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Caravan Chronicles

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Caravan Chronicles

Category Archives: Weekend Break

Code Breaking and Cambridge…Pt 2

25 Thursday Apr 2013

Posted by Simon Barlow in General, Travelling in the UK, Trips, Weekend Break

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Cambridge, Caravan, Caravanning, Caravans, One Hairy Caravanner, Touring, Towing, travel, Travel Trailer, Travel Trailers

The second part of our weekend was to return to Cambridge. I think I mentioned in part one that the last time we were both there was back at the end of June 2009 the day before My fellow pilot Feroz and I set off on our round the world flight. I had flown the Bonanza into Cambridge airport and Sue had driven over so we had a couple of days together in Cambridge before I met up with Feroz and we flew to Austria for the start of the trip.

Sunday 21st April

Another sunny cloudless sky greeted us as the filter coffee machine was hissing into life. We didn’t have a planned departure time for Cambridge as it was only about 22 miles away and should only take 35 to 40 minutes to drive there. Continue reading →

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Code Breaking and Cambridge…Pt 1

24 Wednesday Apr 2013

Posted by Simon Barlow in General, Maintenance, Travelling in the UK, Trips, Weekend Break

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Bletchley Park, Cambridge, Caravan, Caravan Club, Caravanning, Caravans, Maintenance, Swift Group, Touring, Towing, travel, Travel Trailer, Travel Trailers

One of the places we had on out list of “must visit” was Bletchley Park, home of the wartime code breakers. The other was more of a re-visit as the last time we were both in Cambridge was the day before I set off on my round the world flight.

Friday 19th April

We had loaded up the caravan and by the time we pulled out of the storage compound it was dead on 8:20. The traffic was not too bad considering it was a Friday morning and the M60 was flowing quite well, as was the M56, and even the A556 Chester Road short cut to the M6 was quiet. It was so quiet that the on ramp to the M6 didn’t even have the traffic control lights operating. We were heading down to the Caravan Club’s  Ashridge Farm  site near Letchworth just off the A1(M). Continue reading →

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What a difference a year makes….

25 Monday Mar 2013

Posted by Simon Barlow in Blog updates, Travelling in the UK, Weekend Break

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Caravan, Caravanning, Caravans, Glastonbury, One Hairy Caravanner, The Old Oaks, Travel Trailer, Travel Trailers, Warwick Racecourse

This time last year – (well 27th to 30th March actually) we were at the Caravan Club’s recently opened site at Bridlington. The weather could not have been more different. The North Sea at Bridlington was as calm as a mill-pond and we sat outside at a pavement cafe on the sea front enjoying a morning coffee in the warm sun.

The sea was almost as still as a mill pond

The sea was almost as still as a mill pond

In fact the evening was so nice, my alter ego “One Hairy Caravanner” donned shorts and SPB_5D_096524sapron and deployed the Cadac to conjure up the evening meal. We had three fantastic days in Bridlington and enjoyed three days of great weather…. and as I look out of the office window now, it’s sunny, still blowing a hooley and the wind chill makes it feel like below zero out there. What a difference a year makes!

Looking forward to June, by chance (well Twitter actually), we came across a site in Glastonbury…. The Old Oaks –  http://www.theoldoaks.co.uk Some of the reviews it has received and the pictures posted ment it had to be worth a visit. So we have a few days there and maybe visit The Fleet Air Arm Museum and the East Somerset Railway. On the way back we call in at Warwick Racecourse site for a couple of days so we can visit Warwick Castle again and do a bit of shopping. Now where to go in April and May?

A little landmark passed today at around 12:30. The blog had it’s 55,246th viewer, which means that today, just under three months into the year it has had exactly half the number of visitors it had in the whole of last year. Many thanks to all who have visited, posted and tweeted about Caravan Chronicles.

Here’s hoping for a wonderful hot summer!

