This is where my immersion really comes in - drive home plug it in and walk indoors. Even less money well spent (about three grand less) if you ask me.
It's great isn't it Dave?
-4 this morning at 8 am; got to my first job in glorious sunshine at exactly 9 am and -3 degrees on the thermometer. Hand wiped the front door. Back door and step in direct sunlight so wfp'd it. Got to my second job at 9.20; temperature now -2 degrees, hand wiped front door and side panel, did the rest wfp.
3rd job started at 9.50 - no doors to worry about and now zero degrees.
4th job started at 10.05 got given a cuppa tea and a freshly baked "pain au chocolat". Yum. Temp 1 degree.
5th job - front only in direct sunlight.
6th job - used my small broom at back doorstep to sweep laying water to drain.
7th job - including lean-to conny roof which was in the shade and frost covered. Warm water soon melted it and it stayed dry. Temp up to 3 degrees. Church clock chimed 12 as I was finishing. Swept water in front of conny doors to drain and put a note through to say be careful on path at back of house as it might be frozen this evening.
8th - 12th job - van in one position - some parts of jobs in direct sunlight - others in deep shade. Doors in shade I used scrim or squeegee. Used broom to sweep lying water away from paths.
1.15 - 1.30 Stopped for packed lunch.
13th job temp 4 degrees - scrimmed door in shade.
Last job - a which is owned by a railway fanatic - home made level crossing gates for entrance way - signals in the garden - mini garden railway - shed like a waiting room - enamel signs. Love it. But to do the backs you have to go through a farmer's field sometimes with cows in it so it entails pulling hose over a five bar gate and across about 25 yards of frost covered grass (fortunately the cows were out and the cow pats were frozen solid) and the warm water stopped the hose freezing especially as I use pole hose for the first 30 yards of my reel.
So finished at 2.50, went and got my daughter from school and went home.
Immersion is plugged in ready to go for tomorrow.