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Last orders? Not at our pubs

Cinema nights – Mitch Adams at the Thatchers Arms Cinema nights – Mitch Adams at the Thatchers Arms

PUBS in north Essex are resorting to all kinds of weird and wonderful tactics in the battle to keep their customers.

With an avalanche of pubs closing down every year, those remaining are forced to be ever more resourceful, from adding small shops to their premises to offering cut-price deals for pensioners.

Pubs such as Colchester’s New Town Tavern and the Artillery Man are keeping their prices at rock bottom in a ploy to coax people from their the homes and back in the boozer.

More and more, publicans are concentrating on serving quality food as a way of appealing to families.

But that is often still not enough to lure cash-strapped drinkers, so one establishment has gone a step further and opened its own mini cinema.

The Thatchers Arms, in Hall Road, used a £10,000 donation from drinks company Pilsner to set up the big screen.

Its first cinema night, in May, a screening of Oscar-winning, the King’s Speech, was a sellout.

Landlord Mitch Adams said: “We show a film most Thursday evenings and we draw between 40 and 50 people in each time.

“They are all people who probably wouldn’t visit the pub otherwise, so it definitely boosts trade.

“Pubs have to diversify these days because the culture has changed and people just don’t have the money to go to the pub as much.

“I think people are quite rightfully more picky as a result, and they want to make sure they are getting good value for their money.

“We make sure our food is really good, and we have introduced midweek food offers.

“Diversifying is essential in order to survive in the current market, especially with our rural location, so we have to make sure we are offering something a bit different and special.”

Mike Blackmore, landlord of the New Town Tavern, in Kendall Road, Colchester, has tried to keep his drink prices as low as possible, and has just installed a card machine so people can use their credit cards if they are short of cash before pay day.

He said: “Everything is going up and a lot of people are not earning at the moment, so they just can’t go out as much.

“During the week it has been a lot quieter – I have really noticed that over the past few months.

“We have been trying to do a few things to attract customers and we have a few summer barbecues lined up.

“We have to do these things, otherwise people will just stay at home and drink because it’s cheaper.” Low-cost alcohol in supermarkets, rising taxes and the smoking ban have all been blamed for the demise of the local pub.

Prince Charles is now helping to stop the rot, setting up advisory organisation, Pub Is The Hub.

It encourages councils, communities, licensees, pub owners and breweries to work together to preserve our rural pubs.

The Anchor Inn, in Court Street, Colchester, has 100 acres of rural land next door.

It has capitalised on this asset by not only growing its own vegetables and rearing its own animals, but also building walkways and a wood, enabling families to go out and about in nature after enjoying a pub lunch or a drink.

The pub also has sheep, cows, and even a stag beetle pyramid, to keep youngsters entertained.

Co-owner Hector Bunting said: “We always ensure we have a variety of real ales on offer and our food is of a high standard. We have even recently built a smokehouse to smoke our own meat, the majority of which is reared on our land.”

This family-friendly approach is reaping its rewards.

“Because we can offer our customers access to our conservation area, where they can feed the animals and enjoy nature, we haven’t noticed that times are tough,” he said.

“If anything, things have never been so good, because people are choosing not to go abroad, so they are spending more money here. We also make sure we hold regular fun and free events, with a bouncy castle for the kids.”

Pubs around Halstead are also going the extra mile.

The Bell Inn, at Castle Hedingham, has come up with some quirky, practical and successful ways of being at the heart of their community.

Kylie Turkoz-Ferguson, who runs the Bell Inn with her sister Penny Doe, said: “We do a lot to get people to get together throughout the year.

“One of the things we do is put on a play, or in the case of this year, a musical. It’s great fun. Last year it was so popular, we had to put on an extra show.”

Staff and pub regulars all get involved, and last year they raised more than £1,000 for charity.

“By opening a small hop farm at the back of the pub, staff are hoping to brew their own beer, another way of saving money.

One thing is certain, pubs have been at the centre of British life for centuries and, if the innovative publicans in north Essex are anything to go by, they will remain so.

Comments(22)

tug wilson says...
2:24pm Sat 13 Aug 11

The problem is a Pub should be a Pub, turning into a Cinema or a cheap Cafe takes it away from being a traditional Pub, the so called "culture change " has Not been a natural change, it was forced onto the country by the introduction of the ill thought out Smoking ban, as we have seen the rest of the EU do not have this problem because CHOICE is offered, to both smoker and non smoker, to save the industry in this country D Cameron must Reform the smoking ban to allow All people choice once again.

chas says...
5:16pm Sat 13 Aug 11

Pubs are for drinking. Restaurants are for eating. Drinking and smoking have always gone hand in hand, and the only way to stop more pubs from closing is to make exemptions to the smoking ban.

