So sang 
John Lennon and 
Yoko Ono, 
52 years ago, but despite the half-century time lapse, it's still a question that's well worth asking. 
Christmas Day and 
Boxing Day are now over, and apart from confirming that the 
Bailey family
enjoyed an excellent roast turkey dinner, on the 
"big day," I want to take a look back at the year that is fast coming to an end, with particular emphasis as usual on the world of beer and travel.
After a brief respite on 
Boxing Day, the weather has returned to its familiar, damp and rather miserable pattern, so with nothing to tempt me outside, I want to use the
time to present my annual round-up and look back at the year 
2023.I’ve been keeping some rough notes which suggest that I
didn’t achieve as much as I would have like to, in certain areas of my life
with particular regard to pubs. I only visited 
84 different pubs in
2023, 
    which was a lot more than I initially thought, but obviously pales into
insignificance when compared to the exploits of pub-ticking legends such as
Retired Martin, Si Everitt, LAF (Life After Football), and 
GBG completest over
several years, 
Pubmeister. In mitigation, 
23 of those pubs were new to me.
Despite this low tally – only three up on 
2022, I enjoyed visiting
all these pubs, which ranged from town centre locals, unspoilt rural gems, modern
craft beer bars, to 
CAMRA National Heritage Pubs. The numbers were boosted by
days out spent in a number of towns and cities, up and down this fair land of
ours. Places visited this year, were 
Norwich, Henley-on-Thames, Birmingham, Manchester, Chichester,
and 
Macclesfield, I also spent time in 
Dundee and 
Cologne, and whilst these visits
were work-related, I still found time for a few beers. 
We said a sad farewell, at the start of the year, to 
Mrs PBT’s brother 
David, who died
unexpectedly in 
January, then, later in the year we had another family funeral to attend,
this time it was 
Eileen’s aunt, who was just a few months short of her 
100th
birthday! This meant a trip to the 
Bingley area of 
Yorkshire, for the funeral,
and also to spend a few days with the 
Yorkshire branch of 
Mrs PBT's family. As
on a previous visit, we based ourselves at the 
Bradford West, Premier Inn,
which is on the edge of 
Bingley, in an attractive, semi-rural setting. (The adjacent photo, shows 
David, sitting next to me, in happier times, enjoying a summertime drink).
Eileen is a big fan of this 
Whitbread-owned, hotel chain,
and whilst I agree with her statement that 
“you know what you are getting,” I
personally prefer an independently operated, or even family-owned
establishment, even though occasionally, it can throw in the odd 
“duffer.” A
short, 
1o-minute walk from the 
Premier Inn, takes you to the 
Airedale Heifer, a
stone-built pub housed in a former barn, that was once part of the 
Old East
Riddlesden Hall Estate. The 
Heifer, is also home to the 
Bridgehouse Brewery, with
brewing taking place in a separate outbuilding, behind the pub. 
During our time in 
Yorkshire, we spent a morning in 
Howarth
and then took a drive across the moors to 
Colne and 
Skipton. The scenery
certainly looked spectacular in the
 June sunshine, and we passed a number of
attractive looking, stone-built pubs nestling by the side of the road. Our
journey home, saw us skirting 
Skipton and the edge of 
Harrogate, before passing
through the attractive 
North Yorkshire town of 
Knaresborough, and then on to
the 
A1 and the road home. 
Fortunately, the car behaved itself on this trip, which is
more than be said after what happened in September, when it started
malfunctioning on the 
M25, during a drive home from 
Dorking. Having to be
recovered from 
Clackets Lane services, was an indignity I haven’t experienced before,
but after having the faulty fuel injector replaced, blow me if the same thing
didn’t happen again, on the 
Friday before 
Christmas. I limped the vehicle home
this time, and it’s going in for a diagnostic check in a couple of days’ time. I
mentioned previously that I’ve been looking for a replacement vehicle, but with
the benefit of that wonderful thing called hindsight, I should have looked for
one, earlier in the year.
One activity that definitely took a nosedive was bus trips,
out to unspoilt and difficult to reach country pubs. I’m not how this came
about, particularly as there was very little in the way of long-distance walking
but trips out by 
bus were nowhere as frequent as the previous year. For the record I travelled out to 
Goudhurst – Star & Eagle, Eridge – Boar’s Head, Petteridge –
Hopbine and 
Brenchley – Halfway House, Penshurst – Leicester Arms and
Edenbridge – Old Eden, but that was it. This was despite my best intentions,
and the fact that I’d compiled a list of 
“easy” places to visit by bus.
2023 was a disappointing year for walking, being marred by
wet weather, particularly during the months of 
March and 
April. This didn’t
help with my quest of completing the 
Tunbridge Wells Circular Walk, a 
27.5-mile
trail that passes through a rolling landscape of ridges, valleys, small
fields, hedges, and broad-leaved woodland, as it skirts the town of 
Tunbridge
Wells. Lying within the 
High Weald AONB, the trail explores the
diverse and beautiful countryside which lies on the borders of 
Kent and 
East
Sussex.  I have been following the
official 
Kent Ramblers Guide, which divides the trail into four
convenient stages, which vary in length from 
5 to 10 miles, but so far, I
have only completed two of the stages (
Southborough to 
Pembury,
and 
Pembury to 
Frant).
Still to come are 
Frant to 
Groombridge (7 miles) and 
Groombridge
to
 Southborough (6 miles). These final two stages should be relatively easy,
although the trail isn’t as well signposted as those along the 
North and 
South
Downs. I aim to get started, once the wet weather eases up, and the days begin
to lengthen again. 
Another feature missing on the walking front, has been the
complete absence of 
CAMRA, related rambles. This follows on from the relocation
to 
Portsmouth of one of the leading lights and driving forces of the 
Weekend
Walking WhatsApp group. The garden also proved rather disappointing last year, and if
truth be known, I probably expended too much time and effort on it, for very
little return. On the plus side, it has forced a reappraisal on what’s
feasible, or even worth growing. 
Highlight of the year, even if it was a longtime coming, was
the (almost) three-week 
Mediterranean cruise that 
Mrs PBT’s and I embarked on,
back in 
October. Not only did it take up a large chunk of the month, it also
represented by far the longest holiday that the pair of us have ever
undertaken. Even better was the fact that we didn’t fall out, not even
slightly, despite being in close proximity to each other for a long period of
time. 
There were many memorable moments, and some amazing sights,
such as passing through the 
Straits of Gibraltar, as well as the 
Strait of
Messina, between 
Sicily and the
 Italian mainland.  Anchoring in the collapsed
 caldera, that makes up much of 
Santorini,
was also memorable, even if on that occasion, we didn’t get off the boat. Then
there was my ascent of the 
Acropolis, overlooking 
Athens, and getting separated
from the tour party, when we reached the 
Parthenon. Both 
Eileen and I were
smitten by the charms of 
Kefalonia, and have marked down this idyllic 
Greek
island, as a place we would like to return to before our days are out. 
Cruising doesn’t always get a good press environmentally and
is said to be 
worse
for the climate than flying. There are other downsides too,
such as limited time in each location and not experiencing the local hotels and
nightlife, but the sheer joy of waking up almost every morning in a new or
different port, or anchorage, certainly takes some beating. Let’s end the year
on a high note then and await what 
2024 has to offer us with a mixture of excitement
tempered by a slight hint of trepidation.