Real Ale Prices
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Real Ale Prices
The price of real ale has been going up.
This is ridiculous
Can't blame it on Brexit as loads of hops grown in UK - just profiteering by fat cat barstewards
Pubs should bring down real ale prices and increase prices of pussy-drinks like lager, shots and proseco
It's enough to drive you to drink
This is ridiculous
Can't blame it on Brexit as loads of hops grown in UK - just profiteering by fat cat barstewards
Pubs should bring down real ale prices and increase prices of pussy-drinks like lager, shots and proseco
It's enough to drive you to drink
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Re: Real Ale Prices
In some Pubs and in some places the prices are way over the top, the only way is to boycott said pubs if you can.
Re: Real Ale Prices
Im a right in thinking it goes off quicker than your normal largers and such? If the pubs dont shift enough of it they'll stick the prices up to cover their costs and justify putting the stuff on.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
A pint of London Pride in a Fullers pub in St Alban's at the weekend = £3.80p
A pint of London Pride in the Lamb and Flag, Covent Garden last Thursday = £4.50p
At one point we had a whip- round, £10 in, six of us..which just about covered two rounds - good job we were mostly drinking beer, had we been buying cider/lager the £60 would not have covered two rounds..
- when I was a lad back then, drinking in the Hop on a Friday night, I could get 6 pints of Whitbread Trophy for £1..
A pint of London Pride in the Lamb and Flag, Covent Garden last Thursday = £4.50p
At one point we had a whip- round, £10 in, six of us..which just about covered two rounds - good job we were mostly drinking beer, had we been buying cider/lager the £60 would not have covered two rounds..


- when I was a lad back then, drinking in the Hop on a Friday night, I could get 6 pints of Whitbread Trophy for £1..
Re: Real Ale Prices
Think it's been going off at the same speed for the last few hundred years.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
There should be some sort of public inquiry/government investigation - wonder if we can get Nige on it - he likes the odd pint? Mind you, he'd probably want to bring back fags too, don't want that though.
Some years ago The Frog Party was about, they had a manifesto which included being nice to frogs and having real ale on The Rates (C Tax). Can't remember the rest but those two are more than sufficient.
Some years ago The Frog Party was about, they had a manifesto which included being nice to frogs and having real ale on The Rates (C Tax). Can't remember the rest but those two are more than sufficient.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
Dyched...apparently you've got to get rid of a cask in about 3/4 days or the quality begins to disappear..
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Re: Real Ale Prices
hampstead - told you before - that's what you get for living down there in The Axis of Evil. Thought you were coming back up here?
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Re: Real Ale Prices
Ps - Also - the technical qualities/life expectancies haven't changed in centuries. The darker/stronger ones last longest.
Re: Real Ale Prices
Depends on where and at what time you drink. Lots of places around Burnley offering a pint around £2, some places even less!
£2.25 a pint in New Brew-m no matter what you get or what time. Match days even have free nibbles and kids drinks.
Think ( and don't quote me ) that 25p of every pint of pendleside ale sold goes to the pendleside hospice!
Drinking, at a reasonable price, and helping out a worthy local charity too, what's not to like!
£2.25 a pint in New Brew-m no matter what you get or what time. Match days even have free nibbles and kids drinks.
Think ( and don't quote me ) that 25p of every pint of pendleside ale sold goes to the pendleside hospice!
Drinking, at a reasonable price, and helping out a worthy local charity too, what's not to like!
Re: Real Ale Prices
Maybe the camra boys can campaign now because it's too popular. Even the trendies have nicked their beards.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
It's a lot cheaper than the other drinks so is always more likely to rise.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
I did hear a couple of negative stories about CAMRA recently, but to be fair they have done a fantastic job in promoting Real Ale in the 1970's and since
then..they took on the [then] Big Six breweries and beat them...pretty much every UK brewery offers real ale now, and the growth of micro-breweries and micro-pubs has been impressive.
- this is where the first branch meeting of Camra took place in 1972..
https://www.yelp.co.uk/biz/the-farriers-arms-st-albans" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
then..they took on the [then] Big Six breweries and beat them...pretty much every UK brewery offers real ale now, and the growth of micro-breweries and micro-pubs has been impressive.
- this is where the first branch meeting of Camra took place in 1972..
https://www.yelp.co.uk/biz/the-farriers-arms-st-albans" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: Real Ale Prices
£1.79 tonight in Colne.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
- where's that bus timetable?
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Re: Real Ale Prices
"Maybe the camra boys can campaign now because it's too popular. Even the trendies have nicked their beards"
Aye - "trendies" - 'kin dicks - why don't they get back to their Irish Cider (made with Dutch and Flemish apple pulp) and chep spumante?
Aye - "trendies" - 'kin dicks - why don't they get back to their Irish Cider (made with Dutch and Flemish apple pulp) and chep spumante?