S

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Our first weather cancellation…

22 Friday Mar 2013

Posted by Simon Barlow in General, Travelling in the UK, Trips, Weekend Break

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

bowness on windermere, Camping & Caravanning Club, Caravan, Caravans, Touring, Travel Trailer, Travel Trailers

We were due to set off for 3 days at the Camping & Caravan Club’s Braithwaite Fold site at Bowness on Windermere this weekend, to meet up with some friends who would have been travelling across from North Yorkshire. However, the forecast is not too good. There is snow forecast, and winds possibly gusting 50+ MPH. Travelling from Manchester up to the Lake District towing a large caravan is not a good idea.

I rang the Camping & Caravan Club to cancel the booking, and was told that our only option was to move our booking to another date at Braithwaite Fold to save loosing the deposit. However, the only two weekends that we have free in the next three months, Braithwaite Fold was fully booked. So as a consequence we have lost our £25 deposit.

I would have thought that as the weather is causing chaos up and down the country at the moment, the powers at be in the Camping & Caravan Club would have opted to allow the deposit to be used on a booking at any site to hopefully ensure that people booked alternatives. For us, it has effectively increased the cost of 12 months membership by £25, and as Sue has just said to me, there is no point in booking sites that need a deposit when the weather is so unpredictable. I do have to agree with her.

We use the caravan all year round and up to now have never had to cancel a booking.

Ho Hum

S

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Back to the beginning…

27 Wednesday Feb 2013

Posted by Simon Barlow in General, Travelling in the UK, Trips, Uncategorized, Weekend Break

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Tags

Blue Planet Aquarium, Caravan, Caravanning, Lady Heyes, The York Roast Co, Towing, Travel Trailer, Travel Trailers

We have just returned from 4 days at Lady Heyes touring caravan park near Frodsham in Cheshire. For us, this is where our caravanning adventures began as it was the first site we went to with our shiny brand new van back in July 2011, which now seems so long ago. (You can read about it in “Our First Trip…”)

What had changed… well back then we had only towed the caravan from the dealers, so it was all a new learning curve. This time we had over 4700 miles of towing under our wheels… so still a learning curve but not quite as steep, and this time Lady Heyes had won an award… Caravan Talk Touring Park of the Year 2012.

We arrived at Lady Hayes just after 12 and checked in. On our first visit, we had been on pitch 5 and parked nose in, which put the EHU & water bollard on the ‘wrong’ side of the caravan, so this time I chose pitch 6 so that it would be on the ‘correct’ side… however when I asked if we could park ‘nose in’ I was told that due to fire regulations all vans now had to be reversed in to the pitches, so this would put the hook up bollard on the ‘wrong’ side again. Bugger. At least we had enough kit to be able to hook up to water and power if not drainage.

Pitched... heater and kettle on!

Pitched… heater and kettle on!

As we swung round to our pitch it started to snow… well that’s a first. We have set up in torrential rain and gales and everything in-between but never when it has been  snowing. Thankfully it was only a few flakes blowing about. Something I said back in my original post – “Our First Trip… was that the pitches seemed close and as it was the last weekend of the school holidays the site was full and a bit tight getting on the pitch… which meant that reversing on in one 90 degree turn was not possible and involved a shunt forward between two caravans opposite. Once on the pitch we were soon set up with the power and water on and the heating set on ‘blast furnace’ to get the caravan warmed up.

It didn’t take long for the caravan to warm up and the plastic vent insert I made a couple of weeks ago (A Little winter warmer…) made a big difference in the rear bathroom. Once up to temp, the blown air duct could be shut off and the heated towel rail kept the room at temperature.

Sunday 24th

Sunday morning there was a flurry of activity. We guessed that as it was the last day of half term so all the parents and grandparents would be packing up… and they were. By 11:00 the site was emptying fast.

Looking North East from out pitch.... the site was rapidly emptying as parents and grandparents headed back on the last day of half term.

Looking towards the North East from out pitch…. the site was rapidly emptying as parents and grandparents headed back on the last day of half term.

