http://www.pubsgalore.co.uk/pubs/19366/
I've read this posting from the 13th Feb several times and can't make sense of it. Maybe the owner could clarify what is meant as he has reviewed a fair few pubs so maybe reads the forums.
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http://www.pubsgalore.co.uk/pubs/19366/
I've read this posting from the 13th Feb several times and can't make sense of it. Maybe the owner could clarify what is meant as he has reviewed a fair few pubs so maybe reads the forums.
I agree, it's not easy to read, especially as it is missing punctuation. I reckon he meant to say:
Called in on the 13th of Feb. Nice pub right by the railway station. Had a nice pint of Guinness. It was about 7pm.
While I was stood at the bar, lots of different people came in and asked for food. They said they had knocked it of for a bit until trade picked up.
Would call back.
Can anybody tell me why all the nearly all the people in this little town don't talk.
It bears a striking resemblance to some of my late night 10 pints down the hatch text messages. :eek:
I live in this little "town" and if me and the wife had been out on the same night as Mr Hunter he may well have posted "Why do the women in this town never shut up".
Any donkeys left with four legs round here run a mile when the see the wife approaching.
Can't agree with him giving the Shef 9 either it was dire last time i was in.
Here's another one!
Royal Oak
cant wait for the review if he bumps into :( me :( in a pub
Attachment 702 ;)
Just a cautionary note, the tone of this thread is a little close to persecution of a contributor for my comfort, in that it is about only one member and primarily negative. :o
Yeah yours was quite funny :). In fact no real problem with any post, just trying to get in before the thread goes South (I have no idea what that means, and as I live in the South not sure I should use it).
To get to you it would have to go West as well. :p
Another one that I don't know what it really means. :confused:
Although this is allegedly what going for a Burton means which would be appropriate on here.
It was RAF slang in world war two, and was taken from a series of adverts for Burton Ale - there would always be someone obviously missing from the scene, ie an empty chair or something, and the catch phrase was 'He's gone for a Burton'
RAF crews used it as a euphemism for people killed or missing in action.
:cheers:
where does drunk as a skunk come from?
do skunks even drink?
Actually I think that it was one of the warders that had to stay on the waggon while his colleagues accompanied the condemned for his last bowl of ale in this world. Thus he didn't get to drink and was therefore "on the waggon". Typically it would have been in the "Bowl" pub in St giles (although there were others), where The Angel pub sits today. I read of a case of one poor soul who declined the offer of ale, and thus arrived at Tyburn earlier than otherwise, and was executed before his stay of execution arrived! The moral here of course is never pass up the chance of a beer or two!
I always liked a put-down by the Senator Cleghorn character, later re-used in Grease
"I've seen better heads on a mug of beer"