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12-07-2022, 06:51
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Today marks the 15th anniversary of this blog. Rather fittingly, the very first post was one about Bansturbation (https://pubcurmudgeon.blogspot.com/2007/07/bansturbation.html), which has remained a consistent theme throughout. That was very much the high summer of beer blogging, and also saw the foundation of blogs by Boak and Bailey (https://boakandbailey.com/) and Tandleman (https://tandlemanbeerblog.blogspot.com/) which are still going, although many others have fallen by the wayside. The demise of blogging has often been declared, although I see many commentators have taken to Substack, which is basically the same thing under a different name.
The creation of this blog was prompted by the smoking ban in indoor public places, which was introduced in England on 1 July 2007. I said pretty much all that needed to be said on its tenth anniversary (https://pubcurmudgeon.blogspot.com/2017/07/ten-years-gone.html), and there is nothing there from which I would dissent. In the words of Lord Stoddart of Swindon, quoted in the sidebar, “This piece of legislation must be one of the most restrictive, spiteful and socially divisive imposed by any British Government.”
It had a disastrous effect on wet-led local pubs. While the immediate impact has long since worked its way through the system, it has left the pub trade permanently weaker than it otherwise would have been. And, as Christopher Snowdon writes (https://www.spiked-online.com/2022/07/01/how-the-smoking-ban-ruined-britain/), it was taken as a green light for all kinds of other lifestyle restrictions, although more recently the slippery slope seems to have pointed more towards food than alcohol, which is something I would not have predicted in 2007.
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgBwVjGk5CojE_7Nm6J2F1hXGxc33hRBWJrqIjraapZWM TEz7UrGct41fxXzVq_Tfje8VM52dNJ1lpYdLXyIcHFpD3vbzFL O-kGS6O4Fx24IB6ueq6Q7jpNTF4nMgcv9fRk1LbJZw1-rlc9HTsDCJngFytdg-nsmHN00ZipRyVMn7ngNG98qYTeYUqH/s320/separate%20areas.jpg (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgBwVjGk5CojE_7Nm6J2F1hXGxc33hRBWJrqIjraapZWM TEz7UrGct41fxXzVq_Tfje8VM52dNJ1lpYdLXyIcHFpD3vbzFL O-kGS6O4Fx24IB6ueq6Q7jpNTF4nMgcv9fRk1LbJZw1-rlc9HTsDCJngFytdg-nsmHN00ZipRyVMn7ngNG98qYTeYUqH/s1024/separate%20areas.jpg)

The photo above shows a sign still displayed on the door of the Griffin Hotel in Heaton Mersey, just down the road from me, which must have been there for at least fifteen years. This was one of the large number of pubs that did provide facilities for those who preferred a non-smoking environment.
I don’t propose to offer a summary of the developments of the past fifteen years, although suffice to say in the sphere of pubs and beer they have mostly been negative, with thousands of pubs shutting their doors for the last time. The number of pubs in Britain has now fallen to a record low (https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/jul/04/number-of-pubs-in-england-and-wales-falls-to-record-low-covid-19-soaring-costs) and, while the BBPA seem to have ceased publishing their regular statistical updates, so has the quantity of beer sold in them.
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi8uj6zvsi_XilbHixuxXC2Jf9UdU_zodn1BqkAv3DWYj C3vA-y98gpuIl8wqOjDGGg1oNSq5NRjc4jMjBV7RmNjIaAYF6KIVghI JEpomORfElWah5NXqMTNug5SMzvE5RYl-vorI1vnhvvHRrgh0dVv_-Tyt3oZBMke_bIELEEmU6hYA6KrEJyBmYb/s320/four_heatons_2.jpg (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi8uj6zvsi_XilbHixuxXC2Jf9UdU_zodn1BqkAv3DWYj C3vA-y98gpuIl8wqOjDGGg1oNSq5NRjc4jMjBV7RmNjIaAYF6KIVghI JEpomORfElWah5NXqMTNug5SMzvE5RYl-vorI1vnhvvHRrgh0dVv_-Tyt3oZBMke_bIELEEmU6hYA6KrEJyBmYb/s800/four_heatons_2.jpg)

One closure that affected me on a personal level was that of the Four Heatons (originally the Moss Rose), which was built in the early 1970s and bit the dust at the beginning of 2011. This was one of only two pubs within easy walking distance of my house and, while externally in an unattractive Brutalist style, it had a comfortable interior, and I had plenty of good times in there. It has now been replaced by a convenience store, originally Morrisons, now Co-op.
And the other pub, which was always my favourite of the two, has become progressively less appealing (http://pubcurmudgeon.blogspot.com/2018/11/lost-local.html) through a steady accretion of minor changes to the extent that I rarely go in it except to deliver the local CAMRA magazine.
I have tried via my Campaign for Real Pubs (https://realpubsuk.blogspot.com/) blog, which I began in September 2011, to highlight some of the characterful traditional pubs that are still out there to be enjoyed, although one or two have closed or been unsympathetically modernised since I wrote about them.
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgVdQ3ey_-lrUQkZPMRwcY91bV9OkWJCeN_aCwMdJac-k65mMWmlI0veuzzvmqopIcUSSGFnlFFG_zaGvHnsFgeFlZSSu3 Jd0Euku_n78BrIl3Iawwigfi-O2Xns8dBBgGHNODOQl8S57dw3ZtruAn6AGyRrlD6jUt89rNpf3 c2vwSkvZDxod_kqNR1/s320/national%20bass%20day%202022.jpg (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgVdQ3ey_-lrUQkZPMRwcY91bV9OkWJCeN_aCwMdJac-k65mMWmlI0veuzzvmqopIcUSSGFnlFFG_zaGvHnsFgeFlZSSu3 Jd0Euku_n78BrIl3Iawwigfi-O2Xns8dBBgGHNODOQl8S57dw3ZtruAn6AGyRrlD6jUt89rNpf3 c2vwSkvZDxod_kqNR1/s640/national%20bass%20day%202022.jpg)

One positive development I will mention is the campaign to promote Draught Bass, the definitive beer of England, which sadly has fallen on hard times, seemingly unloved by the brand owners and seeing its distribution dramatically contract. This has been entirely a grassroots movement that has bypassed both the brewing industry and, with few exceptions, the great and good of beer commentary. This year it was finally possible to organise the first National Bass Day (https://pubcurmudgeon.blogspot.com/2022/04/an-easter-pilgrimage.html), after two previous attempts had been stymied by lockdowns.
Will there be another fifteen years? Only time will tell...
Incidentally, “Fifteen Years” is the title of this rather rousing song by The Levellers, although it always seems to me a touch hypocritical when potheads go on about the evils of drink.



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