
The big keeper joined St Mirren earlier this month for a second stint having spent the first half of the campaign with Sky Bet League One side Leyton Orient.
Hemming was instrumental in the Buddies’ back-to-back top-six Premiership finishes and European qualification last season.
In an attempt to become the No. 2 goalie, he returned to parent club Middlesbrough last summer, but he was assigned to East London instead.
After moving from the northeast of England to join Hemming in the big smoke, wife Caitlin and their two children, Louie, age two, and Riven, age five, followed him back up to Renfrewshire.
The Boro custodian’s philosophy has been “have boots will travel,” but he acknowledges that it might be time to locate a more permanent location.
“I think it takes its toll on the family more,” he said. “The missus is moving somewhere she doesn’t know and hasn’t got family and friends there. I go to work every day and I’ve got 25 lads I can speak to so it’s probably easier for me.
“Credit to her, she doesn’t complain and just gets on with it. She keeps the family ticking and it makes it easier with someone like her around.
My wife found it harder than what I did [in the summer] as she packed the house up and organised everything [in London].
“A lot of credit goes to her. She sorted the house, sorted where we’re going to live and sorted the kids’ schools. For me, it was about moving a few clothes!
“The kids are still young so it’s not too bad on them. They made friends down there so they were maybe a bit gutted to leave.
“But when I told them we were coming back up to Scotland they were buzzing. They seem happy. The oldest one has been invited back to his old football club so he’s happy!
“I think my eldest got scouted before I went back so hopefully someone comes back in for him!”
How tough is all the moving around?

For me personally,” the 25-year-old answered, “It’s quite easy. I’m a social person, I can get on with anyone. For the kids, it’s easy-ish apart from those first couple of days at a new school. For the missus, it’s probably the worst nightmare she’s ever had.
“She hates it. She’s down in London packing up a five-bedroom house with two kids to look after but hopefully we can get settled soon. She has packed two houses up this season.
“I have one year left at Middlesbrough. Hopefully I can do well for the rest of this season and see what happens. I just want to be playing football and enjoying it because, when I do, I go home and I’m a happy man. The kids love coming to the games.
“I’m still trying to find somewhere [to live up here]. Someone’s in the old house but he doesn’t know if he is going to stay or move out! I’ve got the kids in school. I need a Houston postcode so hopefully he moves out!”
Hemming insists keeping his family in the north-east of England and commuting is a non-starter after enduring a similar scenario in the 2022-23 season when he was with Kilmarnock.
“It wasn’t good for both of us,” he said. “She had the kids 24/7. I tell her not to work but she still likes to work. She was working all day then having the kids all night.
“I was driving three-and-a-half hours home, maybe having two or three hours and a full day the next day, and then driving back early the next morning.
“I couldn’t do it. It was too hard on the body. When you train every day and are playing on a Saturday it is too much.
“It’s nice to go home after training and a game and play with the kids for a bit. You have a full day on a Sunday and you don’t have to worry about travelling. I can help with the kids in the morning. It’s miles better when the family is together.”
Hemming is at Saints after bringing his loan spell at Orient to an end when they put on-loan Tottenham Hotspur keeper Josh Keeley between the sticks.
He kept clean sheets against the likes of Millwall, Reading and Wrexham but believes some early-season errors were never forgotten.
“I made two mistakes in the first two games,” Hemming reflected. “I have come out in the press, held my hands up and accepted it but I don’t think they ever looked past that.
“Once that happens, I don’t think there’s any coming back from it. I felt that I just needed a fresh start. In my first five or six games, we played everyone who were favourites to get promoted so it was a tough start.
“It was my first time in League One and first time in London with all the travelling. We went on a five or six-game unbeaten run but I just don’t think they looked past the first couple of games which was disappointing.