Duuuuuuude that original house was gorgeous. I hope you found one equally as lovely! Cheers from Charleston!
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Thanks!! It does have a workshop, and also a hair salonsolteroblues wrote: ↑Wed Mar 31, 2021 4:07 pm
Congrats! I hope it has a workshop bigger than you had dreamed of!
Thanks Brett!
Yeah I reckon that one will do! Beautiful house and love the willow!UrenragK wrote:Thanks Brett!
Yeah, the other one was a peach, but this one is pretty good too!
Wotton Road, Rangeworthy, South Gloucestershire
https://www.rightmove.co.uk/property/90177061
Maybe that will work!?
Cheers! Rich
That’s the plan!!
One acre would be more than enough for me. Most of the places I've lived had a postage stamp for a front and/or back yard (or no yard at all). If I had an acre, I'd feel like a land baron!
If we could go a bit farther away I could have a nice house with 55 acres, including woodlands and pasture, but the Mrs won’t sign off on that.
A nice little pub that, needs to be explored a bit more
There are pubs in America? Most bars that I've been to that say "pub" on the sign are not really a pub. They think "pub" is just another word for "bar". Same thing with "tavern". And if a swillery claims to be an "English Pub", it's so pre-fab and fake you can't stand it... And it's still not a pub.
The Rose & Crown is a proper pub, very authentic.Mossman wrote: ↑Sun Oct 03, 2021 1:14 am There are pubs in America? Most bars that I've been to that say "pub" on the sign are not really a pub. They think "pub" is just another word for "bar". Same thing with "tavern". And if a swillery claims to be an "English Pub", it's so pre-fab and fake you can't stand it... And it's still not a pub.
Perhaps I'm being too persnickety about semantics... I don't even know how many functioning pubs that meet the definition are left in the UK anymore.
There's one watering hole in my hometown (Lowell, MA) called the "Old Worthen House" that would qualify as a real "pub" or "tavern" (albeit an American one). Edgar Alan Poe stayed there for a while when he was trying to get some rich Boston socialite to marry him (on his "matrimony tour" of the east coast). The sign out front features a raven perched atop a large beer in recognition. They never did any drastic remodeling. It looks about the same as it did in the late 19th century, with gas lamps, a pressed tin ceiling and a belt-driven fan system that still works, etc. I'm sure the bar and a lot of the carpentry have been replaced over time, but they managed to preserve much of the rustic ambiance. The two floors above the bar that were used for lodging back in the day was just being used for storage space for much of time that I was a patron, but in the mid '90s they converted the second floor into a game room with pool tables, etc., and on the third floor they had live music. I actually played there once before I blasted out of that town.UrenragK wrote: ↑Mon Oct 04, 2021 6:02 amThe Rose & Crown is a proper pub, very authentic.Mossman wrote: ↑Sun Oct 03, 2021 1:14 am There are pubs in America? Most bars that I've been to that say "pub" on the sign are not really a pub. They think "pub" is just another word for "bar". Same thing with "tavern". And if a swillery claims to be an "English Pub", it's so pre-fab and fake you can't stand it... And it's still not a pub.
Perhaps I'm being too persnickety about semantics... I don't even know how many functioning pubs that meet the definition are left in the UK anymore.
I'm with you on the American 'Pubs', and very much the same for the "Irish bars" around Europe that I have visited on my business travels.![]()