Thursday, 25 May 2023

Brewing, glamping and pizza, down on the hop farm

Regular readers will remember that at the end of August 2022, I received an invitation to visit Hukins Hops, at their hop farm at St Michaels, near Tenterden. The invitation was received, courtesy of Dom, from UK Brewery Tours, and on the allotted day, I met up with several other members of the British Guild of Beer Writers, and other interested parties, at Headcorn station, where a pre-booked taxi transported us to Hukins home, at Haffeneden Farm.

Our small group spent several hours at the farm, where we were shown around, and then led on a walking tour through several hop fields (or gardens, to give them their correct name). Dom acted as our guide, as owner, Ross Hukins, was tied up making sure everything was in order for the impending hop harvest. Picking and then drying the hops, represents the busiest, and most important time of the year for every hop farmer, and it is crucial that the precious harvest is gathered in at just the right moment.

You can read more about that scorching hot, late August day here, but for the record, I had the pleasure of meeting Ross a few years earlier, when we both acted as beer judges, at the Spa Valley Railway Beer Festival. Ross has just released some exciting news which, after the introductory stuff, is the main focus of this post. According to an article in KentOnline a brewery with a taproom and brasserie is set to open, at Haffeneden Farm. It will be housed in the farm’s old oast house, which became surplus to requirements, three years ago, following the opening of a modern hop processing facility.

It was this facility that my fellow Beer Writers and I had inspected last August when it was being made ready for the impending hop harvest. I remember at the time there was talk about finding a new use for the old oast house, and I vaguely remember a brewery being suggested. Those initial, sketchy plans have come to fruition, as Hukins secured planning permission in February to transform the historic oast house into a brewery, plus attached restaurant, offering pizza and beer.

Ross Hukins broke the news saying how excited he is about this new project, which will be opening with a soft launch, set for July. He claims that the combined offer at the farm will be the first of its kind in Kent and is also a huge leap forward for this family-owned business, which has been going for more than 100 years. After redeveloping the old oast house, Hukins started doing tours and began looking at how they could open themselves up to the public and help them learn more about hops and their importance in local Kentish beers.

They decided that an on-site brewery, would be a good way, not only of reflect the former use of the oast house, but also of getting their message across. The brewery they have partnered with is McCanns Brewery – a company I am not really familiar with although according to Untappd, they have a connection to the Angels & Demons Brewery, based at Capel-le-Ferne, near Dover. A photo of Ross Gandon, manager at McCanns, pictured alongside Ross Hukins, featured in the KentOnline article. Like other local beer enthusiasts, I am looking forward to sampling what McCanns have to offer once they are up and running.

As well as the brasserie and taproom where people can come on tours, taste the beers, and enjoy some food, there will also be four to five glamping units onsite so people can stay overnight. These will range from shepherds huts, hop pickers huts and a converted brick building where people can stay and explore the farm, see what goes on there. Ross stated how excited he was to have the brewery on the family hop farm; something he describes as quite unique, that will allow people to come along, learn a bit about the beer and enjoy themselves.

He concluded by saying, "Hops play a crucial role today but also historically with the local landscape and community. It is a really important part of our local agricultural history. With the number of modern brewers, we have in Kent now, with the Kent brewing scene flourishing, this will be a great way of signposting to all the different types of beers they can get locally and how important British hops are in those beers.”

Local residents will have a sneak peek at the development at the farm when it will be opens on June 11th as part of National Farm Open Day, although the rest of us will have to wait a little longer. I’m looking forward to visiting, when the hop farm brewery complex opens its doors to the general public, although if I’m really lucky, I might get a sneak preview of my own.

Sunday, 21 May 2023

Tunbridge Wells Circular Walk - Stage 1, Southborough to Pembury

Last autumn when I’d finally finished walking the North Downs Way long distance footpath, I began looking around for another hiking trail to attempt next. There were a number of possible options, the most obvious one being the Greensand Way, a trail that runs for 108 miles, from Haslemere in Surrey to Hamstreet in Kent. The Greensand ridge runs broadly parallel to the south of the chalk hills of the North Downs, and takes its name from the layers of sandstone, some of which contain the green coloured mineral glauconite.

