Film night: Saving the Lathkill

As regular readers of this blog will know, post-industrial rivers really do come in all shapes, sizes and conditions (and not all of them now as urban as you might think).

To us, there’s no better proof of this maxim than the otherwise idyllic upper Lathkill, part of the headwaters of the mighty Trent.

However rural the Peak District’s limestone landscape looks at first glance, it’s an area of Derbyshire that’s been intensively lead-mined for centuries.

As this film explains, Magpie Sough was constructed between 1873 and 1881 to drain groundwater out of the Magpie Mine workings and make it possible for the miners to dig for even deeper deposits of lead.

Unfortunately, Magpie Sough taps the little River Lathkill’s aquifer and diverts late-season base flows into the Wye instead… which means it’s necessary for local riverkeepers and EA staff to rescue trout from the upper Lathkill, at least twice or three times every year, before the river bed dries out completely.

There’s a discussion and updates thread here on the Fly Fishing Forums, and we’ll be watching this potential HLF project with the greatest interest.

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2 Responses to “Film night: Saving the Lathkill”

  1. […] Saving the Lathkill. Now featured as a fully-fledged post-industrial river on this evening's film night on Urbantrout.net […]

  2. John O'Brien says:

    A stranger who just watched the movie and did not read the text (i.e. me), would not be able to make any sense of magpie soft (34 seconds), my pie suff (2 mins 23 secs) or magpie suff (6 mins 01 secs), I spent more time trying to work out what this weird sound actually meant than listening to the rest of the commentary.

    I am sure that all you locals think it is blindingly obvious, but to a stranger it has no meaning until explained.

    A few extra seconds of explanation at the start of the movie would remove this distraction.

    Otherwise an excellent piece of work and I wish you well with your quest to reverse this water problem.

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