Farmoor Reservoir
Farmoor Reservoir is a reservoir at Farmoor, Oxfordshire, England, about 5 miles (8 km) outside the city of Oxford. It is close to the left bank of the River Thames. Like most of the reservoirs in the Thames Valley, it was not formed by damming a valley. In this case the banks were raised above the local ground level using material excavated from within the bowl of the reservoir.
Farmoor Reservoir | |
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Location | Oxfordshire |
Coordinates | 51.75543°N 1.35671°W |
Type | reservoir |
Basin countries | United Kingdom |
Water volume | 9.30 Gl (2.05×10 9 imp gal) |
Website | corporate.thameswater.co.uk |
The reservoir is split into Stage 1 (completed 1967, 4,544 million litres) and Stage 2 (completed 1976, 9,298 million litres). Among other locations, Farmoor supplies the large town of Swindon, some 25 miles (40 km) to the southwest.[1] The reservoir is filled from the River Thames.[2]
The reservoir is used for sports: fishing (especially fly-fishing for rainbow and brown trout), dinghy sailing and windsurfing. Oxford Sailing Club and the Oxford Sail Training Trust are based there. The latter offers sailing, windsurfing and powerboat courses. There is also access for bird watching and walking.
Birds of Farmoor Reservoir
- Black-headed gull
- Eurasian coot
- Great cormorant
- Greylag goose
- Mute swans
- Tufted duck
- White wagtail
- Mallard
References
- "£32m water scheme in final stage". BBC News. 24 May 2004. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
- Benke, Mike (26 November 2014). "Water pipeline to preserve Kennet". Swindon Advertiser. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
External links