Roadway Closure At Shearwater For Three Weeks To Allow Important Work

Sunday 8th October 2023

Important Notice – Shearwater Lake
As a stakeholder of Shearwater Lake we are writing to notify you of important statutory works taking place at Shearwater Lake which will result in closure of the dam roadway on the eastern edge of the lake for a period of up to 3 weeks commencing from Monday 16th October 2023.

This means there will be no vehicle or pedestrian access to the dam at all during the works period (aside from authorised works contractors and emergency access). Security fencing will be installed to prevent access at the white entrance barrier and also at the Sailing Club to form a safe working area for the contractors working on the project.

The work will involve the installation of siphons from the lake over the roadway and down to the spillway below. This is required as a measure to be able to de-water the lake in the event of a flood risk. A ramp and raised roadway over the siphons will be constructed as part of the project to facilitate future access for vehicles and pedestrians going forwards once the roadway can be re-opened.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause while these important and necessary works are undertaken. It is intended that the car park area serving Shearwater will remain open for the duration of the works.Please do revert if you have any further queries or questions.

With kind regards, Ben Short MRICS FAAVL, Land Agent, Longleat/Cheddar Gorge & Caves.

Carpworld Profile For Shearwater And Its Fishing

Monday 6th February 2023

Carpword has the following profile for Shearwater and its fishing:

Longleat Estate offers some of the highest quality coarse fishing available in Britain in its superb lakes and set in beautiful surroundings in the heart of the Wiltshire countryside.

Shearwater Lake is a fabulous 36 acre lake set in stunning scenery near Warminster, Wiltshire and is a fishery very much on the up and caters for all kinds of anglers with its wide variety of fish. Shearwater was drained down for repairs to the dame in the late 1980’s and when the fishery reopened 2 years later Longleat Estate took the fishery back in hand from Warminster Angling Club.

Over the last 29 years the fishery has developed into on the country’s finest mixed fisheries.  The lakes numerous carp consist of wildie common carp pawned from the original Shearwater commons and over the last 15 years a large number of mirrors and commons have been added and the fishery now boasts a good head of 20lb plus carp up to 28lb, an excellent head of upper doubles and a huge head of doubles and in the summer months catches of 30 carp in 24 hour sessions are regularly taken with pop ups over big beds of boilies or trout pellet popular, while huge hauls can also be taken on zig rigs over a spod mix of ground bait. The fishery is rated as a fairly easy carp water and most anglers catch carp on most visits.

The bream fishing on Shearwater is probably some of the best anywhere in the UK with experienced anglers taking bags of up to 200lb of bream averaging 3lb in a single day, while the average angler can expect 30lb to 50lb under favourable conditions.  Sweetcorn, worm or pellet on a ground bait feeder or small method feeder works well as does pole or waggler tactics.

The fishery also has an excellent head of roach to over 2lb with bags to 30lb common place mainly to caster or maggot on the pole or waggler.

As regards other species Shearwater also holds rudd to 2lb and tench to 4lb which make up tremendous mixed bags with the roach, bream and carp.

On the predator front Shearwater holds an excellent head of perch to 3lb and with drop shotting the latest fishing craze Shearwater’s dam wall lends itself ideally to drop, shotting and bags of up to 30 perch in a day are common place in the autumn and winter.  Shearwater also holds a good head of pike, with fish to over 20lb taken to between October and the end of March on sea fish dead baits.

Below the main lake at Shearwater is Little Shearwater that holds an excellent head of ghosties, mirrors and common carp to over 20lb, while in the winter months the fishery comes into its own as a pike fishery.

Whatever you want to fish for and withwhatever the tactics you wish to use Shearwater is an ideal venue for allanglers who can enjoy a real days sport in a wonderful setting.

carpworld.co.uk/fisheries/shearwater-lake/

Shearwater ~ Notes By Danny Howell

Notes from a leaflet written and published by Danny Howell, in 1994:

Shearwater, the lake on the Longleat Estate, at the western end of the village of Crockerton, was made in 1791-1792 when the Marquis of Bath was responsible for damming the Shearwater stream.

