Wendy, which 'Big Blow' was that? There have been a few over the years, frequently while we've been on holiday!
I was on a campsite near Penzance during the Aug 13, 1979 Fastnet Gale (the one that killed 15 sailors & 3 rescuers) with my parents & brother.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1979_Fastnet_race
That was a heck of a storm. The family was in a caravan and awning on a pretty open site, but when we arrived the week before & knowing it was Cornwall, my dad placed the caravan to the NW of the awning and chose the most sheltered spot on site, near a couple of big gorse bushes and a higher section of dry stone wall. As the storm increased, my dad lashed the caravan down and placed the van upwind of the caravan, moving it as the wind changed. Throughout the night, all four of us regularly stitched up the awning as the canvas ripped around the peg attachments. When in the awning all we could hear was a huge roar of wind overlaid with a demonic shriek from some turbulence, and it was impossible to talk to each other in the awning - even shouting down someone's ear was inaudible over the roar. In the caravan, by the light of our gas lights, we could see the van bouncing like a toy on its springs as huge gusts smashed into it, immediately followed by a massive (but reduced) impulse to the caravan. There were a couple of times when it looked as if the van was going to topple, but it didn't, quite. As it got light, we could see the smashed, destroyed and overturned caravans of the people who didn't take the same precautions. No-one was hurt on site, but out of 6 caravans on the campsite, only two were whole, and only our awning had survived (by the skin of its teeth).
When I got back to school in September I discovered the elder brother of someone in my class had been blown off a cliff & killed by the residual wind after that horrific night.
Sometimes I wonder why I ever go camping... However, when it's not horrible, it's fantastic.
Thanks, everyone for your kind comments. As I said, I'll continue with Gryff until the end of the page (soon, I hope).
Regards,
Richard