Yes indeed, after the Tassie tour, we changed the oil/filter, flushed the cooling system and added anti-freeze (on the guess that it might be nippy on my side of the Big Pond). Was not cold when the ship docked but has been the last 10 days or so. Maybe snow on Monday.
About coolant freezing...30 years ago I took a solo drive to the US southwest in my MGB - California, Arizona, Nevada - and headed north though Utah. After stopping overnight and looking about Salt Lake City, I headed north for Yellowstone Park. The day was a longish one and well after dark the B needed some fuel and I was looking at long stretches of highway without any sign of life.
Fortunately, a lone light bulb shone in the distance and as I neared it was the only light at a single pump fuel station...and all by itself out in the open. However, as I filled the tank, the cold surrounded me and, wondering why, I checked the map...I was on a route some 6,600 feet above sea level in late September. In due course I motored into West Yellowstone (just over 6,000 ft. elev.) and got lodgings.
Next morning I started to check the B over since I wanted to drive the Yellowstone Park loop road. Oil was OK but icy slush greeted me when I popped the rad cap. I made my way to the Chevron service station, it had a big garage in those days, to drain out some coolant and add more anti-freeze.
Well the old geezers in coveralls had no idea what they were looking at, "How do we drain the coolant?" Once they were pointed at the drain tap, all was good.
It was a remote fuel stop but smaller than this one in the high desert of Oregon. Most of these old country fuel stops are now just reminders of a different age of motoring in north America.