Much of the route passes through quiet and almost remote areas, where opportunities for accommodation and refreshment are limited, and public transport links are not as plentiful as on the North and South Downs footpaths. For this reason, and the fact there is no official guidebook (Kent and Surrey County Councils do publish some excellent online material), I have put the Greensand Way on hold for the time being, and until I have fully evaluated the logistics of reaching the start and end points of each section, using public transport.

Instead, I have settled on a shorter footpath, that is much closer to home, and that is the Tunbridge Wells Circular Walk. This particular trail was formerly known as the High Weald Walk, and it explores the diverse and beautiful countryside around Tunbridge Wells which lies on the borders of Kent and East Sussex. The walk lies within the High Weald AONB and is 27.5-miles in length. It passes through a rolling landscape of ridges and valleys with a patchwork of small fields, hedges, and broad-leaved woodland. It takes in the sandstone outcrops of High Rocks, Eridge Rocks and Harrison's Rocks, all of which are popular with climbers, and also passes the stately piles of Groombridge Place, and Eridge Park.

Being a circular walk, it starts and finishes at whichever point you find most convenient, but 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. I started with the Southborough to Pembury stage, which at 10.2 miles is the longest section of the walk, but as the route passes within a half mile of my home, I decided to split this section into two. Looking at the guide, I have already completed certain stages of this footpath in the past, mainly as part of other walks to places such as Groombridge, Frant, and Tudeley. Unsurprisingly, most of those walks were to pubs, and once again there will be opportunities for “pit stops” at suitably located pubs.

So, back in February, I made the short bus journey to Southborough Common, and started out on the trail. The weather was dull and overcast, but it was early in the year, and whilst it was quite muddy in places, I made good progress as far as Keeper’s Cottage, on the slopes of Castle Hill. On the way I passed beneath the massive brick arches of the viaduct which carries the Tonbridge to Hastings railway line across the valley, close to Forge Farm. Perhaps I was feeling too cocky, as I continued my descent, after missing the sharp right northerly turn the path takes, shortly after Forest Farm. I realised my wrong turn, when I once again encountered the railway, as I didn’t recall having to cross the line for a second time.

Had I looked at either my OS map, or the Guidebook, I wouldn’t have made such a schoolboy error, but I carried on, carefully traversing the railway at a permitted crossing place, before eventually reaching Vauxhall Lane. A bit further along, I was able to pick up a bus down into Tonbridge, which was handy as I had some errands to attend to in the town. Several weeks later, I completed the correct part of the trail, this time walking up from the Vauxhall roundabout towards Forest Farm. I found the spot where I’d made my wrong turn and yes, had I been paying attention to the marker posts, I wouldn’t have made that mistake.

I still had the second half of this section to complete, which was through the grounds of Somerhill House, and then onto Pembury, a distance of around 5.5 miles, but for the next couple of months the weather was against me, with one of the wettest March and Aprils I can recall. One only has to take a look back at this blog to read I was deploring this situation, on a regular basis! Finally, over halfway through May came the opportunity to finally complete this section, and with only a half mile from Bailey Towers to the entrance of the Somerhill Estate, I was off, and raring to go.

I have followed the path up towards the house, many a time, usually as part of a walk to the Dovecote Inn at Capel. Somerhill House itself, is a Grade 1 listed Jacobean mansion, with a rather mixed history, and after being bought and extended by the Goldsmid family in 1849, became the second largest stately pile in Kent, after Knole House in nearby Sevenoaks. Today, the property is home to a number of private schools, and this has entailed the construction of a new access road, leaving the original driveway, with its broad sweeping views down towards the ornamental lake, largely unspoiled.