handymanphil says...
5:40pm Sat 13 Aug 11

"...adding small shops " -
"... cut-price deals for pensioners." -
"... concentrating on serving quality food " -
"...opening its own mini cinema." -
"... midweek food offers." -
"...The pub also has sheep, cows, and even a stag beetle pyramid, to keep youngsters entertained." -
"...One thing is certain, pubs have been at the centre of British life for centuries and, if the innovative publicans in north Essex are anything to go by, they will remain so." - My God Almighty, I have never heard such claptrap in all my life! The innovative publicans are simply dragging a dying existence out to the very last-a pub is a pub not some fancy fairy grotto for kids to be entertained in- Kids shouldn't be in a pub-end of!
It is to the shame of the simple minded, easily led politicians of 5 years ago that our greatest heritage is in this pathetic state. A whiff of second hand smoke has never killed anyone and never will but the anti smoking lobby have created such hysteria it is surreal! Has anyone had the intelligence to work out what this ban has cost this country in the past 4 1/4 years-set against how many lives have been proven to have been saved? The latter part of the equation = 0. Yes, the grand total of zero, yet 9,000 businesses have gone down the drain.
The smoking ban is the primary reason, nothing else! Supermarkets have always been there, recessions (1970's) pub trade peaked (true) but the smoking ban killed off 68% of pubs regular customers. I don't smoke but I certainly don't go to our drab, boring, lifeless pubs anymore-I've seen more atmosphere in a cemetary!
Napoleon said we were a nation of shopkeepers-we are-totally, insipid, wonka style ( ;) ) voiceless ones who deserve every closure that comes their way!

JamieS says...
6:48pm Sat 13 Aug 11

Smokers are in the minority now more than ever. When the smoking ban was first introduced it was the non smoker that was left out but now the tables have turned and it's the smoker that has to leave the group to go out side. Just look at the reduced numbers of smokers that are gathered. The laws of supply and demand rule here. There were too many pubs which were run poorly and failed to adapt when their busineses changed. You constantly have to keep reevaluating your business to stay successful, however price wars are not the answer and if price was the issue we would all drink in Weatherspoons. The pub going population has reduced significantly in the past 30 years due to more leisure options available. Alcohol is all to readily available now. When I was younger in the 80's, town centres were safe at night, Alcohol could only be bought from an off licence and licensing hours were 12 - 3 and 7 to 11 for pubs too. We are now bombarded with cheap supermarket alcohol and people are half cut before they leave the house instead of going into town sober. What an awful state of affairs.

Boris says...
9:46pm Sat 13 Aug 11

The smoking lobby is dying out, as is proved by the fact that its sole spokespersons so far are not from around here.
The real problem is indeed that supermarkets sell cheap alcohol. The solution is to ban them from selling any alcohol at all. They already make huge profits so they will survive. Shops that sell food should sell no alcohol - end of. Each supermarket must choose whether it wants to sell EITHER food OR alcohol, but not both.
Alcohol to take away should be sold only by off-licences and pubs.
And of course children should be welcome in all pubs. Not to drink alcohol, but to enable their families to keep an eye on them while enjoying themselves in a responsible and convivial manner.

chas says...
9:57pm Sat 13 Aug 11

Before the smoking ban the majority of regular pub goers were smokers and still are. There was no surplus of pubs before the smoking ban. People go to pubs to socialise and not for cheap drinks.

jut1972 says...
8:55am Sun 14 Aug 11

Boris,

Why should I as a responsible drinker lose out from cut price deals at supermarkets? CAMRA's call for this is one reason I probably wont renew my membership, its ill thought out and quite possibly illegal. The call to ban supermarkets and shops from selling other products is idiocy, a) its against competition law, b) the supermarket would just open a drinks shop next door meaning small traders miss out again.

As for handymanphil from Leicester - second hand smoke does kill people, its carcinogenic. If smokers are stupid enough to kill themselves, fine, but dont take anyone else with you.

Pubs have diversified because they have to to survive, the notion a pub is a pub is outdated. There are more traditional pubs available if you want to go to them, fine, give them your patronage, for the rest of us, we can choose to go where we want also.

Sdapeze says...
12:16pm Sun 14 Aug 11

Sadly, the pub is gradually dying out as a British institution. We are going the way of Europe with demand for places where everybody can go for a drink and a meal - and who's to say that is a bad thing? The difference between us and the more socially adept Europeans is that we have a nasty element among us who want to get drunk, to threaten people, to eff and blind and generally show the British to be a backward and immoral race. People want to take their children into our pubs and it is at the owners discretion whether he allows it. I have no time for those who also want to smoke in pubs as that is pure anti-sociability. My suggestion to you all is to use what pubs we have left, especially the good ones. Sadly the bad ones will die through no fault other than the managements. The law cannot be changed back to the rose-tinted times of the past, nor should it. Supermarkets have been given the right to sell cheap booze. That cannot be taken away from them, any more than we should go back to stigmatising single mothers, homosexuals, spongers, the work-shy, etc. We have made our bed so now we need to lie on it.

