Whether you’re into swilling craft brews, sipping sweet and lethal cocktails or sampling vintage wines in cozy surrounds, Bermuda has a drinking establishment tailor made for your needs. The pubs tend to be in the authentic English country mode, all dimly lit interiors, wood paneling and walls filled with bric-a-brac, but some also have sundecks to take advantage of the balmy weather. To get around, buy an all-day bus pass at the depot in Hamilton: $12 gets you access to any bus or ferry island-wide.
On weekends, join the crowds at the island’s most famous watering hole, The Swizzle Inn. The original location, in Bailey’s Bay, Hamilton Parish (not to be confused with the capital) is a non-stop funfest, in part thanks to never-ending jugs of the national drink, the Rum Swizzle – a heady concoction of rum, triple sec, fruit juice and bitters. The walls are covered with business cards from all over the world and the place attracts a young and lively crowd. (Swizzle Inn, 3 Blue Hole Hill, 441-293-1854, <a href="www.swizzleinn.com">www.swizzleinn.com</a>) The second location in Warwick is slightly more sedate: take a perch outside on the deck, order some old fashioned fish and chips ($18.75 gets you beer battered Atlantic cod, coleslaw, chips and tartar sauce) and watch the world go by. (Swizzle Inn South Shore, 87 South Road, Warwick, 441-236-74590).
Beer aficionados will be in their element at the North Rock Brewing Company microbrewery, the only company on the island to produce locally brewed ale (10 South Road, Smiths Parish, 441-236-6633, <a href="www.northrockbrewing.com">www.northrockbrewing.com</a>).The atmosphere harks back to the Old Country, with stained glass windows, dark wood paneling and antique light fixtures, and the food - Sunday roasts ($22.50 with all the trimmings), steak and ale pie - continues the theme. Choose from seven draught beers ranging from a German-style wheat to a Guinness-like dark ale.<br>
If you’re after a slightly tonier experience, book a table at the Waterlot Inn, a swanky restaurant housed in a 340-year-old two-story manor house, where you can sample the island’s other legendary drink, the Dark ‘n’ Stormy, a cocktail made from rum and ginger beer, while you choose from a seafood and steak-heavy menu. (101 South Shore Road, Southampton, 441-238-8000)
The Hog Penny, on a steep street not far from Hamilton’s waterfront, was reputedly the inspiration for the bar in Cheers, and it’s not hard to see why: the cozy interior is low-lit and convivial, with a menu chock-full of comfort food favorites like shepherd’s pie and bangers and mash. (5 Burnaby Hill, Hamilton, 441-292-2534, <a href="www.hogpennypub.com">www.hogpennypub.com</a>) (Adam McCulloch)