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Re: Real Ale Prices
"- when I was a lad back then, drinking in the Hop on a Friday night, I could get 6 pints of Whitbread Trophy for £1.."
That's still a lot of money for p!ss !
That's still a lot of money for p!ss !
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Re: Real Ale Prices
CAMRA with a massively worthwhile campaign here...
https://www.theguardian.com/business/20 ... rch-budget" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
going to make a huge difference that.
https://www.theguardian.com/business/20 ... rch-budget" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
going to make a huge difference that.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
Yes, when beer was 15p a pint in the 70s, a penny off was useful; but now the range of prices for the same stuff in the same town can vary by more than 50p!
Re: Real Ale Prices
The price is going up massively because drinking ale has become 'cool'.
In Leeds centre you are looking at £4 a pint in most of the bars, with the exception of Wetherspoons.
In Burnley however you can still get a pint for £2 in a few places.
In Leeds centre you are looking at £4 a pint in most of the bars, with the exception of Wetherspoons.
In Burnley however you can still get a pint for £2 in a few places.
Re: Real Ale Prices
I was out in Sowerby Bridge on Friday night and the prices down there weren't too bad. I got more than £4 change from a tenner for two pints on more than one occasion. If you're in the area the Hogs Head is worth a visit.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
No sympathy Hampstead. London Pride is akin to a witches p1ss 

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Re: Real Ale Prices
If you take out of the equation the bars catering for pricks with Abraham Lincoln beards and sloping-back head haircuts and the rip-off town centre places, you're left with Local Pubs and they are at the mercy of the suppliers, who are swimming in the same po as the former lot, so the Locals have to either absorb the costs themselves, which depends on 't business position, or pass-on the increase to the Customer, which is the norm.
**** it, I'm going out for a pint.
**** it, I'm going out for a pint.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
I run a pub in ilfracombe north Devon, all our ale is priced at £3 a pint running 6 different ales at a time. What people need to understand now is wages start at £7.50 an hour we open for 14 hours a day, I work 60 hours a week on the bar but I'm still left with a large wage bill. Rent is £2500 a month gas and electric £1000 a month, Sky £650 a month and then anything that's needs fixing costs a fortune nowadays. But done right like we try to you can earn a good living. But I agree that a lot of places are just screwing there customers over.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
Very interesting SAPD, as a matter of interest do you find that paying for sky is well worth the cost?
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Re: Real Ale Prices
For us in here it's a small pub but I have an 80inch tv, 60 inch, 50 inch tv and a 42 inch running from 3 sky boxes show we can show 3 channels at once, for us a wet only pub it does pay, but other pubs locally have taken it out as is not worth it for them.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
Thanks it's not cheap is it, same happened in Chudleigh a few years back and no doubt other pubs that don't attract enough foot fall.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
It's easy to change suppliers to keep it affordable.
For instance Moorhouses are dearer than Worsthorne. There's hundreds of small breweries around here that keep it very affordable.
For instance Moorhouses are dearer than Worsthorne. There's hundreds of small breweries around here that keep it very affordable.
Re: Real Ale Prices
Do you know how a pub works?
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Re: Real Ale Prices
Luckily I run a free house but for many landlords they are tied to breweries or pub company's which tell you what you are paying and a lot of these pub have to pay up to double the amount I do for there beer.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
The price that some people on here would like/expect their beer for will be less than what some tied houses are buying it in for.
People's view of what is a fair price for alcohol is skewed by supermarkets being able to sell booze at such low prices (often loss leading deals to get people through the door).
People's view of what is a fair price for alcohol is skewed by supermarkets being able to sell booze at such low prices (often loss leading deals to get people through the door).
Re: Real Ale Prices

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Re: Real Ale Prices
If that's aimed at me I have quite a bit of knowledge on the subjectbedfords wrote:Do you know how a pub works?
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Re: Real Ale Prices
Real ale prices can vary based on the brewery that supplies but this is not necessarily the fault of the brewery.
As an example, Worsthorne mentioned above is cheaper than Moorhouses but the big difference is that the size of output at a brewery dictates that some pay duty on every barrel and others don't. Moorhouses have to pay where as Worsthorne don't.
Don't worry though, I'm sure the government will realise that micro brewerys are booming and take their cut soon enough!
As an example, Worsthorne mentioned above is cheaper than Moorhouses but the big difference is that the size of output at a brewery dictates that some pay duty on every barrel and others don't. Moorhouses have to pay where as Worsthorne don't.
Don't worry though, I'm sure the government will realise that micro brewerys are booming and take their cut soon enough!
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Re: Real Ale Prices
My first pint in the 70's cost me 11p
over here in ROI prices are around €3.75 Guinness and €4.00 Lager not much else barring cider at €5.50 - 5.75 a pint bottle. Good job I rarely drink nowadays.

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Re: Real Ale Prices
Scrap duty on draught in pubs. If we started a political party with that on the manifesto who'd vote for it.
