During the cold spell at the end of November and beginning of December we went to the caravan for a few days. It turned out to be much colder than we thought!
There has been quite a change in the Herefordshire Oak in the course of a few weeks!
The Octopus Tree and
the Constable Tree
We woke up to frosty mornings.
One night there were reports that people were seeing the Northern Lights all over the UK so we popped outside for a look. Apart from a slight glow on the horizon which was probably something else we had no luck.
On the second morning we woke to find we had no running water and the kitchen waste pipe wasn't working! It had apparently been minus 8 the night before. We discovered we had two frozen pipes on the exterior of the caravan. Normally when we are not there we turn off water to the caravan and do a mini draindown but of course being there this had been reversed! The laundrette on site was thankfully open and we were able to get water for a cup of tea. At lunchtime there was no sign of the pipes unfreezing so B went into Leominster to buy a hairdryer to try and help them along. Fortunately that idea eventually worked and we had water and a working kitchen waste pipe again! B also added more lagging to the exterior pipes. It was a right pain as there were two events I was keen on attending - a Christmas Tree Festival at Bromyard Church and a display through Leominster of tractors decorated with a Christmas Theme and all lit up. After the palaver with the pipes I went off the idea of going - sadly David didn't come on this trip otherwise he may have jollied me along to make the effort!
While B was in Leominster this pheasant came to the door to say "hello"! and to cheer me up!
We will pay one more short visit in December mainly to winterise it properly! The site is closed in January and February.


Formed in 2009, the Archive Team (not to be confused with the archive.org Archive-It Team) is a rogue archivist collective dedicated to saving copies of rapidly dying or deleted websites for the sake of history and digital heritage. The group is 100% composed of volunteers and interested parties, and has expanded into a large amount of related projects for saving online and digital history.

