It’s 10 years since I last set foot in Whitstable, so when
Mrs PBT’s suggested a trip to the seaside, I decided a return visit to a town
which is sometimes referred to as “Shoreditch on Sea”, was long
overdue. A quick check on Google revealed that Whitstable was just over an
hour’s drive from Bailey Towers, so with the sun attempting to break through the murk, we jumped in the car and off we went.
The traffic was heavier than expected,
especially along the section of the M20 between Junctions 4 and 7. Work is taking
place to convert this part of the highway to a so-called “smart motorway”,
which basically means the hard-shoulder will become an additional lane for
traffic, and if you break down “smart technology” will close the carriageway
behind you so that your vehicle doesn’t get swept aside by that juggernaut
thundering along a few inches from your rear bumper!
Those of us living in the Garden of England have heard
a different story, which says the real purpose of this work is to convert the
motorway into a giant lorry park. Now why would that possibly be needed,
especially as the contract is unlikely to be finished before 29th
March?
From memory today’s trip was the first time
in decades that I have driven to that section of the North Kent Coast., as on
previous occasions I have travelled by train. That was because drink was
involved on most, if not all of those visits, but given the driving involved,
this visit ended up being a very sober affair.
I’m not complaining as I’ve plenty of beer at
home, should I feel the urge, but more importantly the purpose of our visit was
to get some sea air in our lungs, some sun on our faces, to get something to eat
(fish & chips?) and to see just how much the town of Whitstable has changed
over the past decade.
Ten years ago I wrote on my now defunct Paul's Beer Travels blog that Whitstable had become second home territory for
an increasing number of affluent Londoners; colour supplement readers and the
like! There had been an inevitable rise in property prices, and this influx of
high-spending "outsiders" had led to a sharp increase in what pubs
and restaurants are charging their customers.
I based this statement on my observations at the time and,
if anything, the "gentrification" I noticed a decade ago has
increased. Whitstable still isn't quite Southwold, but it's fast becoming so.
This time around we arrived in the town just after 12.30pm,
and drove down to the harbour, before parking up in a small car-park, just off
the High Street. We made our way to the sea wall, joining a throng of what
Retired Martin would call the “Pashmina Brigade”, all out for a stroll with
their trophy dogs, trophy husbands/lovers and assorted trophy kids. If you are into
people watching (a habit I acquired from my parents), you would find this
parade both fascinating, and perhaps a little disturbing as well.
More important than watching the “beautiful people” out for
their constitutional, was finding a place to eat; somewhere not prohibitively
expensive and somewhere not thronged with people waiting for a table to become
vacant. We passed two establishments that I’d been in before.
A decade ago, Pearson’s, a former Good Beer
Guide-listed pub, had been full of Whitstable's answer to the "beautiful
people". What’s more, my blog recorded that there were no Gadds (Ramsgate Brewery) beers available, but the Harvey’s
had been quite tasty.
Opposite Pearson’s is the Royal Native Oyster Stores,
owned and run by the Whitstable
Oyster Company Ltd. The brick building is the company’s original head
quarters, and is now their flagship outlet. I’d overheard people saying there
was a lengthy wait for food in there yesterday, but despite more
"beautiful people", it really is worth stepping inside for a look,
especially if you like oysters.
You will find this shellfish in abundance, with oysters
galore being split open and served up on dishes of flaked ice, along with crabs
and lobsters also being prepared behind a glass counter, ready to be served up
to diners in the restaurant next door. We remained aloof. Call us philistines,
but none of us have been brave or foolhardy enough to try oysters and whilst Mrs PBT's and I like crab and lobster, neither were what we had in mind yesterday.
Instead, we spotted a place, attached to the side of
Whitstable Yacht Club, just off the land-side of the sea wall. Laid out on the
shingle was a collection of all-weather (metal) tables and chairs, with a
plastic canopy above for shelter in inclement weather. There was a small
serving hatch, plus a chalk board menu offering all manner of “comfort food”.
What’s more there were a few vacant tables and no-one queuing to place their
orders.
We grabbed a table and I went to order the food – fish &
chips all round. Unfortunately this little pop-up café had run out of fish.
After a brief conflab Mrs PBT’s and I opted for a fish-finger sandwich, whilst
Matthew went for a sausage in a bap. Now for whatever reason I neglected to
order the chips. This was possibly because I thought that chips were included,
or possibly because I’d decided I didn’t really need chips as well.
There was a 20-30 minute wait for the food (the kitchen
looked tiny with only room for two people), but the family didn’t mind at first
– not until the subject of chips came up. “Do the fish finger sandwiches come
with chips?” asked my good lady wife. I looked across to the menu board,
hanging on the wall, before replying in all honesty that it didn’t look like
they did. “Well didn’t you order a portion to go with the main?” was the next
question. What could I say apart from “No”?
