Harder to reach pubs..

Over the last three months we’ve featured guides to Peak District pubs in our branch area that can be easily reached by bus or train.

Key public transport links include the Hope Valley railway line, bus 65 (Sheffield to Buxton, bus 173 (Castleton to Bakewell), bus 218 (Sheffield to Bakewell direct via Owler Bar) bus 257 (Sheffield to Bakewell via Eyam) and bus 272 (Sheffield to Castleton). Timetables and maps available online at travelderbyshire.co.uk.

This month we fill in the gaps with the pubs that are in our branch area but not served by public transport, although if you fancy a country walk that may be a good opportunity to try them!

Grouse Inn, Longshaw (nearest buses – Fox House, routes 65 and 272)

In the same family for over 50 year, this free house stands in isolation on bleak moorland southwest of Sheffield, and is a welcome refuge for walkers as well as climbers from the nearby Froggatt Edge. The comfortable lounge and bar are at the front with separate room at the rear reached through the conservatory in which vines manage to grow. No food Monday evenings. Well known for their excellent steak pie. Both children and dogs are welcome and a children’s menu available.

Chequers Inn, Froggatt (nearest buses – Calver, routes 65 and 257)

Country inn with seven ensuite guest rooms. On the main road below Froggatt Edge. Has a very attractive beer garden melding into the wooded hillside. Up market food menu. Three changing cask ales from Peak Ales, Bradfield Brewery in Sheffield, Thornbridge Brewery, and Stancill Brewery.

Eyre Arms, Hassop (nearest bus Great Longstone, route 173)

300-year-old country pub with two comfortably furnished rooms and small snug squeezed between, watched over by an imposing grandfather clock. The impressive Eyre family arms are displayed above the fireplace. Open fires in the winter. There are up to six real ales available at weekends and three during the week. Excellent, good value home cooked food using locally-sourced ingredients. Bar snacks served 4pm-6pm between normal meal times. Friendly personal service. A superb, little unspoilt pub.

Barrel Inn, Bretton (nearest bus Foolow, route 65)

This remote former farm house, which at 1250 ft. (380 m), is the highest inn in Derbyshire. It boasts a good whisky selection, stunning views from its doorstep and a busy food trade.

Strines Inn (nearest bus Ashopton, route 257)

An inn since the 1770s based on much older buildings dating back to the 13th century. A quaint traditional country pub with plenty of brassware. The entrance lobby opens into a large central bar, the room thought to date to Elizabethan times, with a large stone fireplace. Additional bar areas are to the left and right of the main bar. Large outside parking area with several picnic benches offering glorious views over the moors and Strines reservoir.

Technically Strines is served by bus – service 87, however this runs once a week on a Wednesday with buses passing the pub at 10:29am and 1:21pm!

