September 12, 2008
Posted: 1314 GMT

EDGEFIELD, England – "Hi there. I've got some cooking apples here from the garden for you"

Goods can be traded at the bar for drinks or cash.
Goods can be traded at the bar for drinks or cash.

"Great, I'll get the chef to have a look."

This is the new recipe for success in rural Norfok. Bartering. Sound Medieval? I guess it is, kind of. But the fascinating thing is, it works.

It's quite simple. Got some windfalls from the garden? Got a brace of pheasant you just don't know what to do with? Then head on down to the Pigs Pub in Edgefield and you can trade your fruit, veggies and game for food and drink.

Chef Richard Martin weighs up the quality and quantity of your offerings and the price he offers you can be knocked off your bill.

They've actually been bartering at the pub for two years, but it really took off when people started worrying about the economy.

Rebecca Callister comes in for a chat with her sister who works in the pub. For her cooking apples she got a large glass of wine.

"The economy is a big factor. But it's nice to bring in fresh produce and see what the chef will do with it."

And of course, she gets a "free" drink which would normally have set her back at least £3.50 ($6.20).

For another lady, in with seemingly the entire contents of her back garden, the chef hits on a price of £10. That's a decent whack off her dinner bill.

It's not just fruit and veg. They've had their fair share of dead livestock too. One punter brought in pig testicles which apparently went down a treat, though they're not allowed to barter them any more because of trading standards laws. But rabbits, pheasants, grouse - all of that is fair game - if you'll forgive the pun.

I tried my own hand at it. I have to admit it was more of an academic exercise: I didn't go shoot myself a rabbit and a bird, I relied on a high quality game butcher in London for that. I had to pay £20 for a rabbit and grouse - fully furred and feathered.

What I got was a pint and £1.50. Okay, so that wasn't exactly going to cover the expense of buying them in the first place and the petrol of a long car journey to Norfolk - but if I had caught them myself in a rustic hedgerow in Norfolk, I'd have been in the money.

That's the point. It costs you nothing as a customer and you get something in return. And the pub loves getting the really fresh produce. Plus, there's a nice relationship building up between the customers and the pub.

As bar lady Rachel Callister points out, "you can meet the person who shot the pheasant at the bar and maybe have a chat!"

Whatever rocks your boat.

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Filed under: Business


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Peter   September 12th, 2008 1701 GMT

Be sure to bring the kitchen sink to England this summer so we'll have something to barter with for our beer consumption.

Cheers

Joe Sussmann   September 12th, 2008 1955 GMT

what a splendid idea ! A very positive attitude and an excellent way to keep customers when they may have a diificult time in their life. They will not forget.

Steve in Hong Kong   September 13th, 2008 846 GMT

I hope that you have not dropped the bar lady in the proverbial sh*t with the UK tax authorities. Some one in power is likely to wonder about the loss of tax revenue from "these out of the books" business activities.

It smacks of free wheeling Hong Kong, which will be much too free wheeling for the UK authorities!!!

Scott   September 15th, 2008 1524 GMT

Just because you hunt a pheasant or pick apples doesn't mean you recieved them for 'free'. It's a disgrace to the common man that CNN's own don't understand 'opportunity cost'.

It costs you what time you spent getting those goods and what you invested into it (beans, bullets, and (heaven forbid) band-aids). Those folks bartering may have gotten more had they traded within a farmer's market. It's more likely that the pub is getting their commodities for FAR less than the fair market value, which begs the question; is it fair?

Bob Cohen   September 19th, 2008 1246 GMT

SUBJECT: Govt. Loan to AIM
Who are we trying to kid here. No other bank in the world would lend money to AIG. Since the Government Loan to AIG was done in the interest of the country, the loan looks more like an equity infusion than a loan. If AIG goes into a Chapter 11 Bankrutpcy, the loan will then be treated like equity and not debt. This is called ":equitable subordination." Therefore, the Government will not get repaid on the loan until all other creditors are paid first. In oherwords, there is no way that the governmnt will ever get repaid under the Bankruptcy Code. Why is Congress trying to pull the wool over our eye on this Issue?

Rocky R. Rutledge   September 19th, 2008 1752 GMT

Bail-out Plan
I do know in my small portion of this world, to survive and not be cast aside due to careless work practice, I have a"TIP LEVEL" this is where at a certian point of a process that items however small need to be elavated to the next level, this is basically to asure that our customer satisfaction is not put in jepordy. what has happened in the last few weeks tells me and the rest of the USA that we as the working class mean nothing to anyone, Now who is going to pay for this Bail-Out,
yes the working class, who will pay for the working class Bail-Out when the time gets here, Banks? I hardly think so. Can anyone involved in this mess tell all of us who will BAT CLEANUP?

DENNIS   December 9th, 2008 624 GMT

i hope that you had a great time at the barter pub...

carmen San Carlos   September 10th, 2009 747 GMT

Too much fuss over the Health Care Bill... to many financial and political interests... Spain has a excellent free health system- Madrid is the the star in this. Come to Madrid- talk to the President of the Community, Esperanza Aguirre and just copy the system.
Free Health Care is a must...the fact the US doesn´t have it is so the Insurance companies and Farmaceutical companies will lose a lot of space to make money.
I personally enjoy both- free state health care and private insurance...but many people can´t afford this, but NEED FREE HEALTH CARE.

Anthony St. John   November 12th, 2009 1343 GMT

A Tender-hearted Partial Roster of People
with Whom I Wish to Dine

Sergio Anza
Roberto Baggio
Maria Bartiromo
Daniel Bell
Tony Benn
Fausto Bertinotti
Beyoncé
Jeff Bezos
Clarissa Burt
Aldo Busi
Daniela Carbone
Andrew Carnegie
Leonardo Cemak
Yolanda Cervera
Jackie Chan
Hugo Chávez
Qing Chen
Noam Chomsky
Michel Classens
Hillary Clinton
Paul A Cohen
Richard Dawkins
Barbara Dorris
Pierre Durand
Jenna Elfman
Elizabeth, Queen of England
Lynette Federer
Roger Federer
Margot Forbes
Vittoria Franco
Franco Gabrielli
André Glucksmann
Gary W. Goldstein
Cindy Gomez
Hala Gorani
Germaine Greer
Kathy Griffith
Tony Hadley
Jenny Harrison
Sasha Herriman
Paris Hilton
Whitney Houston
Eric Hobsbawn
Dr House
Martin Jacques
Hu Jintao
Teck Khong
Nicole Kidman
Naomi Klein
Paul Krugman
La Principessa Fiona Corsini
Peter Lavelle
Spike Lee
Jay Leno
Gong Li
Jet Li
Madonna
Bill Maher
Claudi Martini
Johnny Mathis
Giovanna Melandri
Manuela Moreno
Alain Minc
Michelle Pfeiffer
Vladimir Putin
Charles Rangel
Laura Rasero
Robert Redford
Robert Reich
Don Rickles
Giulia Righi
Joan Rivers
José Luis Rodriguez
Jim Rogers
Ségolène Royal
Jerry Seinfeld
Brooke Shields
Jurg Siegenthaler
Peter Singer
Chang Sisi
Wolfgang Sofsky
Christopher Smith
Joseph Stiglitz
Peter Stothard
Xavier L Telly-Wambwa
Lester Thurow
Livia Turco
Gore Vidal
Alessio Vinci
Vittorio Volterra
Karen Wilkinson
Martin Wolf
Tiger Woods
Gong Xixiang
Jean Ziegler
Andrew Zimmern
Howard Zinn
Greta Zografaki

Updated 18 October 2009

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