carnkie
13 years ago
"sougher" wrote:


The driving of the soughs greatly altered the water table of the whole of the Derbyshire lead field, but this didn't happen until the middle of the seventeenth century onwards (Longhead sough Cromford being the first to be driven in 1640, and Alport sough being the first to be draining mines in that area in 1718), so if it was possible to find records concerning weather pre that time and compare drought years with records of the R. Lathkill running dry, this might help.



Chatsworth House may have some anecdotal information in their archives but their official records were 'lost' and they are later anyway. For general information, talking around the time of the Little Ice Age, this is about as good as it get's.

The 1600s were generally a period of harsh severe winters, and cool/wet springs/summers. At points the Thames was frozen for months, although I think it would have been wider then (?) and shallower (?) so easier to freeze when the temperatures were right.

The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.
Peter Burgess
13 years ago
It is a shame that a good scientific case cannot be made for this idea without resorting to anthropomorphic phraseology with regard to inanimate concepts like rivers and catchment areas. It's a regretful symptom of the modern world.
unclej
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13 years ago
Sound scientific facts have proved Magpie is taking from the Lathkill, by three separate people. I am not a scientist but can identify, along with many others, that the Lathkill is living. Viktor Schauberger first claimed water to be alive, I think of the plants and animals that rely upon the flow to be the living factor.

What is a regretful sympton of the modern world is that people living outside an area feel they hold great sway over it. We feel this keenly as residents of the Peak District National Park. The place has become a playground for outsiders!
Boy Engineer
13 years ago
Ought to resist but can't.
Quote:

anthropomorphic phraseology

. In my book river full of water, fish, invertebrates, plant life = living, ditto devoid of above = rather harder to describe in such terms and er, dead. I reckon most people would agree with the designation.
Moorebooks
13 years ago
"unclej" wrote:

Sound scientific facts have proved Magpie is taking from the Lathkill, by three separate people. I am not a scientist but can identify, along with many others, that the Lathkill is living. Viktor Schauberger first claimed water to be alive, I think of the plants and animals that rely upon the flow to be the living factor.

What is a regretful sympton of the modern world is that people living outside an area feel they hold great sway over it. We feel this keenly as residents of the Peak District National Park. The place has become a playground for outsiders!



I wonder are you a mine explorer or some sort of politcal campaigner? This sounds like an extension of the Cymru Cong or the free cornwall brigade.

Apart from the mines there seems little discussion of the natural passage that account for the river disappearing. The fact is this year we have had a lack of rain. Everywhere passages previously flooded have been exposed, springs and wells have dried up so whats different here.

Mike
Peter Burgess
13 years ago
"unclejan" wrote:

What is a regretful sympton of the modern world is that people living outside an area feel they hold great sway over it. We feel this keenly as residents of the Peak District National Park. The place has become a playground for outsiders!

Sorry, Jan, resorting to personal comments now are we?

Whatever sympathy I had a day or so back with the case for restoring the Lathkill is rapidly disappearing. On balance I could see the case possibly had more strength than that for keeping the status quo. You may recall I advocated the idea that we should avoid polarisation, but I see you might not agree. I am a UK citizen and have been all my life. I have been a PDMHS member for a while until a year or so back, and may well rejoin if I ever intend to be brave enough to venture into the area again. I believe the Lathkill is part of a National Park, the key word being National, not Local. Perhaps, Jan, you should reflect on the damage you are doing to your cause by upsetting a number of people here who are by and large very reasonable folk who have the capacity to consider many opinions sensibly and intelligently, and who do not resort to dismissing the views of those they don't agree with.

Go in Peace, brother.
unclej
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13 years ago
"Moorebooks" wrote:

"unclej" wrote:


The fact is this year we have had a lack of rain. Everywhere passages previously flooded have been exposed, springs and wells have dried up so whats different here.

Mike



This year is an exceptionally dry year, on the back of a year previously 30% down in rainfall, and the BBC decided to do a programe on it. The EA said the lack of surface flow in Lathkill Dale caused them to rescue fish earlier than normal and that the seasonal recharge was later than normal.
unclej
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13 years ago
"Peter Burgess" wrote:

Sorry, John, resorting to personal comments now are we?



