This heritage pub of immense character offers a choice of rooms - front bar with open fire and huge beams, snug with inglenook fireplace and rear public bar with TV. Winner of several CAMRA awards including West Wales Pub of the Year 2015. Two real ales in winter, three in summer from breweries in Wales and the Borders. Gwynt y Ddraig is served all year round and real cider from smaller Welsh producers is served in the busier months. The pub is listed in the Michelin Guide and excellent quality food is served in the bars and restaurant. The menu includes local meat, fish and cheese and good vegetarian options. Rear patio and a large, beautifully landscaped beer garden with a memorial to the circus elephant reputedly buried here.
Dogs are welcome in the bars and garden. Winter opening hours may vary.
One star - A pub interior of special national historic interest
Listed status: II
A late 18th.century drovers’ inn with three rooms including a characterful snug. The latter, flagstone-floored and beamed, is at the front and has an inglenook fireplace incorporating a bread oven and two antique settles. It has changed little since the inn's days as a resting place for cattle drovers. The small lounge on the far left, with a flagstone floor, has a counter dating from c.1965 and bar back shelves possibly of similar date. Through a low doorway is the public bar with similar counter and shelves which replaced the original small counter on the opposite side of the room. In the hotel part, the office/reception room, originally a private bar for well-to-do locals, has a colourful Victorian floor and curved partition walls. To the left of the passage, with its 'Old Worthington in Bottle' mirror, is a small dado- panelled room while on the right a room with two tiled fireplaces was, until 50 years ago, two small rooms.
A late 18th.century drovers’ inn with three rooms including a characterful snug. The flagstone floored and beamed front snug with its inglenook fireplace including a bread oven and two antique settles is little changed since the inn's days as a resting place for cattle drovers It was extended in the late 19th.century with the arrival of the railway to Tregaron. The small lounge on the far left, with a flagstone floor, has a bar counter dating from c.1965 and bar back shelves possibly of similar date. Through a low doorway is the public bar at the rear with another c.1965 bar counter and bar back shelves, which replaced the original small counter on the opposite side of the room. In the hotel part there is an office/reception room, originally a private bar for the well-to-do locals that has a colourful Victorian floor and curved partition walls. To the left of the passage with an 'Old Worthington in Bottle' mirror there is a small dado panelled room to the left, and on the right a room with two tiled fireplaces that until 50 years ago was two small rooms.
Very busy when the Tregaron Trotting Club (www.tregarontrotting.com) holds its Spring meeting and three days of racing over the August bank holiday called the Festival of Harness; also for Ffair Garon on Spring Bank Holiday Monday.
This Pub serves 3 changing beers and 0 regular beers.
Talbot, Tregaron
Changing beers typically include: Evan Evans (varies) , Mantle (varies) , Wye Valley
Source: Regional
A Celebration Of Welsh Pub Heritage Real Heritage Pubs of Wales is a guide to a remarkable and varied collection of pubs with the best and most interesting interiors in the whole of Wales. It is CAMRA’s pioneering initiative to...