Bomere Pool

Bomere Pool

Infobox lake
lake_name = Bomere Pool
image_lake =
caption_lake =
image_bathymetry =
caption_bathymetry =
location = Shropshire, England
coords = coord|52|40|N|2|44|W|region:GB_type:waterbody|display=inline,title
type = Mere, oligotrophic
inflow =
outflow =
catchment =
basin_countries = United Kingdom
length =
width =
area = convert|10.3|ha|abbr=on|lk=on
depth =
max-depth = convert|15.2|m|abbr=on|lk=on
volume =
residence_time =
shore =
elevation =
islands =
cities =

Bomere Pool is a large mere lying between the villages of Bayston Hill and Condover in the county of Shropshire, England, 4.7 miles (7.5 kilometres) south of the county town of Shrewsbury.

Once open to the public, Bomere Pool and the surrounding woodlands are now privately owned and a centre of towed water sports throughout the year. There is a small resident population housed in a number of flats.

History

Geology

Vast tracts of Shropshire were covered with ice sheets during the last Ice Age about 18,000 years ago. When the ice sheets retreated large ice blocks were left isolated, often surrounded and covered by the moraine, gravels and clays left behind by the glaciers. When this glacial ice eventually melted sediments collapsed into holes or depressions referred to as 'Kettle Holes'. These holes had no means of drainage and would either turn into steep sided lakes, usually referred to as Meres in Shropshire or, if the lake completely filled with clay and peat, became a moss bog. Bomere Pool is a particularly fine example of a kettle hole mere. [ [http://www.mythstories.com/lostA.html Created from Ice] ]

Use by man

Bomere Pool has been utilised by man for thousands of years. There is the archaeological mounded remains of a suspected iron age settlement at the south east corner of the mere. Two thousand years ago there was a substantial Roman army camp and an associated civilian settlement on the pool side. [ [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Txby6_Lrm0cC&pg=PA22&lpg=PA22&dq=bomere+pool+ghost&source=web&ots=gtxqn5rBfI&sig=SmPXBkdUvw_2-keiV9Pf9CuazXs&hl=en Bomere Pool History] ] Shropshire's oldest ghost of a Roman soldier seeking his lover who was lost in a sudden flood has been sighted on Easter Day, in the years when Easter falls on the same day as it did the year he died.

Literary connections

The 1920s romantic novelist Mary Webb located the action of her most famous novel Precious Bane around Bomere Pool, which she called "Sarn Mere" in the book. Webb wrote the book while living in Spring Cottage on Lyth Hill at nearby Bayston Hill and at her London home. [ [http://www3.shropshire-cc.gov.uk/intros/T000631.htm Precious Bane and Bomere Pool] ]

Bomere Pool also featured in several of the medieval detective novels about Brother Cadfael by novelist Ellis Peters.

Recent history

In 1986 a woman out for a walk discovered the bones of a woolly mammoth and three juvenile mammoths in an associated nearby moss and gravel bog sink hole. [ [http://www.shropshire.gov.uk/llmrc.nsf/9de97c0f894753ab80256c40004efba3/07d08ddfceef4eb680257101004ec7b1!OpenDocument The Bomere Mammoths] ]

Between the 1960s and 1980s the pool was a popular destination for local residents who visited on hot summer days with their young children to splash about in the water and eat meals nearby from a small cafe and ice cream stall. A free squash court built by a local farmer and a public house were also open to the public.

Bomere Pool today

In 1989 the property changed hands and the lake, beach and facilities were closed to the general public and made available exclusively for residents, members and guests of the private Wakeboard & Water Skiing Club that use the pool for regular water sports. There are 25 acres of pool nestled in a secluded traditional forest of a further convert|125|acre|km2, woodland that once formed part of Bayston Hill and Condover Royal hunting forest. The closed public house has now been converted into multiple occupancy, individual private flats.

Walkers using the public footpaths are advised to keep closely to the marked ways as the residents are known to be particularly jealous of their privacy rights.

References

External links

* [http://www.bomere.co.uk/aboutbomere.asp Bomere Wakeboard and Water Ski Club Webpage]
* [http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/efft/efft16.htm Bomere Pool folklore tale]
* [http://66.102.9.104/search?q=cache:Ao96SZIMplwJ:www.english-nature.org.uk/citation/citation_photo/1003107.pdf+bomere+pool&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=6&gl=uk Bomere, a site of Special Scientific Interest]
* [http://www.lordbrunton.com/cameron/default.asp?id=900004&seq=050 Photo of the Lake]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Bayston Hill — infobox UK place country = England latitude= 52.6727 longitude= 2.7654 official name= Bayston Hill population = 5,247 shire district= Shrewsbury and Atcham shire county = Shropshire region= West Midlands constituency westminster= Shrewsbury and… …   Wikipedia

  • Condover — Coordinates: 52°38′53″N 2°45′00″W / 52.648°N 2.75°W / 52.648; 2.75 …   Wikipedia

  • Cound — Coordinates: 52°38′46″N 2°39′18″W / 52.646°N 2.655°W / 52.646; 2.655 …   Wikipedia

  • List of reportedly haunted locations — This is a list of locations reportedly haunted by ghosts or other supernatural beings. Reports of haunted locations are part of ghostlore. Ghostlore is fueled by history and legend and is part of folklore.Australia * The Alkimos is a shipwreck of …   Wikipedia

  • List of Sites of Special Scientific Interest in Shropshire — This is a list of the Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs) in Shropshire. For other counties, see List of SSSIs by Area of Search. * Allscott Settling Ponds * Alveley Grindstone Quarry * Attingham Park * Berrington Pool * Betton Dingle… …   Wikipedia

  • bottomless pools —    In the Old English epic *Beowulf the hero dives into a pool so deep that no man living knows where the bottom of it may be . There are many like it in local folklore, some of them being said to lead straight down into Hell, others to have… …   A Dictionary of English folklore

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”