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mart166

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Posts posted by mart166

  1. If anyone moors in Islington I can give you a recommendation, it's called the lucky chip and is in walking distance of canal, it's in a rather noisy pub which I have not been in, they started out in a van in a market close to my house, got voted as best burgers in UK and they deserved it.

    They have expanded and now have 4 outlets, our nearest and there biggest nowhere near a canal. But the burgers are supreme none of this pile it high just good food and not silly on prices, as long as you don't mind polystyrene cartons for burgers and chips in plastic bowls, sounds gross but i love it there (and I would not touch a mc donalds with a barge pole)

    Mart

     

  2. On 9/8/2017 at 14:16, Sunflower16 said:

    Not sure from the thread where you collected your hire boat from but presume not Burton.........not many gastropubs in the town (thankfully).  Personally, I would check out prices before ordering and decide whether to stay or move on.........you mentioned your dislike of gastropubs earlier - in that case, it was best avoided?       Oh, and London prices are extemely variable, I am sure you will agree - £27 for a light lunch for two including a glass of wine each is hardly overkill for many London establishments.............

    We collected the boat from Napton, found out at end of holiday a lovely canal-side pub, such is life.

    As for London, we can get pie and mash and a glass of squash for under a fiver, but that is very rare, our local so called cafe gives you a bill in excess of £20 just for breakfast and a wake up  drink. It's getting stupid here, I used to eat out regular, but the prices are getting ridiculous, and you find the quality of food goes downhill once they are open a while.

     

    such is life :)

    Mart

     

  3. As for gastropubs, when we picked up our rental narrowboat we were too early, so asked where we could grab a bit of lunch, directed to a pub at end of lane, on arrival was obvious just been converted into a gastropub, two rolls and two glasses of wine cost £27, thats more than we pay in London. Cannot see that lasting long when there are still some lovely traditional pubs in the country. Also why should I pay for there conversion ??

     

     

    Mart

     

  4. Ok thanks for the above, maybe we picked the wrong night, and not knowing a town the wrong places.

    As for non english speakers that accounts for about %90 of my customers so no problems there, also must add I live in East London, so I either speak bengali or use a posh accent.

    Proper cider will not go into a battery, the lumps of apple and god knows whatelse will not fit through the holes, we were at a cider farm in Dorset and the added ingrediant was a lump of pork during brewing, but the cider was good.

    :)

    Mart

     

  5. 6 hours ago, mrsmelly said:

    A true but very very sad state of affairs.

    I agree, where we live have to walk quite a way to what we call our local, lucky it's split resturant on one side (which is great), then bar on the other, offers brilliant ales and Belgium beer, other than that we have nothing in so called trendy east london :(

     

  6. 22 hours ago, BruceinSanity said:

    I recall living in a village in Powys which had three pubs, one of which only sold beer, didn't even sell crisps. One day a stranger came in, ordered a pint and, as it was being pulled, asked for some salt 'n vinegar.

    L (putting pint on bar): "It's a pub, we don't sell food."

    S: "What sort of pub doesn't even sell crisps?"

    L (pouring pint down sink): "This one. If you don't like it, drink somewhere else."

    Sounds like my old local, if you asked for food you were looked on as if you were something the cat dragged in, but when it hit it's low point just before being sold (now a hated gastropub), the landlord happily sold crisps to parents, the kids would pour them on the floor and jump up and down on them making a real mess, the parents and landlord never passed comment. The only good thing about the place was I met my now fiancee and one night stopping for an early drink found it completly empty, shouted up to the accomodation above no reply, so pulled myself a drink and left money on counter, 15 minutes later landlady turned up, was horrified I was in bar in a pub that was unocupied, she had gone out and forgot to lock the door, lucky i'm honest, could have had a field day otherwise lol.

  7. On 28/07/2017 at 23:26, Jess-- said:

    Moored in both the places you mention and suffered no problems, outside tescos in reading overnight and on the north bank at windsor (the brocas)

    Reading had some colourful characters but nothing was touched in any way despite an obviously brand new mountain bike being on the roof (not so obviously alarmed)

    In windsor my only complaint was it being slightly shallow and a couple of dog walkers hadn't cleaned up after their dogs.

    In both cases I have no hesitation in mooring there again and plan to do so twice in september.

    Sorry not been able to reply for several weeks due to medical problem stopping me using PC.

    In reply to above comments, after so many years on the Thames everybody I know uses an anchor chain in Windsor, I suffered a not so serious incident, but a group of lads peeing onto your boat not so nice. Reading the east side where tescos is is not so bad if you can tolerate the university students (no problems), it's the west side to look out for, I know the town well and would never moor there, worse is the Oxford road, sounds nice but you can get any substance you like there, I never moor the boat or park the car near there.

    This is advice and does not need replies

     

  8. On 27/07/2017 at 17:52, Mike the Boilerman said:

     

    I'm inclined to agree!

    If you want to eat, a restaurant is the type of establishment to visit.