Sue and I had always wanted to visit the Blue Planet Aquarium… one of our favourite haunts in Boston (Mass) is the New England Aquarium where they have one of the worlds biggest ocean tanks. We wanted to walk through the clear tunnel under the tank at Blue Planet Aquarium after seeing it advertised somewhere and it didn’t disappoint. Watching the sharks glide a few inches over your head and swim past you at eye level was amazing. It was as close to being in the water with them as you can get without getting wet. We can both thoroughly recommend spending time wandering through the tunnel.

We spent a couple of hours in the aquarium which for the ticket price of £15.50 each (plus car parking) seems like a lot for the time we spent there. The hi-light for me however was being just in time to see the feeding of the otters. My affection with otters goes back several years to Combe Martin Wildlife park when an otter came up to the fence and laid on its back and seemed to thoroughly enjoy me tickling its tummy… I’m sure it was smiling. You haven’t lived until you have tickled an otters tummy!.  Visiting the aquarium was one of those things you have to do and I guess it dropped down the list as it was so close to home as we have in the past tried to visit attractions further afield.

After leaving the aquarium we headed across to the outlet village and decided on a leisurely late lunch at Frankie & Benny’s followed by the 20 minute drive on the back roads across country back to the caravan park. By the time we returned, the site was almost deserted except for a big A Class american outfit and two other occupied caravans…. and of course all the seasonal vans that were deserted dotted around the perimeter.

As a footnote to our visit to the Blue Planet Aquarium, while part way through the clear tunnel there is an area that has other smaller tanks. Here there is a large display telling you that the perspex for the tunnel was made in Germany and it was then sent all the way to New Zealand to be bent before being shipped back to the UK to be assembled in to the tunnel which you have just walked through. Now is it me or does that seem at odds with the whole idea of the aquarium promoting sea life and conservation that the material for the tunnel traveled half way round the world and back…. just how big is that carbon footprint?

Monday 25th

As the schools were now back in session we decided to drive into Chester. Parking in the multistory car park on Pepper Street (opposite Newgate St) put us right in the centre of the town. The wind had a cutting edge to it and despite being wrapped up it was cold. We wandered through one of the shopping malls and ended up on Eastgate St. We wandered down Eastgate and Watergate St doing a bit of window shopping and calling in at an ATM to top up the funds. By now the cold had got to me and we started looking round for somewhere to have lunch and to get out of the wind. Walking across the end of Bridge St came a wondrous smell of roasting….

The menu from The York Roast Co

The menu from The York Roast Co

We followed the smell and stood outside the The York Roast Co. Peering through the window, the small seating area was full and the queue was out the door so we walked further down Bridge St looking for alternatives. However… the smell of all the roasts got to us and we soon turned round and set off back.

The seating area in the shop had emptied a little and the queue at the counter was shorter. We entered the shop and joined the queue. I ordered a “beastly” Slow Roast Leg of English Pork & Crispy Crackling sandwich with stuffing and Sue opted for a “Beastly” Top Side of Beef…. with a portion of crispy roast potatoes to share and two latte’s. It’s not cheap… our order came to just over £19… the prices on the printed menu are for take out, so be warned. We took our order and descended further into the cafe’s small seating area.

The sandwiches were good although not hot as we had both expected and maybe a little light on the filling for the price! Sue thought that the beef looked a little dry when she watched the chap carve off some slices for her sandwich but that was not the case. All the time we were sat there was a constant flow of customers for the take out service and maybe then it becomes reasonable value. If you find your self in Chester and you want to give it a try go for the take out option and find somewhere to sit outside to get best value for money. There are a few mixed reviews here on Trip Advisor and here on QYPE

Sue just checking the menu to see if she missed anything!

Sue just checking the menu to see if she missed anything!

