Thursday, 16 July 2026

Grimsthorpe Speed Trials


My lovely Girlfriend & I visited Grimsthorpe Speed Trials again this year, it was a good day out, the point is to run some slow old cars along the drive of a country house against the clock. No sorry, the point is to have a day out in the countryside - the excuse is to run some slow old cars along the drive of a country house against the clock.

There were some fabulous '30s & earlier cars, some immaculate, some looking like they'd just left the barn they were put in in 1939 & some built for occasions such as this out of an eclectic mix of parts from the early days of motoring.

There were also bikes, INCREDIBLY NOISY bikes, others were two stokes belching smoke. I didn't like the bikes.


There were also a few proper racers, two Bugatis, an ERA which is a new-build & a couple of MGs, one with an early IRS. The two originals were being treated nicely, but the new-build ERA was getting some beans, smoking off the line each time.

The other cars mostly pootled up the track, I dare say they were going as fast as they would, but many of them weren't build for speed.


Here's a case in point. It's actually an AC, as in AC Cobra, it has the logo on the foot plates & everything. There didn't appear to be much in the way of brakes. 

This Austin Seven special looked fantastic & sounded amazing, revving like a modern motorcycle. the aluminium panelling was a work of art.




Then there was this - it's a Ford model A with all the bits you don't need taken off.

Of course some people's idea of what you need is different to others


But the model A seemed almost luxurious next to this 1909 Daraq - or a least parts of one. Everything was drilled for lightness, the chassis, the tank straps, the pedals.

It was quite brilliant & on it's first public outing, the chap said it was good up to "a certain speed" & then the 1 litre, single cylinder engine hit the car's resonant frequency & it all leapt up & down a bit.


There were original sporting cars from Riley & singer, all absolutely beautiful

And this ratty Bugatti was there, there were two actually, neither in "showroom condition" but both looking spectacular.




What Else Have I Been Doing?

The road trip was in May, it's taken me until July to sort through all the video footage & post them up, so what else has been happening in the blattersphere?

Well my lovely girlfriend & I had a very good week's holiday in Norfolk. Perhaps not your first though for a holiday destination, but we rented a small cottagey thing & packed the week full of interesting places.


On the way we called into Old Buckenden Airfield where there is a memorial / museum to the USAAF aircrew who operated B24 Liberators from there in WWII, by co-incidence they had a Piper Cup owner's club meet on, so that was good.


On the second day we went to the Norfolk & Suffolk Aviation Museum, it's small, but like a lot of small museums it packed in a lot of things & some quite unexpected interesting things too. This for example is the front end of a Boulton Paul Overstrand - the RAF's first bomber with an enclosed cockpit & turrets, they only made enough for one squadron because it was one of the last biplanes & the times they were a changing.


Also, this >

That's a Merlin engine from a crashed aircraft, you're looking at the bottom of the engine as it lies on it's side. The bent thing at the bottom is the crankshaft, the first piston is still in it's bore liner (squashed flat) at the top.

As a bonus they had a small car show in the grounds that day.

The day after that was a trip to Banham Zoo, so I won't trouble you with that - it was a very nice zoo, but not the sort of thing I write about here - no engines.

Tuesday was Bressingham Gardens & Steam Museum, obviously the gardens fall into the same category as the zoo, though they were very nice even for a non-gardener like me. But the steam side of it was good, as we arrived there were a couple of volunteers tending to a traction engine, so we took photos & asked questions, then wandered into the sheds where there were engines undergoing maintenance.

In the second shed though were lots of engines & the closest one made my girlfriend stop dead & say "no, that can't be", but it was - a big old main line engine called "Black Prince" & one of her favourites was not only there, but with a ladder so visitors could get up onto the foot plate - which we did.

Next was another shed with the high street of Warmington-on-Sea from Dad's Army with several of the original vehicles parked up including Jones' butchers van. once again we arrived as it opened & left just after it closed.

Wednesday & the Forncett industrial Steam Museum, we arrived & a guy said "I'm doing a tour in ten minutes, would you like to be on it?" silly question! so we were guided round the museum's fifteen or so beautiful old steam engines which they do steam up once a month, but on this trip we couldn't fit a steaming day in. All the engines run & all are maintained in fantastic condition - in a shed, up a country lane, in a hamlet that no-ones heard of, in deepest Norfolk.