No! I am Spartacus says...
12:23pm Sun 14 Aug 11

The simple fact is that the prices that pubs charge are much greater than those at supermarkets. In these times of 'belt tightning' it would be silly to expect people to only drink after they have left the house.

Pub companies with large portfolios are partly to blame (they tie in the landlords and make them pay for for drinks than if the landlords went to the supermarket- thereby instantly making them uncompetitive).

Taxes cause added pain but increasing them just compounds the problems- anyone that thinks more tax is a solution already has too much cash.

jut1972 says...
2:10pm Sun 14 Aug 11

Plenty of pubs and restaurants shop in supermarkets for stock. The big pub cos don't like it but its always happening.

Sdapeze and Spartacus are right poor management and overly controlling pub chain terms and conditions are as much to blame as supermarkets.

25414nora says...
5:57pm Sun 14 Aug 11

Recently in a town centre pub, I ordered two small diet pepsi's, for my partner and myself. The bar assistant half filled two tumblers with ice, then she topped up the glasses from a plastic quart bottle of tesco's diet pepsi, costing £1. or two for £1.50. I was charged (wait for it)....£4.20...

jut1972 says...
7:08pm Sun 14 Aug 11

name and shame nora, thats ridiculous

25414nora says...
8:06pm Sun 14 Aug 11

jut1972 wrote:
name and shame nora, thats ridiculous
the bar assistant's name was Sharron and she lives in essex...satisfied ?

Boris says...
10:41pm Sun 14 Aug 11

25414nora wrote:
jut1972 wrote:
name and shame nora, thats ridiculous
the bar assistant's name was Sharron and she lives in essex...satisfied ?
No, please name the actual pub, then we can all avoid it. You'd think the pub manager would at least have the decency to buy a proper brand of cola, i.e. Coca or Pepsi.
Next time you order similar drinks, get them to give you the ice in a separate tumbler, and then at least you'll get your full measure of what you are paying for.

JamieS says...
10:52pm Sun 14 Aug 11

No! I am Spartacus wrote:
The simple fact is that the prices that pubs charge are much greater than those at supermarkets. In these times of 'belt tightning' it would be silly to expect people to only drink after they have left the house. Pub companies with large portfolios are partly to blame (they tie in the landlords and make them pay for for drinks than if the landlords went to the supermarket- thereby instantly making them uncompetitive). Taxes cause added pain but increasing them just compounds the problems- anyone that thinks more tax is a solution already has too much cash.
Pubs charge a premuim price as they provide asthetically pleasing environments for you to drink in. You wouln't want to open your bottle of wine and start consuming it in the supermarket would you? Pubs are no place for kids and should be adult environments. Take them to your local Harvester. The more widely available and cheaper alcohol has become corresponds with the increase in binge drinking, violent behavior and no go town centres. Unfortunately the responsible majority have to suffer and are seemingly prepared to put up with it. You forget, supermarkets sell alcohol at a loss which pubs obviously cannot.

JamieS says...
10:56pm Sun 14 Aug 11

chas wrote:
Before the smoking ban the majority of regular pub goers were smokers and still are. There was no surplus of pubs before the smoking ban. People go to pubs to socialise and not for cheap drinks.
I think you will find that is no longer true. Please see the British Institute of Inn Keeping website.

Boris says...
11:16pm Sun 14 Aug 11

Jut and Sdapeze, why shouldn't a law be reversed? it happens quite often.
The power of the supermarkets has increased, is increasing, and ought to be diminished.
And yes jut, I'm like you, I often take up the supermarkets' offers of bogof, 3 for the price of 2, or whatever. But off-licences do the same kind of offers. In recent years I have taken up all sorts of offers at Bottoms Up (High St) and Oddbins (Crouch St), both now sadly defunct. If supermarkets no longer sold alcohol, there would be a resurgence of off-licences (yes, all the supermarkets would set up their own), and you would be offered such deals again.
And the pubs would be able to re-open their off-sales counters.
50 years ago I worked in a pub where we served nine-year-old children whose parents sent them along with empty jugs to buy two pints of mild (@ 1/1d a pint) or bitter (@ 1/5d) to take back. OK, we shan't go back to serving alcohol to children, but why shouldn't there be a steady stream of customers coming along to the pub to buy beer to take home?
Certainly the pub-owning companies must bear a lot of blame, because of the exorbitant prices they charge the managers of their pubs. We should avoid tenanted pubs and only go to free houses where the landlord chooses the products he sells and sets the prices.