We started our wander back to the car, through the indoor market and back through one of the shopping malls. We walked back to the car park. I put the ticket in the machine… “Please Contact The Cashier” flashed up on the small screen. We wandered round looking for the cashiers office. There were no signs pointing the way and after exploring three floors of the car park we headed back to the car to drive down to the exit. Some inconsiderate numpty had parked so close I could only just manage to get back into the car. We drove down the ramp to the exit and there it was.. the cashiers office. There was a space to pull in off the ramp.
“Ah…” he said “We have had a few of these today”
That did not help me much.”
“One of the ticket machines has been dating the ticket’s 1970 so they have been rejected as the parking fee would be thousands of pounds“

I paid him our parking fee and he opened the barrier for us. We turned on the sat nav and punched in the campsite and headed off back out of Chester. It was nice to return to our toasty warm caravan.

Tuesday morning soon arrived and we set about our packing up ritual once again. By 12:00 we were back home. Another three nights away in the caravan to add to our tally. Never mind… only 10 days before we set off again for more adventures.

While away we had an issue with our water pump, so in the next post I’ll update you on that and let you know how my recent light modifications fared.

S

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A Big Birthday and A Christmas Market

15 Saturday Dec 2012

Posted by Simon Barlow in Christmas Markets, Events, General, Travelling in the UK, Trips, Weekend Break

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Tags

Camping & Caravanning Club, Caravan, Caravanning, Caravans, Damon's, Freelander, Lincoln Christmas Market, Thorpe Park Lodges, Touring, Towing, travel, Travel Trailers

This was to be a bit of a celebration weekend. It was Sue’s big birthday on the Saturday, two projects I have been working on were coming to a finish and we were going to meet up with some friends Pete and Julie, who we hadn’t seen for over a year…. in fact since we went to Barnard Castle Camping and Caravanning Club’s site back in August 2011. Mind you it wasn’t a certainty we would see them this time…. they live in a small valley on the North Yorkshire Moors and it was looking like they might be snowed in.

Last year we had wanted to go to Lincoln’s Christmas Market but Sue had to work the weekend that the Lincoln market was on so we had to change date and location to Wrexham (see my post Wrexham Christmas Market). This year it fitted in nicely with Sue’s birthday. Back in September I had booked a site that was only five or six miles outside Lincoln at Thorpe-on-the-Hill just off the A46. Thorpe Park Lodges is a C & CC CL which only started a couple of years ago but from their website looked really nice. As you can probably guess from the name is mainly lodges but does have a number of pitches for caravans and motor homes.

Ant and his DR107

Ant and his DR107

The first project I had been working on ground to a halt. I had been building a new ‘Santa’s Sleigh’ on a trailer for my local Rotary club and what should have been a simple task of obtaining 12 volt LED rope light proved a challenge. 12 volt is available in the USA, but not it seems in the UK. After two weeks of trying, I decided to run the old lights from the previous float via a couple of small inverters. Come spring when I have a bit more time I will be ordering 12 volt rope light from the USA. The second project is an aerobatic airplane. A close friend has been building a DR107 aerobatic aircraft and for my sins I designed and built the electrical system for the aircraft. After a bit of an issue with the new engine which required its removal and return to the engine builder, we had reinstalled it and were waiting for the guy who built it to come up to the airfield to do the final checks so we could start it. Unfortunately I was waiting for stuff to arrive for the float so wasn’t there for the start…. which went well. I was due to go with Anthony the following day to set up some of the electronics now the engine was running but had to put it off till after the weekend due to a delay in getting bits for the float. Ant decided to go and was on his way to Sleap airfield to do some finishing work on the aircraft and unfortunately hit black ice. He managed to reduce his car to a mangled pile of scrap and in the process  broke both legs, crushed a couple of vertebrae and broke an arm. It took about an hour to cut him out and as a bonus he got a free flight in the air ambulance. Considering he’s a captain for Easy Jet it must have been hard not to say “cabin doors to manual” when they landed at Stoke Hospital. He was in intensive care for several days but the day before we were due to set off for Lincoln I went down to see him in hospital. I have to thank his girlfriend and family at this point as I kind of jumped the queue a bit as some of his family had not been able to see him yet.