THE OTHER DERBYSHIRE PEAK DISTRICT PUBS IN OUR BRANCH AREA WITH CASK ALE

  • Anchor, Tideswell (bus 65, 66 or 173)
  • Anglers Rest, Bamford (bus 257, 257a or 257b)
  • Anglers Rest, Millers Dale (bus 65)
  • Blind Bull, Little Hucklow (bus 173 or 257b)
  • Bulls Head, Castleton (bus 62, 173 or 272)
  • Bulls Head, Foolow (bus 65, 66, 257a or 257b)
  • Calver Arms, Calver (bus 65, 66, 257, 257a, 257b or X66)
  • Castle Inn, Castleton (bus 62, 173 or 272)
  • Cheshire Cheese Inn, Hope (bus 62)
  • Cow Shed Cafe, Millers Dale (bus 65)
  • Crispin, Great Longstone (bus 173)
  • Eyam Brewery tap, Tideswell – special events only (bus 65, 66 or 173)
  • Fox House (bus 65 or 272)
  • George, Castleton (bus 62, 173 or 272)
  • George Hotel, Hathersage (bus 257, 257a or 272)
  • George, Tideswell (bus 65, 66 or 173)
  • Horse & Jockey, Tideswell (bus 65, 66 or 173)
  • Intrepid Brewery, Brough – special events only (bus 173, 257b or 272)
  • Ladybower Inn (bus 257, 257a or 257b)
  • Little John Hotel, Hathersage (bus 257, 257a or 272)
  • Losehill House Hotel & Spa (bus 62)
  • Maynard Arms, Grindleford (bus 65 or train)
  • Millstone, Hathersage (bus 272)
  • Miners Arms, Eyam (bus 65, 257, 257a or 257b)
  • Moon, Stoney Middleton (bus 65, 66, 257, 257a or 257b or X66)
  • Olde Bowling Green Inn, Bradwell (bus 173, 257b or 272)
  • Olde Cheshire Cheese, Castleton (bus 62, 173 or 272)
  • Old Hall Hotel, Hope (bus 62, 173, 257b or 272)
  • Old Nags Head, Edale (bus 62 or train)
  • Olde Nags Head, Castleton (bus 62, 173 or 272)
  • Packhorse Inn, Little Longstone (bus 173)
  • Peak Hotel, Castleton (bus 62, 173 or 272)
  • Plough Inn, Leadmill Bridge (bus 257 or 257a)
  • Queen Anne, Great Hucklow (bus 65, 66 or 173)
  • Rambler Inn, Edale (bus 62 or train)
  • Red Lion, Litton (bus 65 or 173)
  • Scotsmans Pack, Hathersage (bus 272)
  • Shoulder of Mutton, Bradwell (bus 173, 257b or 272)
  • Sir William Hotel, Grindleford (bus 65, 257 or 257a)
  • Stables Bar, Monsal Head (bus 173 or 257a)
  • Star, Tideswell (bus 65, 66 or 173)
  • Swiss Tap, Castleton (bus 62, 173 or 272)
  • Three Stags Heads, Wardlow Mires (bus 173, 257a or X66)
  • Travellers Rest, Brough (bus 173, 257b or 272)
  • White Hart, Bradwell (bus 272)
  • White Lion, Great Longstone (bus 173)
  • Woodroffe Arms, Hope (bus 62, 173, 257b or 272)
  • Yorkshire Bridge Inn, Bamford (bus 257, 257a or 257b)

Chesterfield Historic pub tour

The theme of this year’s Chesterfield Great Historic Pub Tour could be described as “The Best of Chesterfield”. Visiting a total of 8 pubs, 6 of which are in the latest edition of CAMRA’s, “The Good Beer Guide”, and 2 more that should make the cut soon.

Your guide is Shaun Stevenson, a local history enthusiast with a passion for supporting the
hospitality trade. His knowledge concerning Chesterfield’s pubs is extensive, despite the fact that Shaun is actually legally blind. “I know Chesterfield like the back of my hand”, remarked Shaun. “If you join me on one of my tours, I’ll tell you all about these fabulous places, including stories about famous people, local heroes, tragic events and even murders”.

Chesterfield has managed to retain its historic town centre with its recently revamped open
air market attracting many new visitors. Shaun is keen to show off his home town and
promises to indulge in some history telling as the tour passes through landmarks like the
Crooked Spire churchyard, The Shambles and the 800 year old market square, with its
cobblestones and narrow alleyways.

The day begins at 12 noon in the Pig & Pump on St Mary’s Gate, in the shadow of the Crooked Spire. This walking tour allows around 30 minutes at each venue to purchase the drink of your choice. The group will then move on to the next pub with interesting anecdotes along the way. An optional pre-arranged lunch is available around 3pm and the tour finishes at The Neptune Beer Emporium around 5pm/6pm.

Dates for 2026 are limited to Saturdays – 9th May, 6th June, 4th July, 1st August, 5th
September. Booking in advance is recommended.

Shaun has been operating the Chesterfield Great Historic Pub Tour since 2019 and has
noticed a trend towards real ale tourism. “Organisations like CAMRA and some enterprising
individuals have created an entire industry around ‘making a day of it’. Structured pub tours
based around locations and transport links are becoming very popular and I would like to
think that my tour offers something different, within this genre”. Shaun added, “I’m looking
forward to welcoming friends old and new. Regulars return every year, knowing that I always tell new stories and visit new places.”

Shaun also provides pub tours of Bakewell on selected Saturdays throughout the summer
and a popular local drinking challenge, the Brampton Mile, on bank holiday Sundays.

For more details, visit www.greathistoricpubtours.co.uk Facebook – search @CGHPT and
YouTube – Great Historic Pub Tours.

Long distance delivery

A number of our members like to make the effort to deliver copies of Beer Matters magazines to bars in other countries they visit, here is Martyn Stevens, a fan of beer and heritage buses, who more regularly drinks in the Chapeltown and Kelham Island areas in Narke kultur Brewery’s tap in Orebro, Sweden. This is one of his favourite breweries and is an hour and a half by train from Stockholm.

