
also taken over the Kings Arms just across
the road in Chesil Street. He plans to concentrate
here on food, similar to the present
Black Boy’s menu. While designs for the
conversion of the new premises are being
finalised it is opening from 9.00pm to
1.00am, Tuesday to Saturday, with Taylor’s
Landlord on offer for the discerning drinker.
When the work is finished the Black Boy
will concentrate more on beers although still
providing food but to a more limited menu.
Just up the road in Bar End, the Heart in
Hand has had a reprieve from the threat of
closure. Earlier this year a licence was refused
after police raised concerns over crime
and disorder. An appeal was lodged by landlady
Eileen Osborne and just before the hearing
was due to be heard the police dropped
their objections. Back in the centre of the
City, the Foresters in North Walls closed in
mid-August. In February 2003 the pub had a
substantial revamp and the licensee responsible
for that design, Martin Meijer, has now
left the pub. Owners Greene King said that
the pub, which is now open again, may become
a more food-focussed operation.
One City pub that closed years ago, the
Prince of Wales in Hyde Street, attracted the
attention of the fire brigade in October after
a small fire was spotted in an outbuilding.
The pub had been up for sale for a long time.
It was one of a number of local pubs that
were purchased by the Inntown Pub Company
from Eldridge Pope. In 2004 applications
were submitted to convert the premises to
housing but there has been no sign of action
over the last two years.
This summer Eldridge Pope, the owners of
the Stanmore Hotel on the City’s Western
edge, consulted local residents on a proposal
to demolish the pub and replace it with a
65-bed care home. A survey in the Hampshire
Chronicle found that two thirds of respondents
wanted to retain the pub and it is
still open at present. No planning applications
have yet materialised. Meanwhile, the
future of the former Chimneys pub site is
still unresolved as the enquiry into plans to
build a supermarket was postponed due to a
witness having an emergency operation
With all this talk of closures and long-closed
pubs, at least one bar/night-club in Winchester
has reopened. The Porthouse reopened
on 14 October with a promise of
going upmarket after a £½ million refurbishment.
Meanwhile, Mix Bar has opened in
the increasingly bar oriented Jewry Street.
During the day it is offering a selection of
teas and ‘health’ juices while at night the
emphasis is more on ‘music, beers, cocktails
and champagnes.’ Another change of name
may be on the cards for a High Street pub. In
an interview with the Daily Echo, in September,
licensee Colin Clark, said that he had
was thinking of changing the name again of
the former India Arms (now the Old Coach
House) to Alfies. Why oh why?
Moving to the North of the City, there was an
impressive reopening for the March Hare in
Harestock. To mark the occasion there was a
fanfare by buglers from the Light Division,
who are based nearby at Littleton. The public
bar has doubled in size and the there are
new kitchen facilities. And, in the South on
the very City limit, there is a new licensee at
the Bell in St. Cross. Penny Appel-Billsberry
took over on October 4th, for the past three
years she had been running the Yew Tree at
Lower Wield near Basingstoke. The Bell’s
previous landlord had been due to move up
to the Fulflood in Cheriton Road but at the
last minute decided against, the Fulflood is
now under relief management until a new
licensee is appointed after Christmas.
Just East of Winchester, the Chestnut Horse
at Easton, which is now owned by Dorset
brewers Hall and Woodhouse, can now open
until midnight and have entertainment inside
the pub. This is later than the previous closing
time but not as late as the 12.30am that
had been applied for, and to which local
residents objected. Going North, up the A33,
older readers may recall the Lunways Inn,
which was known as the Roman Post before
it closed for the last time after a fire. At long
last the future of the site may have been
resolved as the Winchester Gospel Hall Trust
have won outline planning permission to
construct a hall to be used by up to 100
worshipers each week.
A pub that was built with the intention of
being a chapel but is happily offering customers
a wider choice than just communion
wine is the Rockingham Arms at West
Wellow. Although there were fears, which
we expressed in a previous Hop Press, that
the pub would close and be converted into
housing, a recent advertisement proclaimed
that the pub was ‘Not Sold’ and we are
pleased to report that long standing licensees
Paul and Wendy Broomfield, who have had
the pub since 1988, are looking forward to
serving customers throughout the Christmas
period and into 2007.