Friday 7th December arrived and we loaded up the Freelander with our boxes. It was only a short run to the caravan storage place and by 11:10 we were hitched up and on our way. Normally our route to Lincoln from Manchester would be over the top, either Woodhead or the Snake Pass. Both were closed due to snow, so to head south-east we had to set off north up the M60 to join the M62 and turn east to head over to Pontefract and pick up the A1M southbound. At least the Freelander was behaving its self running on UK diesel after our problems with the French stuff, although we are still looking for a LR Discovery as the primary tow vehicle now.

The M62 had its usual Friday crawl through the road works but once through that it was a fairly clear run south on the A1 to just north of Newark-on-Trent where we picked up the A49 into Lincoln. We pulled into Thorpe Park Lodges entrance bang on 2:00PM. The barrier is controlled by a key less system so I left Sue in the Freelander and wandered in to find reception… which was still in the final stages of being built. A helpful young chap who was just finishing off some of the exterior trim work on the building greeted me and he walked back with me to open the barrier. He told us we could park on any of the vacant pitches and said they would be full for the weekend. We followed the little track round past a motor home, then past another mahoosive motor home based on a lorry chassis, past another and finally on to pitch 8 which had a view through the trees of the fishing lake… mind you they all had views of the fishing lake!SPB_5D_097223

We unhitched and with the help of the chap who let us in swung the van round and pulled it forward ‘nose in’ to the pitch so we had a perfect view of the lake. We soon had the steadies down and the heater on. Between each pair of pitches is the EHU bollard and next to it there is a fresh water tap so no long walks towing the aquaroll were required. It would not take much to upgrade each tap to allow a super pitch type water supply to each caravan or motor home. I didn’t even have to turn the Status TV aerial to get all the lights on the signal strength meter lit, I have never seen them all on before!

Saturday 8th December

A view of our caravan through the trees

A view of our caravan through the trees

It was Sue’s birthday and she opened all the cards we had brought with us. We had arranged to meet up with Pete and Julie in Lincoln at 12:00. They were staying on a site  at Sturton near RAF Scampton. They had not been able to book into Thorpe Park Lodges as it was full when they tried to book!

Earlier that morning I had been chatting to our neighbours who were in a rather nice motor home next to us. They were from the north east and had also travelled down for the Christmas market. They had tried to book a taxi earlier to take them into Lincoln but had been told that it was not advisable to take a dog as it was already very busy…. I’d looked at the park and ride for the market and found it only operated from Lincoln show ground which was about 12 miles away to the north and cost a whopping £15. A taxi seemed like a good idea. We rang the number our neighbours had given us and ordered a taxi. The girl on the other end of the phone told me it would be 11:45 before it could pick us up as they were busy. I said we would wait at the entrance to the site.

By 12:10 Pete was on the phone to Sue asking where we were…. just as the taxi arrived. We agreed to meet them in front of the cathedral…. and asked the taxi driver to drop us close to the cathedral. We followed the A46 bypass around Lincoln and as we crossed a roundabout half joking I said to Sue “Look there’s a Frankie and Bennies, if it all goes pear shape and we can’t find somewhere in Lincoln for your birthday we can go there” The taxi driver overheard us and as we approached the next roundabout he said “If you like ribs, Damon’s is the best place to go”. The taxi driver dropped us off as near to the cathedral as he could. We wandered down the street and rang Pete & Julie to tell them that we would be there in a few minutes.

