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Secret Drinker reviews the Wheatsheaf Inn and the Walnut Tree pub at Eastchurch, Sheppey

Keeping it in the family on Sheppey has always been important, but is the relationship between these two just a little close for comfort?

Brotherly love is a thing of beauty, but without so much as a whisker between them, the Wheatsheaf Inn and the Walnut Tree in Eastchurch have a unique pub relationship in my experience.

If you’re visiting The Wheatsheaf on Warden Road in Eastchurch then it’s the pub on the right as you look from the road. To the left you’ll find its sister pub, with another brother, the Walnut Tree.
If you’re visiting The Wheatsheaf on Warden Road in Eastchurch then it’s the pub on the right as you look from the road. To the left you’ll find its sister pub, with another brother, the Walnut Tree.

The Apprentice and I were pointed in the direction of Minster, on the Island, by SD fan Steve Pink who said this pair of pubs butting up to each other offer something a little bit different.

We turned right into The Wheatsheaf and, after a little wait at the bar, started with a Guinness and a Whitstable Bay Pale Ale. The ale was served in an old metal tankard, the like of which I haven’t had a drink in for many a long year.

Silver fox Trevor has an infectious cheeky grin and welcomed us with several wonderfully politically incorrect quips. We then took our drinks to the room on the right-hand side of the pub, if nothing else to get away from Happy Little Ted (a kids’ grab machine I think) which broke the silence alarmingly, and very loudly, at regular intervals.

The Wheatsheaf bar is to the left and although we were waiting for a little while we didn’t like to ring the bell
The Wheatsheaf bar is to the left and although we were waiting for a little while we didn’t like to ring the bell
The Apprentice went for a pint of the black stuff and said the Guinness was pretty good. My Whitstable Bay Pale Ale was served in a pewter tankard
The Apprentice went for a pint of the black stuff and said the Guinness was pretty good. My Whitstable Bay Pale Ale was served in a pewter tankard

Black cat Coco, I forget if they’re lucky or not, joined us at one point, as did Belle, another fur ball, this time of the Tabby variety.

Though the cats were a lot quieter than the kids charging around the dining room.

As well as visiting cats there are lots of signs with ‘funny’ sayings – ‘Danger, Bad Mood’ and ‘Hangovers last for a day, memories for a lifetime’ but perhaps the most striking is ‘Don’t Panic’ – written out twice in block capitals.

The dining had strings of fairy lights as well as the bar and although there was a dartboard, it was behind the piano and didn’t look as if it had been used for a while
The dining had strings of fairy lights as well as the bar and although there was a dartboard, it was behind the piano and didn’t look as if it had been used for a while
Belle the tabby cat only paid a visit to the bar after the black cat Coco left
Belle the tabby cat only paid a visit to the bar after the black cat Coco left
Walking through to the back garden of The Wheatsheaf you will find this covered area with a pool table and an air hockey game
Walking through to the back garden of The Wheatsheaf you will find this covered area with a pool table and an air hockey game

Having discovered these neighbouring pubs are run by brothers who fell out seven years ago and split the big pub they owned jointly into two completely separate boozers, we had to pop next door to visit Trev’s bro Steve at the Walnut Tree.

It was lively enough in the bar, the sparring mainly took place between Steve and his other half, who admitted it was like a cross between a bad episode of EastEnders and a Punch & Judy show.

If it was like a soap opera then local, and huge snake fan, Jay, was making a guest appearance and was overshadowing the regular actors. His story centred around an appearance on ITV’s This Morning two years ago when his neighbour, with a phobia of snakes, was encouraged into his adapted garage where he had, by his own admission, about 90 snakes, many bred himself.

If you’re visiting the Walnut Tree on Warden Road in Eastchurch then it’s the pub on the left as you look from the road. To the right you’ll find its sister pub, with another brother, The Wheatsheaf.
If you’re visiting the Walnut Tree on Warden Road in Eastchurch then it’s the pub on the left as you look from the road. To the right you’ll find its sister pub, with another brother, The Wheatsheaf.
Steve found time between pulling pints to pull the legs of several locals
Steve found time between pulling pints to pull the legs of several locals

A number of the same beers were on offer here as next door and my Whitstable Bay Pale Ale was an identical price.

