If going along to the local CAMRA branch Christmas meal is
becoming something of a tradition, there is another one which takes place at
work on the day we break up for the Christmas recess.
We normally finish work around midday,
after spending the morning tidying up, cleaning and getting everything ready
for an orderly return in the new-year. We then lock the factory up and adjourn
to the local pub, where the company buys the first couple of drinks.
Not everyone comes along to this, as some people take the
whole day off, especially if their Christmas plans involve travelling and the
need for a quick getaway. Others come into work, but then forgo the pub visit,
in favour of dashing off to finish last minute Christmas shopping.
I sort of fit into the second group, although I normally
turn up for one drink at the pub, but this year was different. With my wife
finishing work on the previous day, and the whole weekend free for any last
minute shopping, I had the perfect excuse to spend a couple of hours in the
pub, and with the rail option providing a safe and sensible alternative means
of getting to and from work I allowed the train take the strain, and took the 07:59
service from Tonbridge to Penshurst.
There was another reason for joining in with the
festivities, and that was the choice of pub. Ever since I started with my
present company, we have used the nearby Little Brown Jug pub as the venue for
our pre-Christmas drink. The LBJ is a nice place, with plenty of room, and has
hosted our Christmas party these past six years. It is part of a small chain,
which is leased from Greene King and whilst it has become more adventurous
recently in its choice of beers, it tends to stick with ones which are tried
and tested.
I have written about the LBJ before, and have no hesitation
in recommending it to visitors to Chiddingstone Causeway, or to those just
passing through. There is however, another pub close by and that is the
Greyhound, in the small hamlet of Charcott, just 15 minutes walk from the Jug
and Penshurst station.
Regular readers of this blog will be aware of my keen
interest in the Greyhound; an interest I have channelled into regular blog
updates where I have recounted the changing fortunes of this unassuming
Victorian country local.
Over the past 18 months or so, I have reported the closure
of the pub, its temporary re-opening under the stewardship of local brewers
Larkin’s, its subsequent closure and then its sale to a local couple as a pub,
following a successful ACV listing driven by the local community, with backing
from CAMRA.
Since reopening back in the summer, the Greyhound has gone
from strength to strength under its new owners, Fran and Richard Gilliat-Smith,
and has re-established itself at the heart of the small community of Charcott.
With this in mind, a couple of members of my team asked our General Manager if
we could move this year’s Christmas drinks from the LBJ to the Greyhound.
He was happy to oblige, as the company is keen to
help out neighbouring businesses and play its part in the local community. So
shortly after midday we locked up and
about a dozen of us trooped up to the Greyhound.
The pub was looking suitably festive when we arrived and was
moderately busy. We found an area to the right of the bar, where we could
congregate; not too near the fire, as it was rather mild for the time of year.
Larkin’s Traditional and Porter were on tap, along with a beer from Bexley
Brewery. I started with the Traditional, before switching to the Porter; both
were in fine form.
I also grabbed a bite to eat, as the Greyhound’s kitchen is
now fully functional following a complete refit. As we sat enjoying our drinks,
and our food, the pub began to fill up. It really is good to see people once
again using their local pub. My colleagues drifted away in dribs and drabs.
They too had errands to run, or partners to get home to.
Eventually I was the only one left, so I finished my Porter
and set off to walk back to the station, taking the well-trodden and familiar
route which leads across the old Penshurst airfield. There was a stillness in
the air as I followed the path across the fields, and a silence too, as there
was very little traffic about.
I caught the 14:31
train back to Tonbridge, nodding off with the motion of the train and the
warmth of the carriage. I picked up a few bits and pieces on my way home, and
once indoors sat down with a cup of coffee and seasonal mince pie, before finishing wrapping the last of the Christmas presents.
3 comments:
Lovely, evocative piece. Folk will look back with nostalgia on this corporate behaviour in 20 years time, when companies buying drinks for staff is completely banned !
Melancholy image of you on your own with a glass of Porter, hopefully not for top long.
Best wishes for Christmas Paul.
I wasn't on my own for too long Martin, although I was in a slightly reflective mood.
Perhaps we are fortunate, but I suppose the number of companies buying drinks for their staff is in decline.
Best wishes for Christmas to you and Mrs RM.
Nice piece Paul.
Good to see the locals supporting the local, and having it be easy access by foot/train certainly helps.
As for reflection, that's pretty much a given at this time of year. :)
And for the companies buying drinks, hopefully that continues. My wife has been doing the catering for the Comfort Inn since it opened in town about 3 years ago. They were so happy with her work for them this year that we both got invited to the staff Christmas dinner at a local Greek restaurant, complete with free dinner and open bar! (sadly I only had two nice IPAs as I was driving).
Cheers and Merry Christmas
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