Eela Water Explained

Eela Water
Location:Ollaberry, Mainland, Shetland
Coordinates:60.49°N -1.398°W
Type:Lake
Outflow:Burn of Eelawater
Basin Countries:Scotland
Pushpin Map:Scotland Shetland
Pushpin Label Position:left
Pushpin Map Alt:Relief map of the Shetland Islands

Eela Water is a freshwater loch (lake) in Northmavine, part of the mainland of Shetland in Scotland. Besides being a freshwater fishing location, the site supplies clean water for the mainland of Shetland, and is one of the largest lochs on the mainland. The loch is 2miles west of Ollaberry, and only to the sea (westwards).

Description

The term Eela is used in Shetland to describe a fishing place, particularly one near to the shore of a body of water.[1] It also used to describe a type of rod fishing, derived from dialectal Norwegian, Ila, which described a type of stone anchor. The Eela rod fishing involved doing so from calm waters, or rowing into the tide and holding the boat steady (usually trying to catch coalfish).[2] However, Tudor states that the name was originally Ola's Water, a personal name.[3] The bedrock that the loch sits on is mixed, but mostly made up of schists and pink granite,[4] [5] [6] and the surrounding earth made up of peat. The inflows of water have been determined to be of low alkalinity.[7] The granite lies mostly to the east of the loch, which is where the depth dips down sharply to the maximum depth, and the eastern shore is mostly rocky too.[8]

Eela Water is on the north-western arm of the mainland of Shetland (known as Northmavine), some 2miles west of the settlement of Ollaberry.[9] The outflow from Eela Water heads west through Little Eela Water and the Burn of Eelawater to head out to sea through Hamar Voe, a distance of only .[10] [7] The average discharge through Burn of Eelawater at Orbister is per day, though not all of the water that is discharged has originated from Eela Water, as other smaller burns run into the Eelawater burn from the surrounding hillsides.[11] [10]

The loch also has a water treatment works (WTW), for supplying freshwater to the mainland of Shetland. These were installed in 2007, replacing some earlier WTWs, at a cost of £1.1 million.[12] The WTW plant is adjacent to the B9079 from Ollaberry,[13] and pumps water to the rest of the mainland in a pipeline through Mavis Grind.[14] The A970 road traverses the east side of the loch connecting Brae and North Roe.[10]

Gammarus lacustris is noted to be present in Eela Water,[15] as are a species of mayfly, known as baetis rhodani.[16] The loch is also noted for its trout fishing.[17] Birds that have been observed at the loch include black-headed gull, common gull, common sandpiper, curlew, eider, golden plover, great skua, greylag goose, lesser black backed gull, oystercatcher, snipe, teal and tufted duck.[18] In 2008, the Scottish Environmental Protection Agency listed Eela Water as having a good ecological status.[19]

Historically the loch featured as one of the boundary markers of the old Northmavine North Parish.[20]

Loch data

The water covers a surface area of (with a maximum length of 0.79miles), a mean depth of and a maximum depth of . Its elevation is above Ordnance Datum, and it has a catchment area of .[7] In 1910, it was assessed that the loch had a capacity of 103000000ft3, but a 2007 calculation determined it to have .[7] It is one of the largest lochs on the mainland of Shetland, the largest being the Loch of Girlsta, which has about three times the amount of water as Eela Water does.[21]

References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Edmonston . Thomas . An etymological glossary of the Shetland & Orkney dialect : with some derivations of names of places in Shetland . 1866 . Asher & Co . London . 29. 6444203.
  2. Book: Fenton . Alexander . The Northern Isles : Orkney and Shetland . 1978 . Donald . Edinburgh . 0859760197 . 528.
  3. Book: Tudor . John R. . The Orkneys and Shetland; their past and present state . 1833 . E Stanford . London . 533. 520429.
  4. Book: Peach . B. N. . Horne . John . The Scottish lakes in relation to the geological features of the country . 1910 . Challenger . Edinburgh . 496. 35355342.
  5. Web site: The geology of Western Shetland (Explanation 1:63 360 Western Shetland; Sheet 127 and pts. of 125, 126 and 128) . webapps.bgs.ac.uk . 13 December 2022.
  6. Web site: SHETLAND COASTAL CHARACTER ASSESSMENT . 2021. shetland.uhi.ac.uk . 13 December 2022 . 36.
  7. Web site: Eela Water Water Body ID 704 . eip.ceh.ac.uk . 14 December 2022 . 11 June 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160611204850/https://eip.ceh.ac.uk/apps/lakes/detail.html#wbid=704 . dead .
  8. Web site: View map: Loch of Flugarth; Eela Water (Vol. 6, Plate 99) - Bathymetrical Survey of the Fresh-Water Lochs of Scotland, 1897-1909 . maps.nls.uk . 14 December 2022.
  9. Book: Tudor . John R. . The Orkneys and Shetland; their past and present state . 1833 . E Stanford . London . 538. 520429.
  10. Shetland - Mainland North West . 469. 2015. 1:25,000 . Explorer . Ordnance Survey . 978-0-319-24720-4 .
  11. Web site: Sanitary Survey Report Hamar Voe SI-655-1404-08 . cefas.co.uk . 13 December 2022 . 21 . April 2015.
  12. Web site: Eela Water Treatment Works . garriock.co.uk . 13 December 2022.
  13. Book: Blackadder . Jill Slee . Shetland . 2003 . Colin Baxter Photography Ltd . Grantown-on-Spey . 9781841073583 . 137.
  14. News: Alderstein . Daid . 9 January 2019 . Scottish Water set to start PS7m project in Shetland to take care of the north, central and west Mainland's water network . Plus Company Updates. .
  15. Sutcliffe . D. W. . On Gammarus from Fresh Waters in the Islands of Orkney and Shetland . Crustaceana . 1974 . 27 . 1 . 110 . Brill . Leiden . 10.1163/156854074X00299 . 0011-216X.
  16. Web site: Baetis rhodani The Microscopic Life of Shetland Lochs . shetlandlochs.com . 13 December 2022.
  17. Book: Sandison . Bruce . Trout & salmon rivers and lochs of Scotland . 1997 . Merlin Unwin Books . Shropshire . 1873674317 . 10.
  18. Web site: Eela Water" Occurrence records NBN Atlas . records.nbnatlas.org . 14 December 2022.
  19. Web site: Shetland Coastal catchment summary . sepa.org.uk . 13 December 2022 . 1.
  20. Book: Manson . T. J. . Manson's Shetland almanac and directory for 1892 . 1893 . Lerwick . 80. 1049643754.
  21. Web site: Loch of Girlsta Water Body ID 1271 . eip.ceh.ac.uk . 14 December 2022 . 11 June 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160611204850/https://eip.ceh.ac.uk/apps/lakes/detail.html#wbid=1271 . dead .