England v wales wont be bad.i remember being over there the summer englang v spain and germany they closed most bars and people had too watch games in there hotel and apts..it work very well..
Cheers mate, Huddle Bar sounds good to me.the huddle bar in the west end, or the highlander always show scottish footy.
England Vs Wales is on whilst I am out there.
Should be interesting.
I can imagine the dirty San An strip will be a pleasant place that night.
Agree. I detest them. Utter tourist trapsIrish bars are utter dross(most of them anyways)
Irish bars are utter dross(most of them anyways)
Irish 'themed' bars. Pubs created and run by Irish people are almost all brilliant.* Flat-packing any culture doesn't work for anyone who knows anything about what they are looking for.
*only exception I know is the brief period where the North London Irish pub where everyone we grew up with, well, grew up, was run by a publican who hated the public. He could have just carried on what had been built for decades before him, but he was unique in his ability to make a genuine institution unpopular. Thriving again, in good hands, these days.
No. Toolans in North Finchley.12 Pins!?![]()
Irish bars are having a moment in the UK too, very weird and I say that as an Irish person. Seems to be a new one opening in Manchester every week and somehow not being viewed as tacky in the way they used to be. Was discussing it with the wife and we think it links to Guinness having their own moment off the back of the splitting the G thing and the success of Fontaines DC and Kneecap.
Irish bars are having a moment in the UK too, very weird and I say that as an Irish person. Seems to be a new one opening in Manchester every week and somehow not being viewed as tacky in the way they used to be. Was discussing it with the wife and we think it links to Guinness having their own moment off the back of the splitting the G thing and the success of Fontaines DC and Kneecap.
It is generally, but it depends on where you look; if you are in one of the towns on the outskirts of Manchester (ie Bolton/Bury/Wigan) decent pubs (and I don't mean 'Spoons!) sell a pint for will under £4, next time I'm out and about pubcrawling I'll make a list!!Thankfully noticed very few of these in MCR last week - which still has plenty of great pubs. Although the beer is getting really expensive.
It is generally, but it depends on where you look; if you are in one of the towns on the outskirts of Manchester (ie Bolton/Bury/Wigan) decent pubs (and I don't mean 'Spoons!) sell a pint for will under £4, next time I'm out and about pubcrawling I'll make a list!!
Wonder what it's like down south (ie Didsbury)???
Hate to write this as a Lanky, but central Leeds trumps Manchester in my book - I'm not really sure what Manchester is these days, tons of skyscrapers in the centre but also run-down areas that need a lot of TLC; and I put the Northern Quarter (hey, if you want an expensive beer...) in that bracket - so much opportunity if it had a brush-up. Also the Gay Village ain't what it was - maybe it's because I'm getting older! But on the plus, Media City in Salford is relatively new and booming, although that's lost a bar since I last went.I completely understand this - my husband is from Stockport - although that has also become gentrified and more expensive over the last 20 years.
It’s great to see Manchester thriving (thanks to Media City in important) as I have been there since the mid-90s to watch City, then at Maine Road, but a pint is now a lot more expensive in the centre, as is the case around much of the UK. Yet I didn’t feel such a jump in Glasgow when there two week ago (and where I lived from 1998-2010).
My husband felt parts of Manchester were completely unrecognisable compared with even 5 years ago due to all the new development.