The guy that started it was given an old engine in his teens & it took over his life & his garden. He has one of the engines that raised Tower Bridge & an engine that pumped water to the homes in Dover, so they have had to be dismantled, lifted out of their setting, moved to Norfolk, new settings made, the engines fitted, re-built & restored & then a building built around them! A mammoth operation for a tiny group of volunteers, the pumping engine is three storeys tall!

The astonishing thing about them is the details, they were just products build to do a job, but every little detail is beautifully finished, all the castings are superb, all the engraved brass plates are perfect, the rods & linkages are all pieces of art in their own right, A couple of the engines had flywheels 12ft in diameter, sand cast in two pieces, so you make a wooden 1/2 wheel, bury it in casting sand, remove the wood & pour molten iron in. BUT - you have to allow for thermal contraction as the iron cools, so the wooden master has to be bigger than the finished part,

there can't be any cracks as it cools, so all the shapes need to blend smoothly & the two 1/2 wheels have to match perfectly AND  - you have to calculate all that correctly with a slide rule.

We NEED to go back & see this all in steam, there are videos on the web site. But the most amazing part of this whole wonderful thing? It's FREE to get in! They do ask for donations, but there is no entry fee.

Thursday was going to be a rest day, but instead we went to the East Anglia Transport Museum where they have trams, trolley busses & a narrow gauge train to ride on as well as a few sheds full of exhibits. The site is really nicely laid out like a cobbled high street with the trams & trolley bus rumbling around, taking people for rides. A lot of the trams were beautiful, proper art deco both inside & out, so we had another full gates open to gates close sort of day.

But the Friday was the reason we were here at all, my present to my girlfriend at Christmas had been a tank driving experience at the Norfolk Tank Museum.

There are many "tank driving" experiences, a lot are combined with some other armyish activity like "an SAS patrol" or car crushing, but this one appealed because it was held on days when the museum was closed, giving "behind the scenes" access which I knew my girlfriend would like because of the photo opportunities. We were due to arrive at 2:00 & it was supposed to last about two hours, so we went to a local airfield & had a cooked breakfast watching the aeroplanes, they also were having a car show & fly in later so we thought we'd call in on the way home.


On arrival the owner said "we have to move the WWI tank to the bottom field, would you like a ride?" Oh yes we would! It's a replica & the story of it's making can be seen in a Channel 4 programme called "Guy Martin's WWI Tank".

Having clambered in through the hatches you can just see are open in the tank side, we sat on a "shelf" beside the two Lewis guns (this is a "female" tank, so has machine guns), there were five other people in there, two at the front driving, two at the back working the gears & another "gunner" opposite us on the other side of the engine - which started with an absolute cacophony, it's just in a steel box inside a bigger steel box, so the noise & heat are incredible - then the drivers start SHOUTING which gear they want back to the gearsmen & the fumes are making our eyes water & I realised it was pretty hellish for the tank crews even before people started shooting! So we set off, at one point one of the Lewis guns swung round & hit my girlfriend on the head, she didn't mind - being hit by a Lewis gun in a WWI tank is a privilege.

The man then told us the history of the tank & showed us round the museum, climbing up on the tanks to see inside, then he took us round the armoury, telling us the story of the guns & letting us handle them. My girlfriend said "that's a Martini-Henry rifle, "Zulu" is one of my favourite films" the man took it down, handed it to her & said "We've researched the serial number of this gun - we believe it was used at Rork's Drift". 

After that it was on to the driving, starting with a Haaglund BV206.

There was a demonstration lap when the man said interesting things, like "it has a 2.8 Cologne V6 like in a Capri" & "it's amphibious, I've driven it across a pond" Then it was my girlfriend's turn, it took some getting used to, but she was very good (if a little shreiky) & she did actually drive it over several humps like the picture. one second the windscreen was entirely full of sky, the next it was completely full of tracked mud, brilliant.

Then we moved on to the point of the exercise, driving the tank (actually a Saladin 6x6 armoured car) as other museum people drove Chieftain tanks around us. But there was a problem. 

Having gamely clambered up onto the rear deck, further up onto the turret, then got in through a hatch & slithered down into the driver's seat, she found she could either reach the pedals or see out through that hole in the front, but not both at the same time. various things were tried to no avail, so in the end I drove it which was good, but not what I'd wanted. Fortunately the rest of the day was sufficiently "EPIC" & she was quite happy standing in the turret being driven around. By the time we left it was 7:30 & far too late to call in at the aerodrome, especially as we'd had no lunch, as we were expecting to be home by 5:00.