SCBF49 visits Happy Valley

Saturday November 15th saw the annual Steel City Beer Festival volunteer day out. After a last-minute check on Storm Claudia flood warnings, our coach travelled north taking 46 passengers to the joys of Happy Valley. Here we met several fellow workers who had journeyed from other parts of West Yorkshire before splitting into smaller groups to investigate the 15 outlets listed on our guide. The relatively small size of Hebden Bridge meant that all of us spent the afternoon meeting-up with colleagues as we moved from pub to pub. As one participant said afterwards, ‘my first Sheff CAMRA trip. Got to say how great it was.’

Ten of us commenced with the most outlying pub: Stubbing Wharf with four hand-pumps. Then it was to West Yorkshire’s first community co-operative pub: the Fox and Goose where a single bar served three flagstone floored rooms and a beer garden which seems to stretch as far as Heptonstall.

Other outlets included the Albert (the ‘Duke of Wellington’ in the recent BBC series, ‘Riot Women’), Drink! – a specialist bottle shop and sampling room with bar, Hidden Hebden, the Trades Club, Vocation & Co. and the tap for local brewery, Nightjar.

Also visited was MAMIL*, a recent addition to a small local chain of cycle-themed café-bars: this was felt to be the bar with the most garish facilities.

Beers sampled included several from local brewery, Vocation plus many others. Big Drop, Black Sheep, Deeply Vale, Harrogate, Nightjar, Ossett, Pictish, Pomona Island, Redwillow, Small World, Squark, Theakston and Timothy Taylor were among the many breweries encountered.

Thanks to our driver, Glyn, and for their local knowledge as our map was constructed, Hebden residents, Alice, Josh and their dog, Mars. Also thanks to everyone who was on the coach for their exemplary time-keeping – much appreciated. Also, it was good to see that none of you turned left after using the on-board facilities.

See you next year!

* MAMIL, Middle Aged Men In Lycra, is an acronym which was heavily used in 2014 when the Tour de France visited Hebden Bridge and also saw it’s best-ever Grand Départ.

Beer in Bangkok

This August I revisited Bangkok after several years, catching up with friends and visiting old favourites – and some new venues. 

Brewing and alcohol laws in Thailand are complex and have changed (for the better) a fair amount in recent years. I believe until recent law changes only a brewpub and a mass production license were available. This resulted in illegal brewing, or legally brewing in a neighbouring country with brewers then having to import their beer into Thailand to sell it. Duties and taxes are still high, but there are now more legal routes to brew and distribute in-country. There is also a large import market and lots of craft beer venues, but the duties and taxes keep prices very high. The most expensive beer I saw on this visit was about £14 for 350ml – an imported 8.9% Vault City & Overtone collaboration. The cheapest local craft beer was around £4.50 for a similar measure. Local lager can be found for around £2 (or more, or less – depending on where you are).

My first stop after landing on a Saturday afternoon was Hair of the Dog in Phrom Phong. They were founded in 2015, and have 2 locations just off Sukhumvit. Their first bar was my local when I lived in Phloen Chit in 2017. Their Phrom Phong bar opened a year later and is slightly larger with a gin bar mezzanine floor. They offer 13 taps of craft beer at each location – all recently kitted out with Czech side pour taps. Both bars also offer cocktails and a large beer fridge for drink in and takeaway. Canadians Mike and Pete originally worked in Bangkok’s Mikkeller bar, the first international craft beer bar in the city before opening Hair of the Dog. 

I also visited Duke of Beerington, a small bottle shop with 3 taps in Thong Lor, opposite a Japanese isakaya which you can order food from. Since my last visit I was pleased to notice that Japanese breweries appear to export and can far more than they did several years ago, and that those cans are making it out of Japan. Duke often has a full fridge of UK beers from breweries like Verdant and Track, alongside a lot of American beers and more recently the legal Thai brews and Japanese imports.

I had a start to my Tuesday evening which turned out to be controversial with at least one friend – visiting a house bar called Om’s Living Room. It turns out it may not be the most licensed of establishments – though as mentioned, Thailand’s beer rules haven’t always been the easiest to work under. Om serves exclusively Thai beer and, as the bar style and name suggest, is literally the ground floor of a residential building.