It's a scandal that the pub as the last bastion of the free thinking Englishman is systematically being ground into the dust.
That said I cannot excuse being charged £6.65 for a half bottle of liefmans kriek beer at Manchester Victoria's 'real ale house' on the way to Leicester last Tuesday
It's a scandal that the pub as the last bastion of the free thinking Englishman is systematically being ground into the dust.
That said I cannot excuse being charged £6.65 for a half bottle of liefmans kriek beer at Manchester Victoria's 'real ale house' on the way to Leicester last Tuesday
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Re: Real Ale Prices
£4.20 Dark Star in the Bree Louise.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
22 - no sympathy required.. but I am a bit worried about your familiarity with witches p1ss.
8 - yes that is true..sometime in the next six months, when everything is sorted out/finalised.
17..funkydrummer..'That's still a lot of money for p!ss !'
Of course I agree..the existence of Trophy and Watney's Red Barrel [Jesus] and Brew Ten and all that other shytte back then, was exactly what gave Camra it's early impetus..well done to them.
8 - yes that is true..sometime in the next six months, when everything is sorted out/finalised.
17..funkydrummer..'That's still a lot of money for p!ss !'
Of course I agree..the existence of Trophy and Watney's Red Barrel [Jesus] and Brew Ten and all that other shytte back then, was exactly what gave Camra it's early impetus..well done to them.
Re: Real Ale Prices
Quickenthetempo wrote:If that's aimed at me I have quite a bit of knowledge on the subject
And you think a pub can just source beer from other brewers?
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Re: Real Ale Prices
The pubs/clubs I have been involved in yeah. I suppose it's too big an industry to cover all but a lot of pubs put guest ales on.bedfords wrote:And you think a pub can just source beer from other brewers?
The ones I am on about are tied into Lagers with a brewery and can put whatever ales on they like.
Re: Real Ale Prices
Had a decent pint of ' Sneck Lifter' in wetherspoons on manchester road before the bristol game and it was only 2 quid odd. In fact I think most of the ales were under £3 a pint.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
Love Sneck Lifter but never found it on draught.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
Indeed some pubs take the p'*ss on pricing, but a pint of good draught ale in a decent pub is one of the joys of life, and the social side of it beats social media hands down.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
I make beer and the cost of raw ingredients has been steadily rising. Breweries have to do this on an industrial scale and when the 'grain bill' goes up, then so does the cost per pint.
Another factor to consider is the rising cost of hops in a market that has decided to go mental for them. The trend in real ale right now is to put ridiculous amounts of new varieties of hops into the beer. These aren't cheap and again drives the unit cost up.
A growing trend in America is cask aging in weird and wonderful casks (tequila, calvados, cherry brandy etc) and I'm sure it won't be long before that takes hold here. Expect the cost of the cask and its associated storage fees to be added to the cost of your pint when it does.
Another factor to consider is the rising cost of hops in a market that has decided to go mental for them. The trend in real ale right now is to put ridiculous amounts of new varieties of hops into the beer. These aren't cheap and again drives the unit cost up.
A growing trend in America is cask aging in weird and wonderful casks (tequila, calvados, cherry brandy etc) and I'm sure it won't be long before that takes hold here. Expect the cost of the cask and its associated storage fees to be added to the cost of your pint when it does.
Re: Real Ale Prices
Wasn't the beer in the hop Scottish + Newcastle therefore Tartan bitter?Funkydrummer wrote:"- when I was a lad back then, drinking in the Hop on a Friday night, I could get 6 pints of Whitbread Trophy for £1.."
That's still a lot of money for p!ss !
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Re: Real Ale Prices
It was definitely Whitbread's Spike..
I believe you are thinking of the Broadsword's in the Market Square on the balcony..
- that was swill I guess as well, tho' at the time it did the job.
I believe you are thinking of the Broadsword's in the Market Square on the balcony..
- that was swill I guess as well, tho' at the time it did the job.
Re: Real Ale Prices
50p off with your CAMRA cardten bellies wrote:£4.20 Dark Star in the Bree Louise.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
I'm going to have to become a member!aggi wrote:50p off with your CAMRA card
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Re: Real Ale Prices
Yes definitely Whitbread - they sold a darker bitter called Gauntlet from a pump with a massive, hideous gauntlet atop ithampsteadclaret wrote:It was definitely Whitbread's Spike..
I believe you are thinking of the Broadsword's in the Market Square on the balcony..
- that was swill I guess as well, tho' at the time it did the job.
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Re: Real Ale Prices
Whitbread Trophy was a marketing term and the ale sold under this label differed depending where you were in the country. In Kent in the 1970s it was basically Fremlins bitter and quite drinkable whilst up north it was Duttons, a less palatable drink.
At least that was the line told to me by a Whitbread manager.
At least that was the line told to me by a Whitbread manager.