This is where it started to go pear-shaped. In its effort to cram as many stalls in as possible Lincoln council had to instigate a one way system and at first it was not too bad, but by the time we had entered the market we were down to a shuffle wedged in between hundreds of others shuffling in the same direction. We reached the first corner and knew that Pete and Julie were just the other side of a temporary barrier across the street. The ever efficient council support staff took a break from their texting to tell us that it was a one way system and we had to go round… we set off again shuffling along past some stalls which we couldn’t get near as the shuffling masses pressed on relentlessly. We approached the cathedral gardens and there was a gate staffed by more council support staff…. some texting but most leaning on the barrier. I asked if we could go through round the front of the cathedral… sorry this is for disabled only you have to follow the one way system. It took us 35 minutes of mindless shuffling like something out of a bad 1950’s Russian propaganda film to complete three sides of the cathedral. Lincoln Christmas Market had succeeded in removing any Christmas spirit from us and hundreds of other people. To make matters worse an Orwellian dismembered voice kept announcing over the tannoy that there was a one way system in operation for our convenience….

We finally met up with Pete and Julie and Sue managed to grab a cup of mulled wine as we shuffled past a mulled wine stall relentlessly on towards the castle. Once inside the castle grounds this is where in my opinion it became dangerous. We got to a point where the route turned and became narrower. The shuffling stopped and we were penned in. I turned and looked back and saw they were still allowing people in to the castle grounds and the exit was blocked. We stood for about 5 minutes not moving, then we shuffled forward a couple of feet and stood again for another five minutes. Behind us they were still letting people in. Small children were now being lifted up and put on the shoulders of parents and I could not have lifted my arms up. Some pwople were obviously getting a bit panicky and a few of the stall holders were now letting people ‘escape’ the mass and stand at the back of the stalls. It took 40 minutes to  reach the castle gateway, I guess a distance of maybe 100 metres and cross over the small bridge. That was it, we like hundreds of others were looking for a way out. We had all had enough.

We eventually made our way out and found ourselves at the top of The Steep Hill. Sue and I had a number of years ago visited Browns Pie Shop and I thought that this might be somewhere for a spot of late lunch as there was no chance of getting anything in the Christmas market. However the council support staff struck again. In site of Browns Pie Shop we were told we had to follow the one way system… which meant going down a back street to the bottom of The Steep Hill and coming back up with the one way system. For feck’s sake. Sorry Browns Pie Shop, you lost some trade.

Earlier Pete and Julie had driven to the park and ride…. and after recovering from the shock of the £15 fee decided to drive in to Lincoln and chance parking…. which was not actually a problem as they found a pay and display car park right in the centre which was a lot cheaper. After trying to negotiate our way through the main street that was jammed with people shuffling towards the Steep Hill, and the entrance to Christmas Market Purgatory, we headed back to Pete and Julie’s car.

Damon's takeout menu

Damon’s takeout menu

We soon found ourselves heading out of Lincoln on the A46. In the car we were discussing what to do for Sue’s birthday as none of us wanted to go back into Lincoln and as luck would have it we were approaching the roundabout where Damon’s our taxi driver’s recommendation was. Julie or Sue said lets call in and see if there is a menu we can look at for tonight. Pete parked up and the girls disappeared inside. I stood next to Pete’s car and had a cigar. I’d not had a cigar since we were in French France.

The girls came out clutching a menu…. we all had a quick look and agreed this was the place. They had recommended booking as they were busy so the girls disappeared back inside and booked a table for the four of us at 6:45. Pete and Julie ran us back to our caravan so they could have a look round the site and have a quick coffee. THey then set off back to their caravan and we agreed to meet up in the bar at 6:30 for 6:45 at Damon’s

It’s funny the things that you do sometimes…. I decided that the kettle needed a sort out. Ever since France it had built up a huge amount of limescale. Luckily we had some white wine vinegar in the comestibles box and a quick boil with a 50/50 mix of white wine vinegar and water shifted most of it. A second boiling with a fresh mix cleared the rest and a third of just fresh water to remove any possible taste of vinegar. One of my next jobs will be to tackle the water heater and pipes in the caravan as we definitely have reduced flow.

