United Kingdom Ladybower Plughole

4 images 4 contributors

James Grant

About this spot
Ladybower Reservoir is a large Y-shaped
reservoir in the Upper Derwent Valley near
Bamford. It is a beautiful location and easily
accessible by all. At times you would be
forgiven for forgetting that the area was
crafted by man. It is perhaps one of the closest
examples to a lake the Peak District has.
Ladybower wasn’t constructed without
controversy. Built between 1935 and 1943, it
was built to provide water to Manchester and
Sheffield as well as the East Midlands.

It continues to fulfil this role to this day. However, this was at the cost of the villages of Ashopton and Derwent.

The buildings were demolished except for the
church, which could be seen during low water
until 1947 when it was also demolished.
At the north of Ladybower is Derwent Reservoir.
The reservoir’s dam was used as practice runs
for the Dam Busters in World War II, due to the
similar construction of the German dams.

Roughly every 5 years an anniversary flight passes over Derwent and Ladybower Reservoir.

Join PhotoHound to learn how, where and when to capture amazing photos here

  • Know the best times, seasons & shooting conditions
  • Detailed directions - maps, co-ordinates and directions
  • Know how to get there - where to park or how to reach there using public transport
  • Browse inspirational photos and learn how they were taken - see the EXIF details
  • Bookmark your favourite spots for future reference
  • Know exactly when to shoot for beautiful photographs - sunrise, sunset, blue hour and astrophotography
  • Detailed, 7-day weather forecast at this location
  • Share your images with like-minded travel photographers
Essential Information

Guides

This spot appears in 1 guide.


Share this photo spot


Join thousands of photographers exploring the world with PhotoHound

Sign up or Log in