You are, but it isn't going to worry me.
Thrutch
13 years ago
The fishing party photograph was published on the river keeper's website some time ago and if I remember correctly was taken in the 1890's.
There are weirs and fish pools above Alport and until the recent efforts to return the river to it's natural state, fish were raised in pools for restocking purposes. These would I assume be both Brown and Rainbow Trout.
The "red" in the description of fish would refer to the colour of the flesh, a result of diet and always a pleasant thing to see when compared with the rather pale flesh of some fish.
In case it is in doubt I have no problem identifying fish, from high or low vantage points; Rainbow Trout, in the water are identified more easily by features other than external colouration, which itself can be very variable. The naturally breeding Wye Rainbows have additional identification features (as compared with stock fish).
Back to mine drainage.
ttxela
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13 years ago
"unclej" wrote:

"AR" wrote:

I don't claim any rights over Magpie Sough, but I'd be failing in my PDMHS duties if I didn't mount a robust challenge to a proposal to completely close off an important site the society has devoted so much time and effort to in the past.



How about if the tail up to any potential obstruction was left open, like Hill Carr? There would be little water in this section and no mobilisation of silt to upset the fishermen. You don't have access now, perhaps a potential blockage further up could be an advantage to you?



I think it's accepted that the majority of the water flowing down the sough at the moment enters at the boil-up, so if I understand correctly to have any meaningful effect the blockage would have to be between the boil-up and the entrance. From memory this is not particularly far up the sough. Therefore any remaining open section would be fairly short and most of the interesting bits would be lost.

I must admit my first thought on seeing the programme was from the point of view of not wanting the opportunity of future trips to be lost - I can understand how this might be seen as a minority attitude but its one that shouldn't be too much of a suprise on a site devoted to mining history and exporing old workings.

Peter Burgess
13 years ago
"unclejan" wrote:

"Peter Burgess" wrote:

Sorry, Jan, resorting to personal comments now are we?



You are, but it isn't going to worry me.



I give up! I would love to make a good case FOR your suggestion, but when the main advocate of it seems determined not to listen to reasonable opinion, then there is no point continuing. I believe you are doing your case far more harm than good on this site, which is a shame.

I shall continue to enjoy Lathkilldale, with or without water, but will probably have to do it disguised as a local so as not to attract too much adverse attention. :lol:
unclej
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13 years ago
How have I upset anyone? Peter Burgess first decided that my 'anthropomorphic phraseology' was a regretful feature of the modern world.

What are your objections to blocking water from Magpie Sough? How can it harm what you do? It hasnt harmed exploration of Hill Carr. You could negotiate new access to Magpie Sough if no water can move silt that is disturbed.
unclej
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13 years ago
"Thrutch" wrote:

The fishing party photograph was published on the river keeper's website some time ago and if I remember correctly was taken in the 1890's.
There are weirs and fish pools above Alport and until the recent efforts to return the river to it's natural state, fish were raised in pools for restocking purposes. These would I assume be both Brown and Rainbow Trout.
The "red" in the description of fish would refer to the colour of the flesh, a result of diet and always a pleasant thing to see when compared with the rather pale flesh of some fish.
In case it is in doubt I have no problem identifying fish, from high or low vantage points; Rainbow Trout, in the water are identified more easily by features other than external colouration, which itself can be very variable. The naturally breeding Wye Rainbows have additional identification features (as compared with stock fish).
Back to mine drainage.



Arh, no. The reddest and best trouts were brown trout with red pigmentaion on their flanks, and presumably pink upon their flesh too but as a consequence of fresh water shrimps, which are a consequence of the high pH. You arent in minorty, people make the mistake all the time. I understand that a fish farmer of 30 years also made the same mistake.

Now back to drainage.
ttxela
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13 years ago
"unclej" wrote:

How have I upset anyone? Peter Burgess first decided that my 'anthropomorphic phraseology' was a regretful feature of the modern world.

What are your objections to blocking water from Magpie Sough? How can it harm what you do? It hasnt harmed exploration of Hill Carr. You could negotiate new access to Magpie Sough if no water can move silt that is disturbed.



I may have misunderstood, how would one block water flow in the sough by any method other than a complete blockage between the boil-up and the entrance?
unclej
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13 years ago
"ttxela" wrote:

"unclej" wrote:

"AR" wrote:

I don't claim any rights over Magpie Sough, but I'd be failing in my PDMHS duties if I didn't mount a robust challenge to a proposal to completely close off an important site the society has devoted so much time and effort to in the past.



