December, 24, 2024-04:30
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Farmers Dog Pub Struggles with Rising Operating Expenses
He wrote in his latest Times column how the volume of theft was 'extraordinary', saying: 'People seem to have it in their heads that if they come in for a pint they are entitled to go home with the glass in which it was served. Last Sunday 104 went missing.'And that cost must be added to the £100 a day we spend on fuel for the generator, the £400 a week it costs to provide warmth on the terrace and the £27,000 a month we must spend on parking and traffic marshals to keep the council off our back.'And that's before you get to the cost of employing people in Starmer's Britain thesedays.'Clarkson- who last week welcomed Conservative party leader Kemi Badenoch to the Farmer's Dog - told readers that running the pub required 'much effort' for 'little money' in return. Clarkson added: 'It's galling to see how much effort is required to make so little money on the farm. It's worse at the pub.'The customers are coming. There's no problem there. But turning their visits into a profit is nigh-on impossible.' He said that 'behind the scenes, everything is a total disaster' - though added: 'The fact is that when you go there you just wouldn't know.'But the long list of problems only continue for Clarkson, who shared details of a toilet incident which required a 'whole team' of chemically trained hazmat engineers to tackle.
More than 400 people waited hours to be the first to enter Clarkson's new pub when it opened in August Pubgoers waited in a long row, often for hours, for a chance to have a pint in Clarkson's Farmer's Dog pub in August Ex-Top Gear host Jeremy Clarkson (pictured with his partner Lisa) has confessed his pub - run only on British produce - is a 'total disaster' behind the scenesJeremy Clarkson goes to the pub with Kemi Badenoch as pair discuss Labour's tax raid on farms Recalling a recent occurrence, where one of employees called wailing on the phone after discovering a 'horror' bathroom 'accident', the presenter hired a team of specialists - a cost he had never envisioned listing on his business plans.
The TV star and his partner Lisa have also encountered some barriers in the run-up to Christmas, with her goose night failing to sell out and only managing to shift five turkeys after ordering 40. But, despite the hurdles, Clarkson insists he is more determined than ever to make his pub work.
'It's warm and there's a fire and the staff are friendly and young and happy. It's a proper, traditional pub,' he said. 'By which I mean you'll love it, and I'll lose a fortune and develop a skin disease from the stress of running it.'Clarkson is not alone among pub owners in condemning the Government and Ms Reeves' Budget measures which she says are necessary to help tackle a £22billion 'black hole' left by the previous Conservative government.She was criticised last month by the chairman of pub chain Fuller, Smith and Turner, and also warned by the British Retail Consortium that job losses and higher prices were 'inevitable'.Michael Turner, whose family have run the pub chain since 1845, called the National Insurance raid a 'direct attack' on industries such as hospitality that are 'the lifeblood of our economy, whilst leaving the large City institutions that can afford to pay their share, almost completely untouched'.