We arrived early a Damon’s and sat at the bar for a while. It was announced our table was ready, but no Pete and Julie. We decided to sit at the table and wait as the bar was filling up quickly. While we sat waiting we perused the menu… 6:45 and no P & J. We were sat at a table for six on our own and this place was packed to the doors… the waiter came back, were we ready to order? Er…no we were still waiting for our friends. Sue rang Pete…. “Where are you?”. “Stood at the bar”. After much arm waiving and gesticulating Sue went off to collect them. I spotted on the back of the menu it said anyone with a birthday gets their meal for free. When Sue arrived back with P & J I asked one of the waitresses… all we needed was proof like a driving licence.  I asked her if she had her driving licence with her…. Sue had a firtle in the magic bag that is the hold-all of all handbags…. no she had left her purse back in the caravan. It’s just our luck!

Considering the place was packed to the rafters, the service was excellent and the food was great. The taxi driver was right, Damon’s was the best place to go for ribs… and steak for that matter. What started as a disaster of a day was made up for by our visit to Damon’s, and if you are in the Lincoln area we can recommend it… and if it’s your birthday take your driving licence!

Sunday 9th December

Not wanting to head back into Lincoln again, we had a quick look on the internet for anything else that was on. At the Lincoln Show Ground there was an antique market … sometimes these are just excuses for people to empty the contents of their loft onto an old pasting table. Pete had gone in search of LPG for their car and we agreed to ring them if the antique market was anything special. There were a few interesting stalls, but we didn’t spot anything that was worth raiding the piggy bank for. We rang P & J and arranged to meet them for a pub lunch. They were staying near Sturton-by-Stow so we headed out that direction and found two local pubs in the village. We chose The Plough Inn simply because there were more cars in the car park… logically thinking it was more popular. Sue tried to ring Pete to tell him… no signal… I managed to send a text through but as Pete was on a new phone and he only had Sue’s number he might ignore it. We went in and ordered drinks. We were perusing the large blackboard that was acting as the menu when the people leaving the table just in front of the blackboard commented and said they had just had a meal and it was wonderful. This was a good sign!

P & J finally arrived and we all ordered, I decided to go the whole hog and ordered the mixed grill…. well it was a very late ‘brunch’ really. The recommendation given to us earlier was not wrong, it was good home-made and honest food. After spending a lazy Sunday lunch in the pub, we headed off to P & J’s caravan. We had not seen their ‘new to them’ caravan. Their last one had sadly ‘died’ not long after the Barnard Castle adventure and they had spent a while looking for a new van. This one was a rather nice and well looked after 1998 Coachman Wanderer 16/5

It was getting late, I was all coffee’d out and the wine had run out about an hour earlier. It was time to leave P & J and head back to our caravan. We went back ‘cross country’ on some of the smaller roads which had been gritted not long before we drove over them. It was only about eight miles this way we missed out the A46 and traffic-cone city. We settled down in the van with our feet up to reflect on the weekend. With the exception of the Christmas market, maybe it had not been a bad weekend. We had a couple of nice meals with good friends and we had both been able to enjoy a drink or two in turn, although we didn’t drink any of the mulled wine we took with us!

Monday morning arrived all to soon and it was time to pack up and hitch up. The couple of motor homes that didn’t leave on Sunday also started packing up and by the time we were hitched up, there was us and our neighbours from the north-east left. We left at around 10:50 and at 13:20 we pulled into the storage place to drop off the van.

Would we visit Lincoln Christmas Market again?. Probably not, but we would most definitely stay again at Thorpe Park Lodges, but don’t tell anyone….. we don’t want it to get too busy there!

Merry Christmas

S & S

PS….. I’ll leave you with a few pictures from Thorpe Park Lodges site

The small bridge across to the fishing island

The small bridge across to the fishing island

Looking from the amenities block towards our caravan in the distance

Looking from the amenities block towards our caravan in the distance

One of the fishing pegs on the island

One of the fishing pegs on the island

Our caravan from across the lake

Our caravan from across the lake
The view from the right hand side of the van

The view from the right hand side of the van

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Lights over Lytham…

25 Tuesday Sep 2012

Posted by Simon Barlow in Travelling in the UK, Trips, Weekend Break

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Blackpool Illuminations, Caravanning, Caravans, Eastham Hall, Lytham, Meteor, One Hairy Caravanner, Towing, travel, Travel Trailers

