Britain is now home to a society showing all the symptoms of the classic degeneracy that preceded the fall of the Roman Empire. I don't need to go into details and proofs - I ask you simply to recognise the symptoms all around you. It's rather like growing older - "It can't happen to me, at least not yet." Oh yes it can, and it's happening now! Likewise, this Never-never-never-Enslaved, Sceptred Throne of Hope can become degenerate. It happened to them, it's happening to us.
So, we seem set to continue our long-delayed but inevitable descent into the picturesque and romantic status of "Once Great Nation", where visitors must manoeuvre past a multitude of corrupt officials into streets full of souvenir hawkers, musicians and beggars from where a persuasive pimp will convey you to a night's lodging in a picturesquely peeling B & B with "Victorian" (actually, 1967) plumbing. In short, Britain will appear to the clean and prosperous Chinese, Korean, Canadian, Japanese, Scandinavian and German visitors rather like most of the states of southern and eastern Europe (not to mention France) until recently appeared to us! One of the characteristics of such societies is the proliferation of cafes, restaurants, bars, kiosks and other eating places. To quote P.J.O'Rourke on Tirana, capital of Albania: "Hundreds of cafes and bars have opened ... built on any handy piece of open ground ... Every public space is covered with bags, wrappers, bottles, cans - and the booze shacks and pizza sheds that sold them.
Nowhere is this trend more evident than in Cromford. It is not long since the only places where you could be served food and drink were a hotel, three pubs, a transport cafe and a fish-and-chip shop. You might well think that such a number and range of eating houses was entirely adequate for a not very fashionable village of 1600 souls, but no - now there are no less than SEVENTEEN establishments (of which Scarthin Books is one) competing to fill you with fodder, while another three are lying in wait just beyond the parish boundaries in case you manage to get through the gauntlet unsated! So far, we residents and the Council just about keep on top of the litter, but only with the aid of numerous bins, which by Sunday evening are stuffed and overflowing with chip trays, coke cans and bountyful no longer Bounty-full wrappers, which by Monday morning the Jackdaws will have spread about the Marketplace and the Promenade in search of unfinished mushy peas.
So, I issue this sociable gastronomic challenge - can you, can I, can we together eat or drink at each of these seventeen establishments in just one day? The best order in which to describe all the different establishments involved is in the order in which I think they could be visited. We shall want to maximise enjoyment and to minimise the strain on the digestive system, which means having our coffees early and our chips and booze late, with as much walking as possible in between repasts. Given appropriate start and finish points, the route will seem absurdly inefficient, ignoring adjacent establishments in order to set off for the most distant of next stops. I am open to major re-scheduling, but here is my draft programme for the day.
When to do it? It has to be on a Saturday, I think, to be sure of catching everywhere open at the right time. Maybe in June, a week before the Celebrating Cromford weekend. In fact it would be part of Celebrating Cromford - photographs, or even a video, could be displayed during the festival.
Who is to take part? Well, the first twenty (maximum) to commit themselves; any more would over-pack some of the venues.
How much would it cost? At first sight, too much. Even at an average of only £2.50 per venue it would come to some £40 each. It seems a lot to have to pay for the sort of jape which is usually sponsored and raises money. I don't see how it could raise money, but I think it could be made cheaper by having joint spreads laid on at the hotels, cafes and restaurants, for a special reduced price. In any case, we will hardly be able to eat a full course at each stop - and it ought to bring the establishments some publicity - of which this article is the first element, to be followed by press releases to the local, and even national, media. Maybe hearing about the event will inspire others. So, if it's to be good publicity, maybe I should go back over what I've written and hype everywhere up a bit. I shan't tell you whether or not I did that.
If the Cromford Cafe Challenge is actually going to happen, I will post the arrangements here and elsewhere. If I don't, feel free to do it anyway. DJM Jan 09