Covering nearly 40 acres and nearly a mile in length, the lake takes its name, it is generally believed, from the area’s use for sheep shearing prior to 1791. In those days there were numerous ponds here from which clay had been dug. One of these ponds was used by the people of the neighbourhood for washing their sheep before shearing.

Shearwater was constructed according to the design and recommendation of Francis, Duke of Bridgewater, the Canal celebrity, who was a frequent visitor to Longleat and an intimate friend of Thomas, Lord Viscount Weymouth and the first Marquis of Bath.

A description of Shearwater in 1881 notes: “The grand expanse of lake with its varied colour, its magnificent surroundings, its beautiful walks, and its most infinite variety of picturesque effects, cannot fail to arouse in the visitor some expression or feeling of admiration for the beauties which nature so lavishly displays. But when it is remembered that the forests of trees with which the banks are lined were planted by mortal hands, that the abundant variety of flowers and foliage is due to the care and cultivation of man, that the pleasant walks have all been planted by the ingenuity and formed by the skill of human beings like ourselves, – and when in addition to all this we remember that even the noble lake itself owes its origin to mechanical contrivance, we can hardly restrain a feeling of wonder at the vastness of what has thus been achieved, and of thankfulness to those by whom it has been undertaken, completed, and given up for public enjoyment. A public drive extends nearly all round the lake, and numerous seats are provided for the comfort of pedestrians, who will also find many delightful shaded walks which are impractible to the wheeled conveyance.”

During the harsh winters of the 19th century Shearwater would freeze over with solid ice, sufficient for ox-roasts to be held on the lake itself.

During January 1891, following eight weeks of frost, a carnival was held at Shearwater with over a thousand people on the lake! An open range was built on the ice, surrounded by sheets of corrugated zinc, and a sheep was roasted whole. The roasting commenced at 3.30 p.m., and the meat was carved and distributed at 8.00 p.m. The boathouse keeper got a leg, the bargate keeper got a shoulder, and the Carnival Committee got the other shoulder. The remainder was distributed to the rest of the first-comers, with bread and 36 gallons of beer. A brass band played and there was skating, followed by a torchlight procession. The carnival ended at 10.00 p.m.

A thatched boathouse on the north side of the lake was destroyed by fire at Whitsun 1938. Lord Weymouth assisted Warminster Fire Brigade in trying to douse the flames. Crowds of people gathered to watch the blaze. The fire occurred only a month after the old boathouse keeper, Mr. A. Trollope, passed away after being at the boathouse for over 50 years.

Another building, to the side of the boathouse, also met with destruction by fire. Wilfred Middlebrook remembered: “It was a huge rustic structure with a deeply-thatched roof in the Dutch style and was once used as a stable. It caught fire in July 1944 but nobody did anything about it for a long time because those who saw the smoke thought it was waste wood being burned by workmen from the Longleat Estate. When Warminster Fire Brigade eventually arrived the place was well alight, and the firemen were hampered still more by wasps that had been nesting in the thatch. That was the end of the old stables.”

Today, a modern boathouse can be seen on the north side of Shearwater. This is all a far cry from the time when during the 1920s and 1930s Shearwater was the haunt of university oarsmen but the lake is currently the home of the Shearwater Sailing Club who were responsible for the building of the pavilion near the north-east corner in the early 1960s.

In more recent years the lake has provided a home for waterfowl and was briefly visited during the spring and autumn seasons in the late 1970s by an osprey during his flights to and from his breeding ground in Scotland. Herons can often be seen in the Shearwater area.

Bargate Cottage, to the south-east, is now a tea room and restaurant, following many years use as a tea room and cafe. Mrs Bessie Stockley, who celebrated her 100th birthday in 1982, had fond memories of Bargate Cottage where her parents lived for many years. When she was growing up there she was told by local people how they used to tend allotment gardens on the slopes of the valley before the lake was formed.