And so it was the final day, but we wouldn't just be going home, oh no! we were extracting the absolute maximum juice from our little holiday by calling in for a tour of Historic Team Lotus Racing" at Hethel. 

This started with a chat from a long standing employee, who then too us round the workshops, telling stories & the history of the cars as we passed them, the upstairs is a "museum" with complete cars, some owned by Lotus, some not.





After that we went home.

It was brilliant, when I'd done the planning, I started with the tank museum & then looked at what else was interesting in the same area, when we booked the cottage, it was almost as expensive to book a few days as it was a week, so we looked for more things to do & we found REALLY interesting things, very close by. The tank, industrial steam, zoo & gardens were all less than 15 miles. But the thing that amazed me was that those things all started because a chap had a house with some land & a hobby which grew into an obsession, which became a museum / attraction.

What a brilliant week.

Monday, 13 July 2026

RogueRunners '23 - Day 10

 

The last day, we set out from out mid way hotel on minor roads, not good driving roads, but I'd had a plan in mind.

But first - some time ago I fitted titanium skid plates to the rear trailing arms as they are not far from the road surface & today I was glad I did, the edge of the tarmac moved away from the verge & a rear wheel dropped off the edge. There was a graunching noise & I steered back. On arrival at the next stop Brian said "there was quite a shower of sparks under you car at one point", when I looked at the video - WOW, yes, a shower of sparks eight feet behind the car!

After an hour or so we rolled into a "viewpoint layby" (really just a muddy bit at the side of the road) to see "On Freedom's Wings", a 1:1 scale sculpture of an Avro Lancaster that operated & crashed locally. It's made of mild steel & has lots of holes in it, but it's still 10 times the weight of an actual Lancaster. The site wasn't open, but it was visible in the distance from the layby.
Then we kind of split up, with three going on to the coffee stop & the other two heading home.

So after some more not too interesting driving we reached the final waypoint, the very good Moor Farm farm shop & café near Peterborough. we had coffee & cake, then Brian departed, but as he was doing so a young waitress was clearing our table & said "Oh wow - whose are those cars?" "umm - ours" we said, it turned out she was a big F1 & interesting cars in general fan, so it was with some effort that I managed to drag my girlfriend away from this kindred spirit.


So that was RR26 all done & dusted. The weather could've been kinder, but it wasn't too bad, the driving was excellent & the company as ever made it an absolute joy!


Day 10 video

PLANNING FOR RR27 HAS BEGUN!

RogueRunners 26 Day 9 - Heading South

 

Time to leave EkkyFekky, so we said our goodbyes to the Ecclefechan Hotel & also to Steve who was heading home northwards & then we set off. We kept it simple by just using the A74 / M6 for a few miles, it’s a long route & we needed to get some distance done. 

We crossed the border at the River Sark & on the outskirts of Carlisle we took the A689 east & an early cake stop at “The Nook” where it was warm enough to sit outside. Linda parked alone in the middle of the car park & was almost completely surrounded by motorcycles by the time we left.

Then we went up onto the moors & some spectacular scenic & traffic free driving, we were passed by the same two bikers that held us up on a very rainy day on the Lead Hills road, they wanted to go slow because the hail was hitting them, but I wanted to go faster so it went over the top, I'm pretty sure it was the same two, how many EXTREMELY loud Harleys with whitewall tyres are there?




Then we dropped down for a visit to Brough Ice Cream Parlour, where I took the time to wander around the castle ruins which are good, it has some proper history & I've paid £10 to walk around less impressive, less complete castles.

Back on the road, we went south on the A685 & then turned onto another moorland road. When I planned the route, I liked the idea of cutting the corner along “Popping Lane”, but streetview showed the middle to have a luxuriant crop of grass, so I decided against it. So instead we went the long way round, heading for the Tan Hill Inn past the hamlets of Whaw & Booze. At one stage there was a puppy running enthusiastically down the middle of the road which we managed to avoid. Again, spectacular unimpeded driving, but we eventually came up behind a group of two cars a LandRover & a van travelling quite slowly "ah" I thought "game over", but no sooner had we caught them up than we arrived at the Tan Hill Inn, the cars went right & the other two stopped at the pub. Result!