I moved on to Finger Heart (named for the finger and thumb heart gesture I believe was popularised by K-Pop) – a small bottle shop offering a mix of local and imported beer, including impressively priced (for Thailand) bottles of 3 Fonteinen.

I then visited a Chit Hole for the first time. Chit started out as Thailand’s most infamous home brewer, often being shut down by the authorities for short periods. His original bar is located on the artificial island of Pak Kret in the Khaopraya river which can only be visited by boat. I didn’t get a chance to make that journey on this trip, however there are now a series of bars named the Chit Hole across the city, often cohabiting with a restaurant or other business. These bars serve exclusively Thai beer, and I enjoyed Chit’s own Hipster IPA (7.2%) and Top Hill (6.5% Porter).

On Wednesday I rejoined my former quiz team at an ‘English’ style pub, the Royal Oak on Sukhumvit Soi 33 – where we won the quiz! Beers in here are the often found local lagers, as well as Guinness and Punk IPA.

On the following Saturday I arranged to meet with old friends to visit a couple of bars in Chinatown, after meeting for lunch and visiting a couple of coffee shops along the way we ended up at Tai Soon, a very nice old building full of exposed brick and concrete, with a high entryway adorned with Chinese lanterns. Fully half the taps were Thai beer so I tried an amazing Yuzu mead (Sanghok brewing, 5%) and Humble Flow (Lollihops brewing, 6.4% IPA) among others. 

We then took a short walk up the road to a brand new bar in the rear grounds of an old mansion, Two Palms taproom. About half their taps were Two Palms beer, and they offered flights so I made significant inroads into the menu with 2 flights of various Two Palms, Maalstroom and Sunrise brewing beer – all Thai brewers. We then took a long and traffic jam hindered Grab taxi back to Sukhumvit, and a final beer (ok, several final beers) at Hair of the Dog Phrom Phong.

Channel Hopping

This summer, our Festival Cellar manager Lee Vallett accepted a challenge even more difficult than sorting the cooling for 200 casks of beer. Swimming the English Channel!

At 04:17, 2nd July 2025, I set off from England to swim to France. I’ve been preparing for 3 years to do this.

Lee’s group signing the wall in the White Horse in Dover. A tradition with channel swimmers for over 20 years

The water was 16.5 degrees and it was still dark. It all seemed ok for the first hour, having swum 6 hours at 14 degrees earlier in the year. But then so soon in the swim, I started with shoulder pain and had to slow down a bit which led to me feeling cold. I felt defeated. I wanted to quit. When I stopped to tell my team, they had other ideas! Just do 15 more minutes with some Paracetamol and see how it goes was their response! So I swam on. 15 minutes came and went, the shoulder improved and so did my pace. I also warmed up and felt a glimmer of hope. 15 minutes became 30, which became my next feed, and 45 minutes later the feed after that as well. The 45 minute blocks soon added up and at 6 hours, I was half way and it was then I started to believe I was going to do this! I had a couple of jelly fish stings! I strangely welcomed them, they took my mind off the never ending repetition of left arm right arm!

Lee swimming!

9 hours in and we could see land! Time to push on and make sure the tide didn’t sweep us past the finish at Cap Gris-Nez! For the last hour I was just fighting the tide! Giving it everything against the power of the sea! It was just enough. I landed after 12 hours 24 minutes and hauled myself out of the water! A Channel Swimmer! Then back to the boat for a ride home.

I took some pretty big life lessons out there, in the 21 miles between England and France!
1. You can do anything with the right team behind you. A team who builds you up when you’re in doubt, and who cheers you on when you need it the most. A team who celebrates with you when you achieve your dreams.
2. Sometimes we set ourselves huge goals and targets. It always seems like a great idea at the time. And then you find yourself at the start. Waiting to jump in. This could be a sporting event or a new project at work. And when faced with the whole of the thing right in front of you, it can be overwhelming. All you can do in these situations is get through the next 15 minutes. And then the next. It soon adds up and before you know it! You’ll be home and dry!

I fundraised for Alzheimer’s Society. A terrible condition my Grandma suffered terribly with. Through incredible support, we have raised over £5000. My page is still open if you would like to donate.

Search “lee is off to france” on justgiving.com.

To finish with, lots of people ask me why I wanted to do it. I think a quote from one of my favourite author’s books says it pretty well:

Some humans would do anything to see if it was possible to do it. If you put a large switch in some cave somewhere, with a sign on it saying ‘End-of-the-World Switch. PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH’, the paint wouldn’t even have time to dry.”