I can manage most things in life with relative ease, but for
some reason, ordering food on behalf of others really throws me. Multiple food
orders are even worse, and trying to second guess their preferences, if what
they ordered originally is not available, is a real pet hate of mine. What
makes it even worse, is getting all the stick when it’s wrong.
So my reply to those family members who were too comfortable
sitting where they were, rather than coming up and ordering with me was, they
ought to try second guessing. Gripe over, but I told them that after all the
Christmas food they’d eaten over the past few days, the last thing they needed
was chips!
The food when it came was hot, well-cooked and as tasty as
fish finger sandwiches can be – even without chips, and being able to sit and
eat outdoors in late December, was an unexpected bonus. With not a breath of
wind, and hardly a cloud in the sky, the sun shining out through the slight
haze, across one of the calmest seas I’ve ever seen, was a real magical moment.
That mirror-like sea, was amazing, although the photos I took don’t really do
it justice.
After finishing our lunch, we walked down one of the
slipways to the water’s edge, just to make sure we weren’t dreaming. My feet
had started to get cold, so we took a slow stroll back to find the car, pausing
en route to admire some of the small converted fishing huts which can be rented
out for £75 a night. Peeping in through the windows did show a rather cramped
interior, plus staircases which looked more like ladders than stairs.
We took a slightly different route back, staying on the M2
motorway all the way until Junction 2, for the A228. I did this to take us
over the impressive Medway Bridge, with its views towards Rochester on
one side and the High-Speed Rail Link on the other.
It was getting dark by the time we arrived back in
Tonbridge, and to end the evening Mrs PBT’s cooked us a very nice turkey curry to
make up for those missing chips!
6 comments:
Great place for people watching, Paul. We sell our plants at the Farmers' Market in season, standing outside, and we are amazed!Lovely atmosphere though.I'm there for work,but I do make a pilgrimage to the Black Dog,one of my favourite micropubs.
Lovely read, great photos (particularly like the view out to sea alongside the chip drama !).
Excellent use of "trophy dogs"; I shall steal that one.
And yes, ordering for others is a thankless task !
Happy 2019.
David, my wife hadn’t visited Whitstable since childhood, and was amazed at the transformation the town has undergone. I can still remember Whitstable having at least one amusement arcade; something the “pashmina brigade” would definitely not approve of!
I will have to look up the Black Dog, as I didn’t realise the town had a micro-pub. (Bit daft of me really, given its proximity to Herne). I will need to let the train take the strain, if I do decide to pay a visit to the Black Dog – quite easy for me, train from Tonbridge, then change at paddock Wood and Strood, and a third off too, thanks to my Senior Railcard.
Glad you enjoyed the post, Martin. It was a day for relaxing and chilling out, and given the heavy motorway traffic, not a day for imbibing.
As for the chips, I ended up rubbing salt into the wound by posting a couple of photos of the scampi and chips, enjoyed by myself plus a couple of friends, at the Greyhound the following day. I did offer to buy a bag of them for Mrs PBT’s in Maidstone this afternoon, but she claimed she wasn’t hungry.
Please feel free to use the term “trophy dogs”. They were certainly out in considerable numbers that day. I was also tempted to use the “trophy” word for some of the kids, but that wouldn’t be fair, as they can’t help having poseurs parents for parents. (Same applies to the hounds!).
All the best for 2019.
It has at least two micropubs, Paul.
There's also the Twelve Taps.
"and if you break down “smart technology” will close the carriageway behind you so that your vehicle doesn’t get swept aside by that juggernaut thundering along a few inches from your rear bumper!"
Interesting. Isn't technology wonderful? (when it works!)
"and this influx of high-spending "outsiders" had led to a sharp increase in what pubs and restaurants are charging their customers."
That's pretty much true anywhere these days. :)
"If you are into people watching (a habit I acquired from my parents), you would find this parade both fascinating, and perhaps a little disturbing as well."
I enjoy doing that on occasion, but it's best done whilst sitting outside a pub. ;)
"Call us philistines, but none of us have been brave or foolhardy enough to try oysters"
Right there with you (including the crab and lobster on my part, while my wife just loves those). Oysters are a big thing in Vancouver these days, at very trendy places of course!
"What makes it even worse, is getting all the stick when it’s wrong."
Over here we call that marriage. (LOL)
"and to end the evening Mrs PBT’s cooked us a very nice turkey curry to make up for those missing chips!"
Over here we call that a peace offering. :)
Cheers
"I was also tempted to use the “trophy” word for some of the kids,"
I do believe you did. ;)
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