The Walnut Tree clearly got the car park, which is spacious, in the split but lost out on the toilets, which are ridiculously bijou and feel like a late addition. The toilets, as well as not having much space, were also missing a drier or paper towels, soap, a light or screws in the ceiling switch.

We’d already decided the only fair way to judge the food at both these boozers was to order the same thing at each and make sure we shared them. We went for pepperoni pizza but the one here was created on a pre-prepared base and it was a world apart from the freshly made example next door. Sorry Walnut Tree, in our taste test the food at The Wheatsheaf was a great deal better.

Both pubs have jukeboxes, dartboards, strings of fairy lights and pumps serving the same drinks, but only The Wheatsheaf has a pool table, two grab machines, a pair of old fruit machines and an air hockey table.

There are fairly lights next door too but I think the Walnut Tree is currently winning the face to install the most lights
There are fairly lights next door too but I think the Walnut Tree is currently winning the face to install the most lights

I’m reliably informed there are plenty of locals who are more than happy to visit both pubs, many on the same night, and we were followed from one pub to the next by a few other folk.

However, when the brothers, who both have a history in construction, built the division between their boozers all those years ago there were a few locals who nailed their colours to the Walnut Tree mast or continue to show their allegiance to The Wheatsheaf.

We were happy to pay our respects at both and sample the delights of both sides of this unique pub experience.

It might have got the car park when the division took place, but the main toilets went to The Wheatsheaf so a new gents has been created at the Walnut Tree
It might have got the car park when the division took place, but the main toilets went to The Wheatsheaf so a new gents has been created at the Walnut Tree
Neither the light or the fan, or the hand drier, for that matter, was operational
Neither the light or the fan, or the hand drier, for that matter, was operational
Both pubs have Whitstable Bay Pale Ale on draught and at the Walnut Tree it’s exactly the same price as next door
Both pubs have Whitstable Bay Pale Ale on draught and at the Walnut Tree it’s exactly the same price as next door
At the bottom of the garden in The Wheatsheaf, the seating area has been designed to look like the prow of a ship with a view across the fields to the sea
At the bottom of the garden in The Wheatsheaf, the seating area has been designed to look like the prow of a ship with a view across the fields to the sea

THE WHEATSHEAF INN AND THE WALNUT TREE

The pubs have identical addresses – Warden Road, Eastchurch, Sheerness ME12 4HA

How they shape up...

Decor: They’ve both got their fair share of fairy lights and a few items you’d find in an amusement arcade, but the décor in both is fairly similar with much dark wood and old beams. I’d score this as a draw.

Drink: Neither pub has too many ales available but the Whitstable Bay Pale Ale was okay and was well served in both. I might just give the edge to the Wheatsheaf for the old-fashioned tankard.

Price: Again, I think this has to be a draw as the pale ale was £4.20 in both pubs. A Guinness in The Wheatsheaf was £4.50 and a pint of Moretti in The Walnut Tree was £4.80.

Food: We judged the pubs on the pepperoni pizzas they served and I’m afraid there was no contest. The Wheatsheaf’s freshly prepared pizza was miles better than next door’s offering.

The Sunday roast is apparently a big draw at The Wheatsheaf and there were plenty of menus dotted about
The Sunday roast is apparently a big draw at The Wheatsheaf and there were plenty of menus dotted about
We decided to have a pepperoni pizza in both pubs so we could compare them. This one in the Walnut Tree had clearly been made on a pre-prepared base
We decided to have a pepperoni pizza in both pubs so we could compare them. This one in the Walnut Tree had clearly been made on a pre-prepared base
The pepperoni pizza in The Wheatsheaf had obviously been prepared fresh and we both agreed it was a big step up from the pizza we sampled next door.
The pepperoni pizza in The Wheatsheaf had obviously been prepared fresh and we both agreed it was a big step up from the pizza we sampled next door.

Staff: I know they’ve gone their separate ways and are now following their own pub paths, but both Trevor and Steve are genial, pleasant hosts who welcome locals and visitors alike.

A high scoring draw for this one.

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