(Sir Terry Pratchett – Thief of Time).

Thanks again to everyone who supported – I’m forever Grateful. Lee

The recorded route showing how they have to account for the tide

Real Ale amongst the dreaming spires

Our chairman, Paul Manning, his wife Bev along with Sheffield branch members John Wright and John Turner with their wives Eve and Andrea enjoyed a fantastic 4 day break in Oxford sampling many real ales and the tourist sights.

We arrived mid afternoon on a Tuesday and checked into our bed and breakfast hotel on St Clement’s Rd, a 15 minute walk south of the city centre. Keen to explore the ales on offer we first found the Cape of Good Hope pub which had a very pleasant pale called Anthem from St Austell Brewery. We then walked past Magdalen and University colleges along the High Street and sampled Abingdon Bridge bitter from Loose Cannon brewery in the Wheatsheaf a rock/dive bar with an interesting clientele. Next was a GBG entry, The Bear Inn, a recently refurbished Fullers pub reputed to be the oldest pub in Oxford. The London Pride was excellent but pricey at £6.50 – ouch!

We then had our evening meal at a local Indian tapas bar followed by a few excellent pints of Beechwood bitter from Chiltern brewery in the Port Mahon pub which was its Tuesday £3.50 ‘drink the cask dry’ offering – nice!

On the Wednesday we had a spot of ‘culture’ with a 2 hour walking tour round Oxford with a Morse, Endeavour and Lewis theme exploring many filming locations and a few drinking holes including the famous Turf Tavern where we tried its house Education ale – a Greene King brew.

Bev and I then did a short river cruise down the Thames past numerous University colleges boat houses whilst enjoying a can of Time Better Spent a juicy IPA from Tap Social Oxford brewery who employ guests of His Majesty’s Prisons in both the brewing and can design!

A further pint of London Pride in the Head of the River Fullers pub followed by an excellent Italian meal closed out our second day.

Thursday dawned a little cloudier but dry and this time it was the very touristy hop on/hop off bus which included a live commentary by Andy the Hat a local travel guide with loads of interesting facts about the many famous graduates in the various colleges including American presidents, Australian and British prime ministers and inventors and explorers. We also visited the Morse bar in the very grand Randolph hotel where it was an Irish coffee and cocktail for us.

We then all headed out of Oxford in a six seater Uber to the splendid Oxford brewery in the nearby village of Horspath. We were welcomed as old friends in their taproom where we enjoyed splendid pints of their cask offerings of Trinity, Prospect and Matilda’s Tears named brews. One purchased T shirt and cracked head on a door beam with ‘a mind your head’ sign on it later we returned to Oxford for our evening meal this time in a lovely Thai restaurant next to another grade ll listed GBG pub, the Chequers, where we enjoyed a lovely pint of Adnams brewery favourite Broadside. 

Our final day saw more visits to the Ashmolean museum, a look round the splendid New College with its Harry Potter themed dining hall and famous courtyard and tree featured in the film franchise.

The afternoon started with a visit to the fantastic Grapes pub which is Oxford CAMRA branch’s pub of the year for 2025 to deliver some of our festival beermats. It wasn’t hard to see why they won the award and we enjoyed several beers including SUP Golden Ale from Northern Monk brewery, 1950’s Burton Ruby Mild by Heritage brewing, a peach Melba bitter from Thornbridge and my personal favourite, a limited edition brew from Vale brewery named Our Shark to celebrate the 50 years anniversary of the Jaws film. They also served superb reasonably priced food with 3 tapas style plates duly consumed.

After enjoying a pint of Oxford Pale Ale from Chadlington brewery in The Kings Arms, a Youngs pub with more Sheffield beer festival beermats donated we spent the final afternoon doing a ‘Mystery Guide’ book tour round Oxford solving various clues on historic buildings and plaques etc to solve a ‘crime’ where the answer was revealed in a local pub. In our case it was the Bear Inn again which had numerous cricket club ties on display which revealed the culprit. Very enjoyable but tiring 3 hours which at least got our step counts way up. Our final evening was a visit to the city’s number 1 Tripadvisor rated restaurant called the Antep kitchen where we enjoyed splendid Turkish cuisine and Turkish Efee bottled beer.

A final couple of beers again at the Port Mahon pub closed out our stay. A lovely city with some great beers that is well worth a visit.

