Posts Tagged ‘Museum Gardens’

Bay Horse, Marygate

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

One of the finest pleasures York has to offer, especially on a fine summers day or a crisp winter morning, is a ramble through the Museum gardens.

As you wander merrily around the potted borders, you can cast your inquisitive eye over a Roman Tower, 1800 years old, clamber over the ruins of St Mary’s Abbey (at one point the most powerful and wealthiest abbey in the the North of England) or feed the pigeons, squirrels and chavs with your left over pasty.

As nice as all these activities most certainly are (apart from feeding the chavs; they only accept White Lightning and Benson and Hedges) you would do well to carry on through the museum gardens, emerge onto Marygate and get yourselves into the Bay Horse, a smashing pub that is deserves your custom, not least because it could quite easily have been a dozen or so swanky flats.

The Bay Horse had been serving drinkers for more than a century, before closing in late 2003. It appeared the writing was on the toilet wall when the building was the subject of two planning applications to convert it into residential use, after being laid empty for five years or so.

To the delight of pub-goers, the developers failed in their bid and the premises was bought shortly afterwards by the Little Pub company, who set about a programme of renovation and re-opened as a pub in the Christmas of 2008, and thepubsofyork,com are most certainly glad it did, for it is a cracking pub.

The stylish wallpaper, comfy upholstered seats and contemporary lighting may be a bit too ‘modern’ for some purists but seeing as though it was so recently and extensively renovated, anything else would probably feel a bit contrived (and if you do want ‘traditional’ head up the road to the Minster Inn which is as traditional as they come).

Six hand pulls are readily available at all times and on our last visit, Greene King IPA and Rocking Rudolph (by the same brewery) were sampled and both were well kept and eminently drinkable.

The friendly bar staff can also serve you a packet of ‘Real Crisps’ which has been stated before on these pages, are the greatest crisps known to man and there’s even a plasma screen in the corner which shows live sport, so football fans needn’t miss out on their weekly fix of Uncle Jeff.

In fact, thinking about it, bypass the Museum Gardens and head straight here, you won’t be disappointed.


View The Pubs Of York Locations in a larger map

VN:F [1.8.3_1051]
Rate this pub yourself! For guidance see here .
Rating: 3.0/5 (4 votes cast)

Thomas’s

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

nullthepubsofyork.com likes this pub as much as an Irish football fan likes Thierry Henry. Unlike the Frenchman (you know the fella, he possesses impressive hand to eye co-ordination and used to drive Renault cars) this pub isn’t that good and when he isn’t cheating his opponents out of World Cup qualification Mr Henry is quite a player. He used to be even better and perhaps Thomas’s used to be half decent too, but thepubsofyork.com can’t really remember if it ever was.

On paper it has lots going for it; it’s large, has high ceilings, a room with an open fire, a jukebox and three screens that are capable of showing Sky Sports. Ridiculously though, it has a bloody huge sword and shield on the wall (no doubt acquired from www.impressgullibletourists.com) in one of the rooms and thepubsofyork.com isn’t sure it needs to say any more than that….but it will.

Like many pubs there’s more than a little something missing as far as York’s premier pub review website is concerned. It lacks a purpose, flair, a specific direction – lets say it is completely devoid of va va voom.

If you stand at the bar you’ll see that Strongbow, 1664 Premiere, Fosters, John Smiths Smooth, Carling, Guinness and Black Sheep are available, while this is a long list it is also an underwhelming one and the Sol, Budweiser, Corona, Peroni, WKD and Jacques Cider in the fridge don’t completely make up for it.

Whenever this alehouse has been visited, the lack of punters, and subsequently, a lack of an ‘atmosphere’ has been striking, and thepubsofyork.com just doesn’t think it could ever be full enough (considering the far more enticing options nearby, such as Judges Lodgings, Guy Fawkes & The Maltings) to be anything else but a convinient meeting place.

Maybe this place isn’t that bad, and whilst thepubofyork.com is never happy if a pub closes down, it just wouldn’t really notice if this boozer disappeared from York’s arsenal of pubs.


View The Pubs Of York Locations in a larger map

VN:F [1.8.3_1051]
Rate this pub yourself! For guidance see here .
Rating: 1.5/5 (4 votes cast)