Spoiler alert, this post is a prelude to the one that will come next, so don’t expect too much detail regarding either the pubs, or the beers I found on sale there. All will be revealed, in the next article. Well, its “Explore Pub Friday” once more, and yet again I was in a quandary. My original plan had been to knock off the remaining two or three miles of the official route of the North Downs Way, a task I've been attempting for some time now. However, after being thwarted by weeks of heavy rain, followed by the recent spell of cold weather I was beginning to think that mother nature herself was conspiring to impede my progress. The section of the official
NDW route that I missed, was a distance of
just under two miles once the links between the path and the main road are taken
into account. My thrice-postponed plan had been, to take a bus to Knockholt
Pound, from Orpington railway station, complete the walk as far as Knockholt
village, and then take another bus to a country pub, for a spot of lunch and a
couple of pints.
I shan’t reveal the name of the pub or its location, but
it’s a place I have never been to before, and one that I expect most members of
West Kent CAMRA have not been to either. Following this lunch stop, I would
then catch a third bus back to Orpington, for the train home. It was the
potential of waiting around in the cold, for late-running buses, that scuppered
Friday’s walk, rather than anything else, although having studied route maps
and obtained bus times, I intend to put this one to bed, once the temperatures
improve and the prospect of more heavy rain, recedes.
With the walk postponed, I began looking around for other
options. Knowing that a strike by train drivers would affect rail services on 3rd
February, next Friday, I decided to reserve that particular day for a location
that is reachable by bus, rather than rail. So, with this in mind, it seemed
sensible to take advantage of a day when the trains were running and go
somewhere further afield. But where?
I spent ages looking for somewhere with a with real
character, and potentially some different beers, although that last factor was the
most important one. Slightly bereft of ideas, I looked to CAMRA’s National Inventory
List for guidance, working on the premise that success was more likely with
those pubs listed with interiors of regional importance, rather than the far
scarcer listings of pubs with a nationally important interior. I was surprised
to find quite a few Kentish pubs falling in to the regionally important
category, and secretly pleased when I realised, I’d already been in quite a few
of them.
There was a pavement on either side of the highway, but much as I enjoy walking, a busy "A" road, with a constant stream of traffic, and possessing all the charms of suburbia, persuaded me make full use of my bus pass instead. Westbere is accessed by a narrow, winding road leading off from the A28, and overlooks the lakes of the same name. These were originally created for extraction of gravel, laid down by the Great Stour river that runs through the valley. The Yew Tree pub is at the far end of the village, close to the church. Much of the surrounding countryside is wooded, which meant I didn’t catch a glimpse of the river, although I obviously found the pub.
More on the Yew Tree in the next post, along with what I
found when I made the short walk, in the opposite direction, from Sturry station,
towards the ancient port of Fordwich. What I will say is the housing density,
is much greater in Fordwich, than in Westbere, although many of the houses and
buildings are of a similar antiquity.








I don't know what a burgh is, either, Paul !
ReplyDeleteFordwich is one of those places the Good Beer Guide brings you to and then you research' a lovely place with superb walks.
Which Fordwich pub is/was the GBG entry? I'm guessing the George & Dragon, but I could be wrong.
ReplyDelete