How about if the tail up to any potential obstruction was left open, like Hill Carr? There would be little water in this section and no mobilisation of silt to upset the fishermen. You don't have access now, perhaps a potential blockage further up could be an advantage to you?



I think it's accepted that the majority of the water flowing down the sough at the moment enters at the boil-up, so if I understand correctly to have any meaningful effect the blockage would have to be between the boil-up and the entrance. From memory this is not particularly far up the sough. Therefore any remaining open section would be fairly short and most of the interesting bits would be lost.

I must admit my first thought on seeing the programme was from the point of view of not wanting the opportunity of future trips to be lost - I can understand how this might be seen as a minority attitude but its one that shouldn't be too much of a suprise on a site devoted to mining history and exporing old workings.



But you have no access at the moment as far as I know. I see no reason why you cannot explore during the closed season, or early in the morning before the fishermen arrive, but as of this moment, the sough water is restricting your access by causing the fishermen to complain.
unclej
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13 years ago
"Peter Burgess" wrote:

"unclej" wrote:

"Peter Burgess" wrote:

Sorry, John, resorting to personal comments now are we?



You are, but it isn't going to worry me.



I give up! I would love to make a good case FOR your suggestion, but when the main advocate of it seems determined not to listen to reasonable opinion, then there is no point continuing. I believe you are doing your case far more harm than good on this site, which is a shame.

I shall continue to enjoy Lathkilldale, with or without water, but will probably have to do it disguised as a local so as not to attract too much adverse attention. :lol:



I'm sorry for that comment, it was an irrelevant consideration. The only issue we have disagreed upon is my humanising the Lathkill. I would humanise the sough, but the water is lifeless.
Peter Burgess
13 years ago
Thank you - the reply is appreciated. However, I have determined to leave this discussion. There are no further comments I wish to make.
unclej
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13 years ago
"ttxela" wrote:

"unclej" wrote:

How have I upset anyone? Peter Burgess first decided that my 'anthropomorphic phraseology' was a regretful feature of the modern world.

What are your objections to blocking water from Magpie Sough? How can it harm what you do? It hasnt harmed exploration of Hill Carr. You could negotiate new access to Magpie Sough if no water can move silt that is disturbed.



I may have misunderstood, how would one block water flow in the sough by any method other than a complete blockage between the boil-up and the entrance?



Hydro-power was one idea. The water would generate through a pico turbine or some sort during the winter and cause a blockage during the summer when the water is needed in't'dale. Not a complete blockage, only a restriction to the perennial flow. On your other point there would be no advantage to blocking below the water.

Atkins did a flood aleviation proposal back in the 1990's. Part of their plan involved reducing the flow to Bakewell and guess what was mooted!

Not suprisingly then, as you state this is a mine exploration forum, your main objection to the idea would be a lack of access?
ttxela
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13 years ago
"unclej" wrote:

"ttxela" wrote:

"unclej" wrote:

How have I upset anyone? Peter Burgess first decided that my 'anthropomorphic phraseology' was a regretful feature of the modern world.

What are your objections to blocking water from Magpie Sough? How can it harm what you do? It hasnt harmed exploration of Hill Carr. You could negotiate new access to Magpie Sough if no water can move silt that is disturbed.



I may have misunderstood, how would one block water flow in the sough by any method other than a complete blockage between the boil-up and the entrance?



Hydro-power was one idea. The water would generate through a pico turbine or some sort during the winter and cause a blockage during the summer when the water is needed in't'dale. Not a complete blockage, only a restriction to the perennial flow. On your other point there would be no advantage to blocking below the water.

Atkins did a flood aleviation proposal back in the 1990's. Part of their plan involved reducing the flow to Bakewell and guess what was mooted!

Not suprisingly then, as you state this is a mine exploration forum, your main objection to the idea would be a lack of access?



Well, yes that would be my own personal and admittedly rather selfish concern.

I imagine others may have rather more complex and thoughtful objections.

unclej
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13 years ago
"ttxela" wrote:


Well, yes that would be my own personal and admittedly rather selfish concern.

I imagine others may have rather more complex and thoughtful objections.



OK. Understood, and that is of course fine*. There ought to be a win/win here.

* I shouldn't mix my sediments.

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