Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Edinburgh Live
Edinburgh Live
National
Nia Dalton & Lee Dalgetty

Wetherspoon superfan books week-long Edinburgh holiday to try out every pub

JD Wetherspoon have become a go-to for people up and down the country looking for their cheap and cheerful fix.

No one is quite as much of a fan as Tim Clarke though, who has stopped off at 240 Wetherspoon venues up and down the country. Tim, 66, never misses a Thursday Curry Club and loves a traditional breakfast.

In just five years, he's collected menus from every Wetherspoon he's been too. Along with his wife Anne, they began their boozer adventure in 2018 and have made quite the hobby out of it.

READ MORE - Award-winning restaurant in plush neighbourhood goes on sale after 19 years of trading

Tim, from Nottingham, told the Mirror : "We first started collecting menus when we got a directory in 2018. You don't get them anymore but it lists all the pubs by county.

"We've visited 240 so far, but we went to lots before then, so it's even more than that. We've travelled as far as Edinburgh for a week's holiday, and we've done all of the pubs in Nottingham, Derbyshire, Lincolnshire, South Yorkshire and West Yorkshire."

Tim's favourite meal is a traditional large breakfast, which includes a fried egg, bacon, sausage, baked beans, two hash browns, slice of toast and butter, for a fiver.

"I like their breakfasts the most, so wherever we go, we always head to Spoons first. They food is always the same and you know exactly what to expect," Tim said.

Tim and his wife Anne started their Wetherspoon journey in 2018 (Tim Clarke/The Mirror)

"You get limitless cups of coffee with it and it's a way to break up the journey as well. I don't know if I'm supposed to, but I do collect the paper menus. I ask the staff before I take them. The big menu tells you the history of the pub.

"I write on the date and if my favourite football team, Nottingham Forest, are playing, I put the match score on. I've got two folders, one downstairs and one in the attic. They're all filed alphabetically under counties, I don't know what I'm going to do with them.

"My missus always says, 'Why do we have to take them?', but I tell her that one day the grandkids might want to look back at the history and say, 'The pints were cheap in those days'."

Even over the last five years, Tim has noticed big changes. As well as Spoons shutting down old pubs, he said the "prices have gone up and you get less food".

"Back in the old days, you used to get really big helpings. But I guess that's the same with everywhere now," he added.

If it's later in the day, Tim and Anne will stop for a Thatchers Cider or Stowford Press, and sometimes stay in a Wetherspoon hotel.

"We've just come back from staying in a hotel in Brecon, Wales. It's handy so you don't have to worry about driving," Tim said.

"Every Thursday night, the lads go out and we have the chargrilled chicken or curry. You can't go wrong with their fish and chips either. The thing with Spoons is that you don't expect top quality, but it's not bad quality either, it's just in the middle."

After taking a trip to all of his local boozers, Tim is struggling to travel further afield and has plans to buy a campervan to continue his mission.

Tim has visited 240 Wetherspoon venues in the country (Tim Clarke/The Mirror)

"When we get a campervan, we'll do Cornwall. It does encourage us to go places. We've been to towns that we probably wouldn't hav gone to," he said.

"It's a bit of fun too, if we've been driving for hours, we'll look at the directory to find where we can stop off, rather than struggle to find somewhere new. You pay £2.50 for a pint of cider instead of £7 like a normal pub. It's a damn sight cheaper. You can buy a round for a tenner."

Tim also uses the app to find pubs and hotels nearby, but prefers a copy that he can physically hold.

"I think Wetherspoon should have a passport. I wrote to them suggesting they bring one out, that can be stamped so people know where the pubs are," he said.

"It would give people an incentive to go. There's definitely a market for it. I think they're missing a trick here!"

Tim has visited 240 out of 826 Wetherspoon pubs in the UK, and if they take his advice to make a passport, he'll definitely visit more.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.