For Loo Hire in Herefordshire please select from the list of companies below or click on the bar to contact the portable toilet hire companies in Herefordshire

Covering Hereford, Ross-on-Wye, Leominster, Ledbury, Bromyard, Kington, Redditch, Broadway, Bromsgrove, Droitwich, Kidderminster, Malvern, Pershore, Stourport-on-Severn, Worcester and all areas of Herefordshire
Hereford is the county town of Herefordshire and is a cathedral city. Herefordshire is a county in the west midlands area of England that has a relatively low population of just less than one hundred and eighty thousand. As well as Hereford, major settlements in Herefordshire include Leominster, Ross-on-Wye, Bromyard, Kington and Ledbury. Herefordshire is probably best known for the production of fruit and cider. Herefordshire became a county in 1998 reversing an earlier 1974 decision.
Hereford is Herefordshire’s only city and has a population of approximately 50 thousand people. Hereford is situated close to the border with Wales on the River Wye and has been accessible by rail since 1854. Hereford Cathedral is the home of the “Mappa Mundi” an early map of the world that was dated around 1300 AD. The map is thought to be the first of its kind that mentions the Faroe Islands. Other areas included on the map are Jerusalem – in the centre, Noah’s Ark, Babylon and England.
Leominster in North Herefordshire has a population of around 11,000 and has the postcode HR6. Another Herefordshire town with a similar population to Leominster is Ross-on-Wye. Ross-on-Wye is considered the birthplace of Britain’s tourism industry because Dr John Egerton took people on boat trips down the River Wye.
Ledbury won the “small town” category in 2003’s Britain in Bloom competition and is the east of the county of Herefordshire. Ledbury was also the birthplace of Henry Scott Holland who was “Regius Professor Divinity at Oxford University in the early 1900’s.
Loo Hire Herefordshire covers the county near the Welsh border. In the county is the town of Kington. A famous doll museum is housed in a Bromyard toyshop and is a popular attraction in the county.
The Malvern Hills give beautiful views over Herefordshire and were often walked by J. R. R. Tolkien – the author of “The Lord of the Rings.” The line that runs down the middle of the hills has traditionally been used as the border between Worcestershire and Herefordshire.
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