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Arbor New Horizons Alc Free

Arbor New Horizons Alc Free

Regular price £4.00
Regular price Sale price £4.00
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Producer Arbor
Country England
Region Bristol

Tasting Notes

Mango, Peach, Pineapple and Soft Citrus

This Pairs With:

Edinburgh and UK Shipping

✓ Carefully packed by our team in Edinburgh

✓ Free local delivery in Edinburgh and
Falkirk for orders over £35

✓ Free UK delivery over £90

✓ Click & Collect available

✓ Shipping to Northern Ireland and Scottish Isles available on request: orders@thebeerhive.co.uk

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More About Arbor New Horizons Alc Free

Gluten Free 0.5% ABV pale ale with Azacca, Citra, Ekuanot & Mosaic hops.

Meet the Producer, Arbor

Arbor

Style: Brewery

Arbor are one of the breweries that became completely woven into the identity of modern Bristol beer. Founded in 2007, they started small but quickly grew into one of the defining names of the city’s craft beer scene, helping shape the reputation Bristol now has as one of the UK’s most exciting beer cities. Even after all the growth, collaborations, and huge number of beers they’ve released over the years, the brewery still feels very rooted in that original independent, slightly chaotic, creativity-first spirit.

A huge part of Arbor’s appeal is how consistently drinkable the beers are, even when they’re experimenting heavily with hops, styles, or newer brewing trends. The brewery built a reputation early on through hop-forward pale ales and IPAs, but there’s always been a broader curiosity running underneath the range too. Dark beers, lagers, mixed fermentation projects, seasonal one-offs, collaborations, they’ve spent years quietly trying just about everything while still keeping a very recognisable house style.

There’s also something very Bristol about the whole atmosphere around Arbor. Bright artwork, pint cans, constantly rotating beers, busy taprooms, collaborations with local businesses, it all feels connected to the city’s creative energy without becoming overly polished or corporate. Even their signature 568ml cans became slightly iconic because they leaned into the simple idea that beer should probably still come in pint-sized quantities rather than tiny “premium” formats.

What’s kept people loyal to Arbor over the years though is probably the consistency underneath all that experimentation. The brewery never really chased hype in the same way some modern craft breweries did. Instead, they built a reputation through reliability, balance, and making beers people genuinely wanted to keep drinking rather than simply ticking off once. There’s a confidence to the brewery now that comes from nearly two decades of brewing, but it still feels approachable, independent, and properly tied to the local scene that helped build it in the first place.