In 1981 it was noticed that Shearwater was leaking through a nine inch hole in one of the lake’s original sluice gates. This was remedied with sandbags and cement being placed in situ by a team of divers from Bristol.

Repairs to the sluices and work on the banks so as to comply with E.E.C. regulations, meant the draining of Shearwater in October and November 1988. Fish were removed from the lake. Pike were temporarily transferred to Broadlands at Romsey, other big fish were moved to the lake adjacent Longleat House, and small fish to the Mill Pond at Horningsham.

The lack of water in the lake resulted in an array of finds being discovered, including live ammunition (mortar bombs and shells) and firearms abandoned during the Second World War, not to mention an assortment of old bicycles and other junk.

Now restored, Shearwater continues to provide enjoyment for many sightseers and users of the lake. It is particularly colourful during early summer when the rhododendrons and azaleas are in flower. Autumn, with its colourful hues, is another ideal time for visiting this lovely place.

Shearwater

From The West Wiltshire District Guide 1978:

The Shearwater lake was formed in 1791, near Crockerton, and is part of the Longleat Estate. It was one of the last improvements made by the first Marquis of Bath who died in 1797. It was designed by Francis Duke of Bridgwater of canal celebrity and an intimate friend of Thomas Lord, Viscount Weymouth and the first Marquis of Bath. The area covered is around 38 acres or thereabouts.

The lake has been frozen over many times during severe winters. In 1879 safe skating was enjoyed there; records state that over 1,000 persons enjoyed the sport whilst it lasted. The roasting of an ox and sheep has taken place many times on the ice when conditions have allowed. The lake is a popular attraction set amid woods to the north and the south and is particularly pleasant on summer evenings.

Shearwater At Crockerton

Mrs. Beatrice McClellan White (1898 – 1969), of Longbridge Deverill, writing in 1960 on the subject of Crockerton, referred to Shearwater as follows:

On the west side of Crockerton there is the beautiful lake of Shearwater. This is not strictly a natural lake, but a dam which takes the form of a road built in 1791 across from north to south, to dam back the stream and water of several springs. 

This lake is very deep, being 40 feet in places. Whether it was a natural valley or disused pit or quarry I am not quite sure but it is very beautiful, especially in the summer, as it is completely surrounded by rhododendrons and azaleas. 

There was a very quaint, thatched boathouse and stables there, but these were entirely destroyed by fire in 1937.

During the summer months literally thousands of visitors visit Shearwater and drive round the lake on their way to Longleat about three miles further on. 

There have been a number of tragedies on the lake, two outstanding being one of the young sons of the Marquess of Bath, whose yacht capsized and he was drowned; the other was two young boys who were skating when the ice broke and one of them went in – his friend who was there as well and was a strong swimmer went in to try and rescue him, but it was dark and they both drowned.

Shearwater

From The Warminster Official Guide And Souvenir 1928 (penned by Victor Strode Manley):

Shearwater

“A quiet spirit-healing nook, Which all, methinks, would love.”

A sylvan paradise is here breathing soft magic of tranquillity. Only two and a half miles from the town, it is so well known as to scarce warrant a description. Forming part of the Longleat Estate, the public have free access to it, a privilege only conditioned by a request to refrain from wanton destruction of the flowering shrubs. No motors are allowed in the grounds and, unless picnicking, it is advisable to refresh at the inn close by where there are admirable tea gardens. Permission for boating and angling may be obtained from the       Longleat Estate Office in Portway, Warminster.

The lake (38 acres) is a perpetual beauty, with water of crystalline clearness in which the play of light and vividly coloured reflections on the glistening surface become increasingly lovely the longer one dotes on the scene. The surface is constantly rippled by leaping fish, mallards with iridescent plumage skim over it, the shy dab chick in sombre black paddles in odd corners contrasting with the white,     supple-necked swans among the water lilies.

There is a placidness in the chequered shade from over-hanging trees which roof the paths with the loveliest green tracery, sheltering mossy banks with delicate ferns and bracken rising out of a carpet of larch needles. Nature in her gayest mood lies pictured in a mirrored lake.