Once at the summit, the TWCW follows a sunken lane to the north of the house, which is lined with large stones. The idea of this construction was either to prevent farm animals encroaching too near the property, or as a means whereby the estate workers could go about their daily duties, without spoiling the view for the posh folk in the big house. I suspect that both of these reasons are true, but the path leads into woodlands, before eventually opening up into arable land.

After following the B2017 for a short distance on the edge of Tudeley, the path branches off uphill in a largely southerly direction, before circling a property known as Knowles Bank – home to a large number of horses, including some impressive looking fillies and stallions that I saw being exercised. There were several spots where the ground had been quite trampled by dozens of equine feet, which made for difficult walking in places. Upon reaching the strangely named Dislingbury Road, the path then veers off and clips the grounds of Kent College, another exclusive seat of learning, this time for privileged young ladies.

The path then leads into and through the churchyard of St Peter’s, Pembury. Known as the Old Church, St Peter’s was the original place of worship for the settlement of Pippenbury, before the village was re-named and re-sited to the ridge, some way to the south, and becoming in the process, modern-day Pembury. The latter is a rather large and sprawling village, that extends a long way to the north, as I was to discover later. A bench, in the tranquil setting of the old churchyard, formed the perfect place for me to sit and enjoy my packed lunch, before heading off, past the waterworks, to the A228, which forms the northern Pembury bypass.

The latter is crossed by a concrete footbridge, although I soon realised, I should have taken another bridge, a little was to the north. Fortunately, a rather spritely local resident, directed me to a path between some hedges, which brought me back to the official route, close to Downingbury Farm Shop. Not long to go now, thought I, but little did I know that Snipe Wood, to the south of Pippin’s Farm, was the ideal place to get lost and completely throw me off course. The strange thing was, looking at the map afterwards, this densely packed wood, consisting of coppiced chestnut trees, was the right way to go and there were way-marks to guide me, and it was only after emerging from the wood that I took a wrong turn.

I blame the sat-nav on my smartphone for this, as after using it to determine my exact location, I typed in my penultimate destination – the King William IV pub, on the old Hastings Road leading out of Pembury. Deciding to follow my phone, rather than my map and guidebook, I tuned right at a T-junction, rather than left. It still took another 25 minutes to reach the pub, although the official TWCW would have taken longer. A simple signpost at the end of Woodlands Road would have prevented this elementary error, although at the same time it was worth getting to the pub ahead of schedule, as I was gagging for a pint.

My walk ended then, as do all good walks, at a decent pub and the King William IV, or the King Will, as it is known locally, is rather a good one. When I first moved to West Kent, the King Will was a rather non-descript, two-bar, brick built roadhouse belonging to Allied Breweries - remember them? It later passed to Greene King, and remained with the Suffolk firm, before finally becoming a free-house in October 2018. Today, all traces of its original two bars have been removed, and the whole interior opened up to create a bight, airy and vibrant drinking area.

It had been some years since I last set foot in the King Will, but there was a respectably sized crowd in the bar when I stepped inside at ten to three. There was also a reasonable selection of cask ales on sale, including Taylor's Landlord, Fuller's London Pride, St Austell Proper Job, Greene King IPA, plus a honey beer from Bowland Brewery.(north-west Lancashire). I was straight in on the Proper Job, and have to say it was brilliant. Cool, refreshing, well-conditioned, and with a biting hop bitterness, it really hit the spot, so my choice of Landlord as pint No. 2 was always going to disappoint.

They seemed a good-natured and friendly crowd in the pub, but I had a bus to catch, back to Tonbridge. Unfortunately, due to a gap in services because of the school run, I had to walk along to Pembury Hospital in order to catch me bus. More walking, was the last thing I wanted, but on the plus side I didn't have long to wait before a Tonbridge bound bus came along. So apart from that very short section, where I took a wrong turn coming out of the woods, that's the Southborough to Pembury stage of the Tunbridge Wells Circular Walk completed.