Continuing along the A36, during the summer
the Shoe Inn at Plaitford underwent a
substantial refurbishment with the addition
of five en-suite bedrooms. Also refurbished
during the summer was the Mill Arms at
Dunbridge, which also underwent a change
of ownership. A little to the Northeast, in
King’s Somborne, there are also new owners
at the Crown Inn. The pub was closed for
five months but is now reopened under Hayley
Marsh and Gary Gates, who hope to
install new kitchens in the future.
There were threats to the Greyhound in
nearby Broughton but the pub was sold as a
going concern to Punch Taverns and after the
addition of eight letting rooms it is now
being run as a ‘gastro-pub’ by Tim Fiducia.
The real ale includes Butcombe Bitter.
Also changing hands was the Enterprise Inn
the New Forest Inn at Emery Down, near
Lyndhurst. It now has Karen Slowen, from
the Oak Inn at Bank, as licensee. The Oak
itself has been purchased by Fullers. It appears
that the London brewers are intent on
expanding their estate in Hampshire following
their recent purchase of Gales. Michael
Turner, Fullers’ chief executive, said recently,
after Fullers posted better than expected
yearly figures, that he is ‘looking for more
family brewers...’ How ominous is that?
Another change of ownership during the
summer was at the Trusty Servant at Minstead.
Previous owners Tony and Jane Walton,
who had been in the village for 10 years,
handed over to a newcomer to the trade,
Chris Onions, who will run the pub with his
brother.
Right on the Western edge of our area, the
Tyrrell’s Ford at Avon is under the new
ownership of Mark and Sara Watts who say
they have made the free house into a ‘family
friendly country inn.’ Nearby in Bransgore
the appeal to build houses in part of the
former car park of the Carpenters Arms
was rejected by government inspectors. Unfortunately
a further application is expected
from our old friends(?) the Inntown Pub
Company, but meanwhile the Carpenters
Arms continues to trade after a redesign of
the remaining car park facilities.
Moving to the Waterside, one of the first non
smoking pubs in the area, the Traveller’s
Rest in Hythe, also changed hands in the
summer. It was purchased by two local couples,
Mr and Mrs Dean, who previously
owned a local tea rooms, and Mr and Mrs
Bennett. A new smoke free establishment in
Hythe is Ebenezers in Pyewell Road. Mark
and Angie Holland, who previously ran the
sports bar at Gang Warily have given the
pub (which returning to an earlier theme was
previously a place of worship for the United
Reformed church) a complete makeover to
turn it into an airy bar with modern furniture
and Greene King IPA on offer. The Waterside
Inn has at long last been put out of its
misery, with 34 flats, in two blocks, being
constructed on the site. Moving on to Totton,
an application for a rear extension and front
patio extension has been granted for the Old
Farmhouse. We might expect to see more
applications going in for changes to the front
of premises as the inside smoking ban approaches.
A Forest pub that had rather too much smoke
earlier this year is now open again. The Happy
Cheese was hit by a kitchen fire in June
but reopened a couple of months later. At the
end of June the White Hart at Cadnam
reopened in the guise of a Blubeckers restaurant/bar. There about twenty pubs in
the Blubeckers chain, all in the south of England.
Another new name that we missed in the last
edition is Stars Bar in Eastleigh. This is the
new name for Lucky Jims in Leigh Road.
Round the corner in the High Street, the lease
of the former Bar 101, closed now for several
years, is available for £40,000 a year. It
remains to be seen if anyone will risk this
much to reopen it again as a bar. Across the
tracks, under new management is the Prince
of Wales in Bishopstoke. New landlady Janice
Davies took over in September. On the
South side of the town Greene King has
spent £360,000 on refurbishing the Cricketers in Chestnut Avenue, including a substantial
extension to the drinking area. And a
couple of miles to the West, the formerly
Whitbread owned Clump Inn is now in
private hands and has had a massive refurbishment
of well over £½ million and reopened
as predominantly a food house, now
named the Chilworth Arms. It still has cask
ale though, Old Speckled Hen and Taylors’
Landlord at the time of reopening and the
presence of bar stools suggest that just dropping
in for a beer is acceptable. The extensive
array of pressure fonts includes things
like Amstell, Leffe and Birra Moretti
The big Suffolk brewer’s attempts to spend a
lot of money in Bishop’s Waltham were
thwarted by planners. An application to build
12 hotel rooms at the Barleycorn in Lower
Basingwell Street was rejected by Winchester
City Council. The City council and
Greene King were also involved in a dispute
over the licensing hours of the Prince of
Wales at Shirrell Heath. The licensing conditions
for the pub state that no customers are
allowed in the garden after 9.30pm. The new
tenants, Wayne and Melanie Tiller, consider
that this will put the pub at a disadvantage
next summer when the smoking ban in enclosed
areas comes into force.
