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Re: The Traditional Pub disappearing.
I like the newer breed of spacious, smoke free pub that serves food. I enjoy sitting down for hours on end and drinking moderate amounts alongside eating lunch/dinner. Other people do as well it seems as these continue to open while 'traditional pubs' tend to close.
This country has a stupid attitude to drink anyway. It is treated both as a sinful vice, something dangerous which at all costs must be kept away from youngsters until they 18 when it changes into the only possible way to have a good time and it is acceptable to go out and binge. |
Re: The Traditional Pub disappearing.
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The demise of the boozer is in no small part due to the price differential between drinking at home and drinking in the pub. The smoking ban may have assisted but was, imho, essential and I agreed with it while I smoked as well as now i don't. People don't want to pay 3.25 for a beer when it'll buy a 4 pack of some stuff that'll strip paint and toast their brain cells. In no small part this is government's fault for allowing alcohol to be too cheap from the off license. That and greedy breweries of course. Ask people why they don't go to the pub, relatively few I suspect would complain about smoking, many will just say they can't or won't pay for it. I am pleased to say that the 3 pubs in this area that I frequent, 2 chain breweries Fullers and Greene King and an independent one are alive and well :) ---------- Post added at 09:11 ---------- Previous post was at 09:09 ---------- Quote:
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They also were smart enough to adjust their pubs to requirements, quieter ones in some areas, loud and chavvy ones in others. Their food is an absolute abomination, their drinks are fabulous in that they actually hydrate you they've so little alcohol in them, however they are what many people want - cheap excrement. They are the Tesco Value of pubs, except worse, and people love them for it. |
Re: The Traditional Pub disappearing.
With me it was neither the smoke not the high price reasons for not going to the pub.. Instead it's the simple fact that we both prefer to go to a local (or for that matter jump in the car and find one further away) beauty spot, have a little picnic with a few bottles of beer/wine and enjoy our surroundings... Hard to do that in a building designed to sell you alcohol and food..
If though it's raining and we fancy a drink then it's in the house, cuddled in front of a good film on the sofa under a duvet.. If we were ever forced to go out for a drink we much prefer a decent café than a pub ---------- Post added at 09:27 ---------- Previous post was at 09:22 ---------- Just asked my partner when was the last time they went in the local pubs.. The answer was 20 years ago and they were born in this village :D |
Re: The Traditional Pub disappearing.
If you live near Hounslow, There are three polish pubs, one in Lampton Road by the garage, one in Bell Road, and the other one is up by the trading estate by Curry's.
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Re: The Traditional Pub disappearing.
Used to live Harlington (Hayes) and then further towards Hounslow on the left of the A4(just south of Cranford park).. Is Rockys still going?? (loved their BBQ burgers)
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Re: The Traditional Pub disappearing.
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They also server local real ale cheap and I can't see how the "name" lagers can be lower strength than the equivalent in other pubs? |
Re: The Traditional Pub disappearing.
"traditional" pubs??????
Who wants 'em. Nowadays if I go to a pub, I'm very choosy about where I go. They must be nice well kept places that I feel comfortable and relaxed in, do good food, and have fairly reasonably priced alchohol. Old pubs that don't do food, have a tatty unwelcoming "public bar" side and dodgy "lounge" side deserve to go under. Times are moving on. The "traditional" working class boozer is dying because the "traditional" working class is no more. The working class that can afford to go out expects a bit more nowadays when they do. And those that can't afford to go out, stay home and drink cheaper alcohol. |
Re: The Traditional Pub disappearing.
Havn't been in a pub for over twenty years since i grew up went teetotal and all of them ripped you off massively for soft drinks. Sorry to be one opposing the popular view but i do think the smoking ban speeded up the killing off of many pubs and i never agreed with a total ban in the first place. Of course prices are the number one reason why they are going out of business and the trouble that many of them attract or certainly do round my way. Any of the ones in the town centre is a place to avoid at the weekends because of the fighting and general lousy atomsphere.
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The ones in town seem to serve better quality food though IMO. |
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Regarding local real ales not had the misfortune but if they treat those in the same manner they treat brand drinks I'll pass. ---------- Post added at 13:21 ---------- Previous post was at 13:19 ---------- Quote:
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By Polish pubs you do mean actual pubs rather than those which moonlight as Polish cafes during the day then morph into the standard pub in the evening? There are a few that do that though these are decreasing as the Polish are going home. As an aside this is happening for a reason - that's where the demand is. Given more Polish smoke than British this would also appear to go against your assertion that the smoking ban is a major cause of these issues. It's a nice scapegoat but that's all it is. |
Re: The Traditional Pub disappearing.
It is shame to see all the pubs gradually closing. eventually we'll have none left at all and part of the British tradition will be lost.
Only good thing I can see from it happening is that the high street won't be full of drunken idiots. they're all at home drinking cans and fighting the neighbours next door but one :) |
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I smoke but I don't go there to smoke, but as others have posted some places provide no end of opprtunities if someone really has to smoke. I think a comfortable ambience shared with aquaintances and new people, a good landlord and tender along with the location is the key. I don't care it's location or purpose. I'd say the places I enjoy aren't going out of business - And no - they ain't all out in the sticks :D And I question the value of "the British boozer"... because I have to agree with you. But I won't miss 'em. :) Have you been in one? |
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Back to the original topic - Four pubs within our village when we moved their 12 years ago - now just two - and the two furthest away from where I live:dozey: |
Re: The Traditional Pub disappearing.
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There is nothing traditional about a chain, I dont want all the pubs left in the UK to have exactly the same drinks and food, thats not special its just boring. Quote:
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Re: The Traditional Pub disappearing.
I used to go to a lovelly boozer in Whitechapel, and that was great on a Friday and a Saturday, great old singalong, it was brilliant,
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