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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
National
Tony Jones

King ‘drowns sorrows’ with pint and brewery tour after World Cup heartbreak

The King takes a sip from a pint during a visit to the Hall and Woodhouse Badger Brewery in Blandford St Mary near Blandford Forum, Dorset, to mark the start of the brewery’s 250th anniversary celebrations (Isabel Infantes/PA) - (PA Wire)

The King “drowned a few sorrows” after England’s dramatic World Cup exit with a pint he pulled with the Queen as they toured a brewery.

Charles sipped an amber ale made by Hall & Woodhouse Badger Brewery the day after England captain Harry Kane and his teammates lost their semi-final match 2-1 to Argentina.

The King and Queen pour a pint of Fursty Ferret beer during a visit to the Hall and Woodhouse Badger Brewery in Blandford St Mary near Blandford Forum, Dorset (Isabel Infantes/PA) (PA Wire)
The King and Queen pour a pint of Fursty Ferret beer during a visit to the Hall and Woodhouse Badger Brewery in Blandford St Mary near Blandford Forum, Dorset (Isabel Infantes/PA) (PA Wire)

Aided by Camilla the King poured a pint of Fursty Ferret, a best seller with the family-owned brewery based in the town of Blandford near Poole in Dorset.

Before tasting the 3.4% popular ale the King said with a wry smile: “Maybe it’s a good day to drown a few sorrows.”

The country is reeling the day after the last-gasp defeat for England manager Thomas Tuchel’s players with many fans likely to be nursing post-match hangovers despite the loss.

The King chats to staff during a visit to the Hall and Woodhouse Badger Brewery in Blandford St Mary, Dorset (Isabel Infantes/PA) (PA Wire)
The King chats to staff during a visit to the Hall and Woodhouse Badger Brewery in Blandford St Mary, Dorset (Isabel Infantes/PA) (PA Wire)

Charles and Camilla were taken on their tour of the brewery, which celebrates its 250th anniversary next year, meeting brewing and chef apprentices, and watched as the trainee cooks competed in a Master Chef-style competition.

Founded in 1777 by Charles Hall, a Dorset farmer who began brewing beer from his excess grain, today the company produces more than nine million pints of beer every year, employs more than 1,500 people, and runs around 140 pubs across the south of England.

The King and Queen during a visit to the Hall and Woodhouse Badger Brewery in Blandford St Mary near Blandford Forum, Dorset (Isabel Infantes/PA) (PA Wire)
The King and Queen during a visit to the Hall and Woodhouse Badger Brewery in Blandford St Mary near Blandford Forum, Dorset (Isabel Infantes/PA) (PA Wire)

At one point the King chatted to Paul Barnett, the brewery’s finance director, about the impact of the World Cup on the business, which has predominantly food-led pubs which do not have screens or show the football.

Mr Barnett told the King: “I’m quite relieved we’re out of the football because we don’t make so much money.”

During the visit, head brewer Toby Heasman presented the King with a bottle of Ale To The King, a very limited run of Coronation Ale first produced in 2023 when a few thousand were bottled to celebrate Charles’s crowning.

Charles was hosted by Anthony Woodhouse, brewery chairman and seventh generation of the Woodhouse family to work at the brewery, while his son Matt Woodhouse, head of marketing and hospitality, is the eighth generation.

The chairman said: “Fursty Ferret is our best-selling draught beer, it’s great to see Their Majesties pull that pint and have a drink.

“Our pubs don’t generally have television screens and screen football, it tends to be more food-led and things like that, we don’t tend to play football matches, we have a few but those that do did very well.”

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