As someone who has experienced three potentially dangerous moments in the wet with legal (3-4mm of tread and no cracking) tyres, the age of the tyre can make a huge difference to the level of grip available, especially in poor weather conditions such as rain - and not even heavy rain or much standing water either. Cooler external temperatures makes such issues even worse. From memory, all of my 'incidents happened in Autumn, so not during really cold periods.
And for both sets of tyres (one set resulted in two very similar incidents within a short space of time) were under 10 years old, around the 6-7 year mark.
What may also make a decent amount of difference is the variation in grip between the tyres on your car and those on the caravan. Whether this makes as much difference as putting a new set of tyres on the rear axle of a FWD car rather than the front is another matter, but I'd suspect it must make some difference, especially when cornering and/or braking.
If you're doing low mileage generally, or at least with the caravan, I'd advocate fitting tyres to it that the manufacturers state are long-lasting in terms of years, not (just) mileage. It's the reason why I fitted CC+s to my car, becasue Michelin have indicated they should be good for 10 years, rather than the 6 which seemed to be the norm for most mainstream tyre manufacturers, even if few rarely said so publicly.
What I'd also do for a rarely used vehicle like a caravan is to somehow (not sure a product is available or you follow the Heath-Robinson approach) cover up the caravan's tyres when it's on the driverway, so sun damage is minimised.
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