A Week on the Estate: Winter Approaches, COP26 & Cromwell’s Christmas
The clocks went back last weekend and the temperatures fell away as winter approaches. The Estate withstood strong winds and bouts of heavy rain with a temperature range of 2C to 9C on the coldest day. For those hardy souls working out on the land this week, the combination of low ambient temperature with rain and windchill certainly felt like winter.
Autumnal gales always take their toll on some of our mature trees. Two trees fell in Lime Tree Avenue and another in the parkland near Ormsby Ring which just missed crushing the new horse trough. A few seasonal casualties are to be expected and some of the windfall will help fuel the Hall’s biomass boiler. Our efforts to plant new trees and hedgerows will more than make good the losses to weather.
As we prepare to meet the commercial demands of the festive season – and the day-to-day challenges of managing a rural estate through the coldest, darkest months – we’ll be talking to some of the Estate’s key players. Between now and Christmas, we’ll be sharing some fascinating insights into life at the Hall, at the Massingberd-Mundy Distillery, at The Old School Tea & Coffee Shop and out on the land as winter starts to bite.
In the meantime, we’ve published a whistle-stop tour of four centuries of Christmases at South Ormsby Estate. From the banning of Christmas cheer during the 17th-century Puritan Revolution to Victoria, Dickens, wartime rationing and Christmas tea parties with the Squire, it’s a fascinating story and you can read it all HERE.