One of the new powers in the current licensing
act was used for the first time in Southampton
recently. Following a brawl outside
the pub in late October, the latest in a string
of problems, the police issued a temporary
closure order on the Merry Oak in the East
of the City. The Licensing Committee have
since decided that the next licensees will
have to call last orders at 10.30pm and close
at 11.00pm. Owners Punch Taverns have
also been ordered to install new CCTV
equipment. When police went to check coverage
of the recent disturbance on the previous
CCTV, the video in the CCTV recorder
played a children’s show...
Also under the 2003 Licensing Act, an application
has been made to alter the internal
layout of the Shirley Hotel on Shirley High
Street. The pub has been shut for a number
of months but it may well be open again by
the time Hop Press hits the pubs. Open again
in West End is the Two Brothers, which is
now under the banner of the ‘Sizzling Pub
Company.’ This is a subsidiary of the largest
UK managed pub company, Mitchells and
Butlers. Older readers will
remember the name in a
former guise as the West
Midlands arm of Bass. The
same company is also rebadging
the Ship Inn in
Lymington as a gastro pub.
Moving back to Southampton,
the Crown and Sceptre in Bassett has changed
hands for the second time
in a year. The new licensee
is Chris Ellis from County
Durham. Along the road to
the Gate, we come across a
new variation on the theme
running through this edition
of pub news. The pub
is hosting informal Christian
workshops on Thursday
evenings and Friday
mornings in its coffee
lounge. Back to the centre
of the City, the Hampshire
Ram is now Jones Wine
Bar.
Down in the old town area
we find new licensees Norman
and Carole Trainor at
the Duke of Wellington in
Bugle Street. Just round the
corner at the Town Quay
we finish with a similar story
to that with which we
started this Pub News.
Landlord Stewart Cross took over the Platform
Tavern nine years ago and then purchased
both the pub and the cafe next door
three years ago. The former cafe opened as
an extension to the thriving Town Quay pub
during the summer months and is now open
from 8am for breakfasts. Known as the
‘News and Blues Cafe,’ a special fish menu
is available in the evenings from Thursday to
Saturday.
BAH HUMBUG Hop Press index
OK, so we’ve just been reluctantly forced to
notice that this is a December edition and
there is usually some antiquated old festival
at this time of the year. So for those who still
celebrate the winter solstice...
For many the essential jolly Christmas scene
is Dickensian — the florid, gaitered countrymen,
fresh from pursuing some unlucky fox,
seated around the roaring fire in the inglenook
of a country inn. Many in that bucolic
throng would be plunging the fire’s poker
into their pewter flagons to mull their ale. To
modern tastes the results were probably not
too wonderful (and the practice would undoubtedly
break some Health and Safety
rules) so here is a much more wholesome
version to welcome your guests in from the
chill winter storms.
Have a good Christmas and New Year – Ed.
MULLED ALE
Ingredients: (for a dozen servings)
3 pints dark, malty ale
3 measures dark rum
1 stick of cinnamon
4 cloves
Pinch of nutmeg
Pinch of ginger
Handful of raisins and sultanas
1 dessert spoon dark treacle or molasses
Method:
Place all the ingredients in a large, attractive, flameproof casserole. Cover and place over the lowest possible heat and leave to come slowly just to a simmer, do not allow to boil. Turn off the heat and leave to stand for a few moments to cool slightly. Ladle into small, heavy tumblers.
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Hop Press Issue number 61. December 2006 Editor: Pat O'Neill
1 Surbiton Road
Eastleigh
Hants. SO50 4HY
023 8064 2246
hop-press@shantscamra.org.uk
© CAMRA Ltd. 2006
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