Up on the windswept moors of the Yorkshire Dales, a spectacularly remote pub, popular with walkers. The pub is still run on a generator and probably never will get hooked up to the national electrical system. Click to visit. Well off the beaten track, this pub has a brewery just down the street, a big fireplace, and cool cats. Some of the beers that are provided by the brewery are exclusive to this pub, so drink them here or you will miss out. Click to visit. Kings Head, Gunnerside, North Yorkshire Deep in the Yorkshire Dales, in the tiniest of villages, a picture-perfect pub, nestled in the hillside. JB Priestly has his resting place in the churchyard across the bridge. Remember to ask about the "Auction-by-Candle"! Click to visit. A classic Dales pub, with the friendliest landlord you could imagine. This is very much a locals pub, not many tourists make their way through Coverdale and even fewer stop, but they are missing out on a real treat. The Thwaite is a true pub experience. Perfect scenery, a perfect village.  Click to visit. Thatched roof, great beer, friendly owner, good food, even bar skittles, all in a sleepy old English village. This is the quintessential English pub: Cozy, friendly, honest, comfortable, unpretentious, with convivial hosts and familiar guests. A great pub! Click to visit. A national treasure, a jewel set in the crown that is the preserved village of Great Tew. A range of Real Ales, over sixty single malts, and over a dozen cask-strength whiskies... perhaps you should make a weekend of it!  Click to visit. A magnificent discovery in the tortuous labyrinthine back roads of Gloucestershire. A truly unpretentious pub, welcoming and warm in every way. A pub-goers pub.  Click to visit. Surely one of the smallest pubs in Britain, this one is a beauty, with oak-paneled walls and a fireplace. A little tricky to find since the street is small and the front of the pub is almost hidden. Certainly cozy inside! Click to visit. In the middle of nowhere, this is the ultimate get-away pub. Slightly protected from the bleakness that is Dartmoor, this pub still feels remote, and is its own little oasis. Tremendous food, friendly folk.  Click to visit. An ancient, characterful pub, with real cider, Shove Ha'penny, and flagstone floors worn smooth by generations of pub-goers. History is all around you from the 500-year old shutters to the archaic central passageway to the little cupboard where they used to lock up visitors who imbibed just a little too much. Click to visit. Tan Hill Inn, Tan Hill, North Yorkshire Thwaite Arms, Horsehouse-in-Coverdale, North Yorkshire George, Hubberholme, North Yorkshire White Horse, Welton, Northamptonshire Falkland Arms, Great Tew, Oxfordshire Green Tree, Bath, Somerset Packhorse, Southstoke, Somerset Forest Inn, Hexworthy, Devon Kings Head, France Lynch, Gloucestershire