Notre Dame Lujan

Notre Dame Lujan is the first and only pub to serve real ale and has hosted the Rand Festival since 2018. We have already done 7 editions of our festival (the first was only 2 casks and each year we add more, than the last one, which was 9). 
In Argentina casks do not exist, so Alberto Eyherabide, owner of the pub and cellarman, had them made to suit him. Same as all the tools to serve cask ale. Every time a friend or family traveled outside of Argentina he bought them taps, and cask ale elements.
We also have natural ciders. 1 year ago we are the only pub in Latin America with cask marquee and we also serve real ale from wooden cask. We have the support of the SPBW. On Saturday the guys from Brampton brewery were here and they left me a Sheffield Unlted t-shirt! We must work to be sister cities! After a recent visit to Sheffield, Alberto explored Kelham/Neepsend to gather ideas, and sample the fine beers. 
I was in England on several occasions and in the USA I won a cellarman scholarship at the Nerax in Boston 2019 and in 2023 I participated as a cask ale judge at the Atlanta Cask Ale Festival. 

My dream is to be able to go to the GBBF one day. We have the support of CAMRA since 2018.
www.notredamelujan.com

Belgium: Beer on the Tracks

I recently returned from Belgium after a few days on a trip which involved Beer, Trains & Trams. We stayed in the home of Belgian rail, Mechelan: my visit including several visits to mostly volunteer-run, tram/train rides/museums.

Steam Train Maldegem-Eeklo is a heritage railway based at the former National Rail station of Maldegem. This houses the largest number of operational diesel and steam locomotives in Flanders. All enjoyed the trip on a narrow gauge line in old open wagons  pulled by one of their diesel locomotives.

The Dendermonde-Puurs Steam Train heritage standard gauge railway took us on a 45 minute return  journey from Puurs (Signal Box) to Baasrode-Noord Station. The track winds through the Scheldeland through the provinces of Antwerp and East Flanders. On board was waiter service: Dilewyns Vicaris Triple 8.5% and, the house train beer, Brouwer Stomerke 6% were sampled.

Rail Rebecq Rognon (RRR or Petit Train Du Bonheur – The Small Train of Happiness) explores the old SNCB Lines 115 and 123 on a 4 km line crossing the Rebecquoise countryside along the Senne and the Vallée des Oiseaux. The diesel loco took us on a return ride on the narrow gauge line between Rebecq and Rognon. Florence Triple 8% was available at the station café.

Our major tram ride was Tram 44 from Montgomery Metro Station (Brussels). This starts underground before emerging onto Avenue de Tervuren. It then rumbles past Stoclet House and the tram museum before plunging into the forest. The journey ends some 20 minutes later at the 19th-century tram station in Tervuren, a Royal suburb of Brussels within the once great ancient Sonian Forest.  The Tram Museum (opened 1976) housed in the 1897 tram depot has a vast collection of 130 vehicles including a 1869 horse-drawn tram.

TramSite Schepdaal (Dilbeek) is the only remaining local (or vicinal) tramway depot in Belgium, the line closing in 1970.  This depot served the first tramway in Flemish Brabant: Brussels to Ninove (1888). The oldest buildings at Schepdaal date from then. The station café provided local beer, Angerik Dilleke 5.1%.

Belgium June 2025

We also visited Duvel Depot in Breendonk, the tap of the family-controlled Duvel Moortgat brewery (1871), and the Batteliek Microbrewery on the outskirts of Mechelen. The latter is an old red brick church, now a brewery, bar and eatery under the auspices of Het Anker. The tasting flight was chosen: Baobab Triple 8,8%, Ipapotamus 7.7% and Derkal 8.3%. The Het Anchor Brouwerij tap (Mechelen) also provided a flight: Gouden Carolus  Hopsinjoor 8.0%, Gouden Carolus Whisky Infused 11.7% and a Batteliek Bieren.

Several other bars were visited – recommended in Mechelen are Beer Central, Hanekeef, Het Maanlicht, Kuub and Moemoe. Het Maanlicht provided one of the most interesting beers of the trip: De Blauwe Kuip Burton 5.2% – an (almost) British bitter served in a half-pint ‘jug.’  Other recommendations include: Cuytegemhoeve Beer Cafe (Puurs-Sint-Amands) and Eetcafe D’Akte (Lennik).

Strangest sight of the trip was undoubtably an open-air tango dancing class in the Veermarkt  in Mechelen – only in Belgium … the next trip is planned for September.