The end to Sue’s two week break was a trip back to Eastham Hall so we could see Blackpool Illuminations on their 100th Anniversary. Sat in my office at home writing this, I can’t believe how lucky we were with the weather as the rain lashes down on the window and the wind is blowing the first soggy autumn leaves around the garden in big swirls. As Eastham Hall is only 60 miles from our storage site, there was no rush in loading up. As we had only come back from Winchcombe four days earlier, we knew the van was in stand-by mode and all we needed to do was replenish the food boxes and a wardrobe change.

Stopping at Rivington Services (M61 N) for a coffee. All 38 foot 6 inches of outfit fitted lengthwise…..

We set off from the compound just before 10:30. The bit of light rain we had first thing by now had dissipated and it was brightening up. We hadn’t been going that long really and my caffeine levels were severely depleted and that required a quick coffee shop stop.

It has been a few years since I’d been into Rivington Services (a loo stop on the way to work I think when I was at BAE Systems). Since the services had been made famous by Peter Kay a few years back for his “That Peter Kay Thing” TV series, they have gone through a bit of a transformation… well less a transformation and more a “that’s crap, knock it down and start again” upgrade. At least this time someone at the planning stage had said “what about caravans?” Continue reading →

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“Pardon Me Boy, Is That The Cheltenham Choo Choo?”

19 Wednesday Sep 2012

Posted by Simon Barlow in General, Travelling in the UK, Trips, Weekend Break

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Caravanning, Cheltenham, Freelander, Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway, One Hairy Caravanner, Touring, Towing, travel, Travel Trailer, Travel Trailers, Winchcombe

Part two of our “Camping with Wolves” aventure saw us leaving a sunny Combe Martin on the Thursday morning for the 150 mile drive north to Winchcombe C & CC site near Tewkesbury for 3 nights.

Being a Thursday, there was more chance of getting caught up in a traffic snarl-up with delivery vans along Combe Martin’s narrow main street. I think Mr Clarkson must have been having a late breakfast this morning though as we sailed through and onwards towards the Atlantic Highway. The sun was shining as we left and it was forecast to be sunny for the next couple of days which ment I would probably have another chance at incinerating something outdoors with the Cadac. Woo Hoo!

The M5 seemed full of caravans and motor-homes – all heading south. Lots of them, I mean mahoosive amounts of them, so what did they know that we didn’t? Had there been an apocalypse “up north” somewhere and they were fleeing for their lives? I think Devon and Cornwall would be full by around tea time at this rate. Continue reading →

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Camping with Wolves…

18 Tuesday Sep 2012

Posted by Simon Barlow in General, Travelling in the UK, Trips, Weekend Break

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Caravanning, Caravans, Combe Martin, Newberry Valley, North Devon, One Hairy Caravanner, Touring, Towing, travel, Travel Trailer, Travel Trailers, vacation

We had the chance of getting away in September for a longer break than usual so we planned to do a trip with a couple of stops. The first would be down to Combe Martin in North Devon and then on the way back to Winchcombe near Tewksbury.

Combe Martin is not as famous as some destinations in North Devon and often misses out, but as a base for exploring that part of North Devon it’s ideal. The reason we chose it was two fold. From our base in Manchester, it would give us an idea of what a “300 mile in one go” tow was like in preparation for travelling to and through France in October and secondly, it was a place I spent a lot of my teenage years on holiday with my parents and it was one of the first places Sue & I went on holiday when we were first married. Continue reading →

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  1. Dave Hart's avatar
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    brilliant and so well explained! Thank you, love your work!!

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    Please look at my very last post on the blog

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    martin here caravan lights worked fine for two stop overs I had then hooking up again for my third trip…

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    I’m so sorry. My sincerest sympathies go to you and your wife Sue. Your ideas and advice have been so…

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