Sdapeze says...
8:59am Mon 15 Aug 11

If you think that you can take away alcohol sales from supermarkets and corner shops, you are living in cloud cuckoo land. It may be be what the majority of pub users want but a lot more will not. Where would I buy my bottle of wine? We need to remember that the politicians are wiser than we plebians. We may want to bring back the death penalty, get out of Europe, stop benefits to certain people, etc. but the politicians that we elected know better than us and would never allow it to happen.

Boris says...
7:27pm Mon 15 Aug 11

Sdapeze wrote:
If you think that you can take away alcohol sales from supermarkets and corner shops, you are living in cloud cuckoo land. It may be be what the majority of pub users want but a lot more will not. Where would I buy my bottle of wine? We need to remember that the politicians are wiser than we plebians. We may want to bring back the death penalty, get out of Europe, stop benefits to certain people, etc. but the politicians that we elected know better than us and would never allow it to happen.
You would buy your bottle of wine at one of the new off-licences that would spring up.
More generally, the supermarkets are indeed powerful at the moment. They say "jump", and the prime minister of the day answers "how high?" But until about a month ago that was also true of Murdoch. What is needed is some kind of catalyst to make the public realise how much harm the dominance of the supermarkets is doing, and then the legislation will come.
Meanwhile, as you rightly say, we need the politicians to resist the calls for backward steps such as restoring the death penalty or defying geography. But I don't entirely trust the ones at Westminster. I have more faith in the unelected bureaucrats of Brussels.
(So glad we still disagree on some things....)

Ricayboy says...
9:14pm Mon 15 Aug 11

Sdapeze wrote:
Sadly, the pub is gradually dying out as a British institution. We are going the way of Europe with demand for places where everybody can go for a drink and a meal - and who's to say that is a bad thing? The difference between us and the more socially adept Europeans is that we have a nasty element among us who want to get drunk, to threaten people, to eff and blind and generally show the British to be a backward and immoral race. People want to take their children into our pubs and it is at the owners discretion whether he allows it. I have no time for those who also want to smoke in pubs as that is pure anti-sociability. My suggestion to you all is to use what pubs we have left, especially the good ones. Sadly the bad ones will die through no fault other than the managements. The law cannot be changed back to the rose-tinted times of the past, nor should it. Supermarkets have been given the right to sell cheap booze. That cannot be taken away from them, any more than we should go back to stigmatising single mothers, homosexuals, spongers, the work-shy, etc. We have made our bed so now we need to lie on it.
The "British" are a backward and immoral race? For a start this is an awful generalisation. For another there is no such thing as a British race. Britain is a state that consists of four distinct nations as well as numerous minorities from other nations, so it's not a question of a "race." Also, have you never met boorish people from abroad, the kind of people who make a nuisance of themselves in pubs? I have. Having said that, there is an element of people who frequent certain pubs who behave badly, swear a lot and generally make life unpleasant, but that is not something limited to "Britain" nor is it an accurate description of all pub-goers.

I am not a regular pub-goer, though I love historic pubs and feel very sad to see their demise. They are a living part of our heritage. Some pubs have been running for hundreds of years. What other business in your local high street has been? It does seem as though people have been put off pubs by the smoking ban, though I remember pubs many years ago which always seemed empty and yet still managed to survive somehow. The price of a pint is what puts me off. I wouldn't mind paying a bit more for a pleasant atmosphere and good company, but when you consider that a pint costs over a pound more than it did just a few years ago, you can see that drinking in a pub has become an expensive treat rather than the staple of a working Englishman's daily social life. What I do find amazing is that whilst pubs close down, many are converted into restaurants. There never seem to be enough! I would have thought that these establishments would also struggle during the recession. There is an absolute plethora of Indian, Chinese and Thai restaurants. But when a pub is gone, it's gone forever. I hope the tide will turn and pubs will come back into fashion as people reject the bland uniformity of the modern world.

Glad to have left says...
11:27am Thu 18 Aug 11

Since when has it been legal to hold public viewings of films without special permission?? It states it quite clearly in the WARNING shown on all copyrighted video media.
Can the council confirm that the appropriate paperwork is place to allow a pub to turn itself into a mini cinema.
I'm an ex landlord by the way and had to fight constantly to be allowed to try and survive with entertainment etc.
It must not be one rule some and another for the rest.

Glad to have left says...
11:28am Thu 18 Aug 11

Since when has it been legal to hold public viewings of films without special permission?? It states it quite clearly in the WARNING shown on all copyrighted video media.
Can the council confirm that the appropriate paperwork is place to allow a pub to turn itself into a mini cinema.
I'm an ex landlord by the way and had to fight constantly to be allowed to try and survive with entertainment etc.
It must not be one rule some and another for the rest.

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