    You'll be complaining you couldn't get a beer in MacDonalds next :cheers:

    Coopers Arms, you say? Pub that don't sell food tend to be particularly good at beer, and are often well worth seeking out.

    Your right, but when only resturants we could find were indian, and we was not in mood for a curry, we wanted a good brew and some nice food.

    Mart

     

  9. Just now, Victor Vectis said:

    Could be because they are proper pubs, with the emphasis on beer not food!

    I do not disagree with that, hate gasropubs where you are paying for the conversion, but a bit of hot food not too much to ask for, pie and chips or sausage and mash, not the end of the world and not so hard to produce lol.

    Mart

     

  10. 4 minutes ago, Chris Davidson said:

    Like I said earlier, it is a real shame you had a bad experience in Burton.

    That kind of thing, generally makes you want to avoid the area in the future.

    Stick with it and I'm sure you will find the good ones far out weigh any bad times.

     

    Thank you for that, and you are right.

    We had 13 great nights and one bad one, but it seems putting a warning of the bad night on here causes outrage, heyho some people !

    Mart

     

  11. 3 minutes ago, frahkn said:

    You are correct in that I would not have preferred "our ethnic enemies", well done.

    IMHO "our ethnic minority friends" does not constitute a more felicitous form of words.

    Perhaps I'm a little odd but I can refer to people without feeling the need to refer to their ethnic origins at all.

     

    Next time i'll act like Alf Garnet and say "bloody foriegners that don't speak our lingo" that'll set the forum on fire and I will not care as will not be here to read it.

  12. 1 hour ago, Victor Vectis said:

    Our lines weren't cut in Windsor either.

    We've moored by Shobnall fields a couple of times with no trouble. It's a bit of a hike into the town centre from there though.

    As for beer, forget the big, national brands/pubs but seek out the two (or is it three?) Burton Bridge Brewery pubs or the four (?) micro pubs in BoT. One of the micros is on the right, past the railway station, on the way into town.

    And there is this place The Coopers Tavern an absolute gem, just down a side street off to the right on the way from the railway station into town.

    I got into conversation with half a dozen retired brewers when I was there last year. They get together once a month, rotating their venue around selected pubs in Burton.

    I speak with a great deal of experiance about the Thames, know a lot of boaters there, Windsor the worse side for problems is on the northern bank just by Eton school, Reading I have moored at Tescos with no problem but would not dream of overnight (I have house 5 miles away and know area well).

    The Coopers Tavern we tried as well as another pub around the corner, they both looked good but unfortunatly the only food on offer was cheese and pork pies, needed more than that after 8 hours of boating, shame because I would have loved to go in them. It's difficult when you arrive in a new town and do not know where to go, we relied on trip advisor, and nicholsons canal book.

    Mart

     

  13. 2 minutes ago, Athy said:

    It is good to see you back. You would be pleasantly surprised, I think, to meet some of the people on here, who may bark when behind a keyboard but who do not bite in real life.

    I hope you'll stay with us.

    Thanks for that

    Unfortunately the world is full of idiots that are brave behind keyboards but not in real life, you see it on the news, but I was very offended about being called a racist, when my whole living relies on our ethnic friends, you should look into these people as they are obviously not nice people. As for everyone else great and I got a lot of help from here during my journey around the Leicester  ring.

     

    Thanks

    Mart

  14. As still a member at moment I'd just like to reply, yes my user name was a typo.

     

    I'm not an inexperienced boater having brought a boat from Germany to Oxfordshire and have been boating on the Thames for the last 30 years. I know as a fact places to avoid, Reading a no no, Windsor you have to use anchor as mooring lines get cut, Pangbourne our boat was used as a bathing platform board by teenagers (nobody bothered other than telling me next day).

    I merely was sharing my experience of what happened to us but was jumped on by obvious apologists.

    Many thanks for the supporting comments they were appreciated.

    I found life on the canal system very enjoyable, friendly helpful people, and I'm considering retiring and buying a boat, I just hope I do not meet some of the people on here !!!

    Mart

     

    • Greenie 3
  15. To the moderators of this account, I placed observations, and i value the supporting comments of many of your members in this forum and throughout during my trip, but it seems some have very deep problems, therefore please delete my account, I do not need offense off people, lifes hard enough without idiots.

     

    Mart164

     

  16. Just now, lulu fish said:

    Try to give your observations without making shit up.  Personally I will discount the rest of your observations as you chose to lie to make it sound worse and slip in your racist agenda.

    As someone whose customer base is 90% ethnic I find your comments very offensive, if you do not like what I write do not read or reply

    • Greenie 3
  17. 2 minutes ago, Jerra said:

    Personally I prefer to be in the country as far from habitation as possible.

    It is a sad fact that most/any congregation of houses these days probably has at least one potential anti social being in it.

    Very true, I do not disagree, trouble is when you on holiday you want places with nice pubs and Burton I knew had reputation for good brewing and was hoping to get some good cider, could not have been more wrong, but you live and learn !

    Thanks for replying and happy boating.

    Mart

     

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