The Camp House Inn, a pub on the west bank of the River Severn near Grimley, has flooded, cutting off customers and leaving the team with another massive clean-up effort.
Previously, a boat was set up for customers to reach the pub but now they said the pub seems to flood throughout directly after any flood.
Johanne Wainwright-Scarrott, acting manager of the Camp House Inn, has grown tired of the constant flooding.
Mrs Wainwright-Scarrott said: “It’s getting very wearing for us now.
“When my parents took over as the landlords of the pub from my grandparents in 1971, we went 21 years without flooding once.
“From 1992, we had flooding every few years, then it was once a year and now we have several times a year.
“Since October, we have had flooding every month.”
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Mrs Wainwright-Scarrott said previously the pub had been able to withstand any flooding when the river Severn broke its banks.
She explained: “The building was built to withstand some natural flooding – and I put the emphasis on natural.
“The canals locks and structures that have been built around us have forced the water onto us.”
Because the building lacks solid foundations, the water instead rises and drains through the tiles.
However, this means no conventional cleaning chemicals can be used to clean up as it would drain into the river.
Instead, the team uses brown vinegar followed by a visit from the sanitising team before the pub can reopen.
Mrs Wainwright-Scarrott said: “It’s a real conundrum.
“This place is very unique because it has no foundations so the water rises up through the tiles long before it ever breaks through the door.
“It is not like we can just put up a barrier to stop the water.
“The best thing we can do is just let it take its course.”
While Mrs Wainwright-Scarrott pointed out the pub had considered the use of pumps, she added that it would be unaffordable due to the price of electricity and any water that was pumped out would end up back in the pub anyway.
She added: “You’re just fighting a losing battle.”