Next stop was the Brymor Ice Cream farm, it’s only 40 miles from Brough, so I wondered if we might not want to stop, then realised I was being ridiculous.

There was  more moorland to cross after that, this time with sheep liking the tarmac oblivious to any traffic that needed to get past.

After that the roads got slowly busier & we took to the motorway, eventually we ended up on the A1 until we turned off & spent the night in the Fox & Hounds near Gainsborough.



Part one video


Part two Video



Sunday, 5 July 2026

RogueRunners '26 - Day 8, Almost Selkirk

 

Day 8 dawned blight & clear - I'll say that again louder - DAY 8 DAWNED BRIGHT & CLEAR.

It was dry & sunny as we prepped the cars, Adrian of the hotel wanted to film us all leaving, so Steve lead us out & off past Carlyle’s monument & on towards the A75. This was a bit of a drudge, but soon we were in the hills, where it was cloudy & cold. After a while we stopped in Thornhill at Jinny’s Tea Room in the middle of the high street which required a little jostling for parking spaces.

Getting away was also difficult as we were all facing different directions, after that there were more excellent roads including the one past Meggit & Tala reservoirs, the road we call "The Devil Sheep Road" because there used to be a herd of very curly-horned sheep which stood in the road & only moved when they felt like it.


 It's not a fast road by any means, but it is beautiful & a challenging drive

That was followed by cake in “The Glen” café recently re-opened & it was good to see it busy. Usually we park up in the car park, but today we stopped across the frontage for a photo – except for Richard, who drove past.

After that it was mile after mile of excellent roads, a few with poor surfaces for short periods, but not too bad. Next  we went along the valley of Yarrow Water, through Yarrow Feus, Yarrow & Yarrow Ford, past business called Yarrow Fishery & Yarrow Dogs (bit of a theme here). When we’d had enough yarrow, we took the B7039 south to Etterick Water & passing through Etterick Bridge & past the Cross Keys Inn (“the badger pub” of previous tours).

After more fantastic roads epic scenery & a 1930s Bentley blatt, we re-fuelled at Lockerbie & we went back to the hotel.

Epic day.


Video Part 1


Video Part 2


Tuesday, 30 June 2026

RogueRunners '26 - Day 7, The West Coast

A run out to Girvan was in prospect today, to begin with the hoods were definitely up & my screen took an age to de-mist, but de-mist it eventually did & we set off. We had some SatNav strangeness. As we left different people's ones were showing 220, 235 & 245 miles to the finish - the actual planned mileage was 196! However a closed road just after Sanquhar was probably the root cause, we did some on-the-fly amendments & headed back the way we'd come through all the road works.

At about this point Linda's wipers gave up, so at each stop there was a certain amount of flapping at the screen with a yellow duster, leading to comments about Morris dancing.

The route was good until we found a REALLY bad logging road, with craters, debris & even a log to be avoided. After a couple of miles it got a surface on it & became wonderfully swoopy.


Then the closed road that had shown up on the SatNavs, by this time we were in two groups but met up again at The Buck tea rooms, visited for the second day running.

It threatened rain all day, but after the initial showers, it never got worse than a dramatic mist on the hills. 



Day 7 Video


Monday, 22 June 2026

RogueRunners '26 - Day 6

We left Ecclefechan with the usual confusion over direction & took the B road parallel to the motorway, it used to be the main road, so it's wide & smooth & there's nothing on it. We crossed over the Water of Milk (it's a river) & passed through three close packed villages called Newton, Whamphray & Newton Whamphray, up ahead it was looking like rain might spoil the day. As we turned south through Elvanfoot, it started to rain, but it was pretty much confined to the high ground - pity this route was mostly on high ground.

We had a fuel stop at Sanquar where I found the two main cameras hadn't been working, fortunately the two auxiliary ones were fine so I have some video to work with. 

I got the rear one going, but on Day 5 I'd managed to set the front camera to slow motion, so I have about ten hours of v e r y  s l o w footage. 


We called into Straiton & the excellent “The Buck” tearoom run by the people that used to run the Carsphairn tearoom for the second day running. After our refreshment we took small roads to Newton Stewart for another re-fuel before taking bigger roads to Drummuir Farm ice cream parlour. Then another fill up in Annan & back to Ecclefechan where we found that Steve had arrived.