Longer Hub Marketing days have been in short supply this year but the Board are back in business with a canal-based caper to welcome in the autumn season. Secretary WME has evening dancing commitments in Wombourne which give us the perfect excuse to stage the Staffs & Worcs towpath trip Mr D9 has had his heart set on...
- A Breakfast Cuppa -
Trip Log: Friday 5th September 2025 and the leaves are turning gold and starting to tumble to the ground. Autumn's incoming tones prompt Hub Marketing members to assemble at Spring Hill shops for a greasy spoon rendezvous at Penny's Cafe, something of a Penn institution by all accounts. The Black Country Special breakfast is exceedingly good value at £8 if you have a big appetite; it comprises three sausages, three bacon rashers, two fried eggs, mushrooms, beans, tinned tomatoes and a round of toast each, not forgetting Secretary WME's favourite - the hallowed black pudding! This certainly lines the stomach for the exertions ahead, even if the recently reopened Fox & Goose doesn't get going pubwise until 3pm.
- Timetable Switchover at Swindon -
The A449 Penn Road has quite a silly song pedigree this year having already hosted a chart rundown on one of our evening endeavours. This time around it has to suffer the indignity of being subjected to Yin and Yan's 'Butch Soap' although 'A Transport of Delight' by legendary double act Flanders and Swann does redress the balance somewhat. The mere mention of 97 horsepower London omnibuses prompts us to board the Stourbridge-bound 16 so that Mr D9 can recreate halcyon driving days of powering through Wombourne. Hopping off at Swindon, there are timetable cases to attend to now that the summer schedules have finished.
- The Green Man -
It isn't all work and no play thankfully, which is Hub Marketing shorthand for saying it's time to go to the pub. The Greyhound was converted for residential use a few years ago but Swindon (the Staffordshire version) retains two other boozers which both demand our consideration. The Old Bush gets first dibs for Hobgoblin Gold and daytime crime dramas - it only looks a small place from the outside but has quite a few cosy rooms to pick from - then we gladly follow that with the Green Man on the corner of Church Road. Wye Valley's Pyoneer is in excellent form here, being the Herefordshire brewery's standard bitter under a rebadged moniker. The old-fashioned public bar has retired chaps chatting away as dogs snooze, evoking a sleepy sense of pub life as a Ken Dodd diddyman illustration watches on.
- Towpath Vistas near Swindon -
Onto the canal we go accompanied by a Nutty Squirrels 'Uh Oh' silly song which threatens the otherwise quiet serenity of Hinksford Lock. The Secretary knows this particular section of the Staffs & Worcs towpath quite well but it's new ground for the Chairman who's more used to the grim industrial sights of Bradley and Priestfield. After eyeing up puntastic narrowboat names at Hinksford Wharf, we exit onto the lane beside Hinksford's terracotta pumping station, installed circa 1900 by the South Staffordshire Waterworks Company. A mobile home park is also close at hand but we're again mainly interested in any pub potential, once Mr D9 has removed the summer timing sheets from another couple of bus stops that is...
- Your Darts Winner (but we don't know how) -
Our next port of call is the Hinksford Arms, a pub which used to be known as the Old Bush and could therefore be easily confused with its former Swindon namesake. Armed with halves of Wye Valley Butty Bach, we take to the oche for our first game of darts for many months. To say WME Whirlwind is rusty is an understatement, the Secretary being almost incapable of hitting the board but managing to leave holes in the wallpaper with alarming regularity. Surely the D9 Destroyer can take advantage of such appalling capabilities? You'd think so but no, the bald one just can't find a finish hence a combination of frustration and sheer bad luck keeps the Whirlwind in contention. In fairness, Mr WME was bound to find his range sooner or later so - despite perforating the floorboards - it is he who triumphs by two legs to one.
- Navigation, Greensforge -
Still smarting from that scarcely believable turn of darting events, the Chairman seeks solace from a canalside hostelry one bridge further along the towpath. Greensforge does feel like it's slap bang in the middle of nowhere so the Navigation is a real bolthole for the folks of Wall Heath and Kingswinford who fancy escaping on an afternoon. This is a musty affair perched right beside Greensforge Lock and has all the faded charm you could wish for, not to mention quality cask ale in the form of Three Tuns XXX. Chats about Loch Ness holidays and bus garage shenanigans keep us entertained while we consult hand-drawn diagrams about the Stourport Ring, part of a canal cruising circuit which is popular with boaters.
- D9 Doolittle talks to the animals (well, sheep mostly...) -
From Greensforge we call upon the Secretary's patented local knowledge to plot our way via Ashwood Marina and over the fields to Lodge Lane. A gravel track of a bridleway keeps us safely away from speedy traffic and even allows Mr D9 to attempt a bit of sheep-whispering; either he hasn't got the knack or these particular ewes had more sense than to engage with such silliness. Historically home to the Briscoe family, the Summerhill House Hotel is a fine C18th property which stands on the Cot Lane crossroads; currently operated by Travelodge, there is a Harvester restaurant-cum-bar next door wherein we can pause briefly over a cold glass of Carling so that the Chairman can recover from hitting the daily 20,000 steps mark.
- Driftaway Tropical IPA at Hickory's -
Hauling some weary limbs along Swindon Road into Wall Heath, we will round off the day at a couple of places that hadn't yet received the Hub Marketing treatment. Hickory's Smokehouse might be more familiar to some readers from its days as the Kingfisher Country Club, which in its time hosted live entertainment for something like 50 years. Anyway, it's now a branch of the Southern-styled American chain of bars, majoring on bourbon and barbecue flavourings. Their Driftaway Tropical IPA is refreshing enough at £4 Friday prices before the Wall Heath Tavern rustles up Holden's Golden Glow on a high table. There's late drama over a missing D9 bus pass but all's well that ends well, and the Secretary does get to go to the ball - sorry, barn dance - after all. Cheers to a terrific towpath trail!