Lake 'at unprecedented low level after dry spring'
Rudyard Lake, near Leek, has dropped to 3.55m (11.6ft) below full, which adds up to about 30% capacity, according to the Canal and River Trust (CRT), which owns the site.
Adam Comerford, CRT's national hydrology manager, said the dry spell had presented a "real challenge" in terms of managing water resources.
"We've experienced one of the driest springs on record and it's gone into the summer with the heatwaves everyone has been enjoying," he told BBC Radio Stoke.
"We are worried, it is unprecedented – it's exceptional," Mr Comerford added.
The water is used to top up canals in the area, though he said other sources in the area can be used if the lake's levels get too low.
He said the trust would never allow the reservoir to become empty, because of support it provides the wildlife, adding the lowest it would get to is 10%.
Andy Rushton, who regularly walks at the beauty spot, said he did not remember the water ever being this low in the 40 years he has been visiting the lake.
"To be honest, it's a bit depressing because you come down the driveway from the other bank and there's nothing to see – it's just dried mud," he said.
"Being a lover of wildlife, it doesn't help any of the birds or anything that nests on this side of the lake."
Hydrologist Margaret Clark, claimed the site had also suffered from a "lack of maintenance" for many years.
"You would see low levels because it's a period of hot weather, but not as low as this," she said. "There would be ways of conserving the water."
Ms Clark said she would like to see an effort being made to bring the reservoir back to its "designed standard".
In response, Mr Comerford said the CRT was "investing hugely" in its assets across the country, with about £17m being spent each winter over the next five years.
He said it was a challenge for the charity to maintain its reservoirs and canals in the face of rising costs.
"We've got about 30% of the water left and we're trying to conserve that the best we can," he added.
Follow BBC Stoke & Staffordshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.
Drought declared in Midlands after hot, dry weather takes its toll
Heatwave triggers reservoir swimming warning
Severn Trent urges more caution with water supplies
Canal and River Trust
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
British Open Round 1 tee times: Will weather be better for early wave or late wave?
Only two players have better than 10-1 odds to win the British Open — or is it The Open or The Open Championship? Whatever you want to call it, the favorites are, as expected, Scottie Scheffler (+500) and Rory McIlroy (+700). If weather is a factor, one of them could have an advantage depending on when it's better, as Scheffler will go out early on Thursday, McIlroy later (and vice versa on Friday). Currently, the forecast for Thursday's Round 1 is rain in the morning, rain in the afternoon, with wind blowing just a bit throughout the day. Advertisement Round 1 of the 153rd Open Championship begins at 1:35 a.m. ET Thursday morning. How to watch Rounds 1 and 2 1:30-4 a.m.: Stream on Peacock 4 a.m-3:30 p.m.: USA Network, NBC Sports app, Peacock, Fubo 3:30-6 p.m.: Golf Channel Featured groups Round 1 tee times (All times ET; (a) amateur)
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
10 counties in England set to swelter in 32C heatwave arriving in July
The UK is all set to experience another round of hot conditions as the latest weather maps reveal temperatures rising to 32C in just two weeks. Weather maps from WXCharts show that 10 counties will turn sizzling on July 30, while other parts also likely to remain warm, reports The maps that are prepared using MetDesk data have gone red for areas around London and Southampton at the end of this month. READ MORE: UK tourist tragedy as two men found dead in Portugal hotel Get breaking news on BirminghamLive WhatsApp, click the link to join The warmer weather comes days after Britain experienced three heatwaves, with the temperature soaring as high as 34C in many areas of the country. According to the maps, the counties of London, Surrey, Hampshire, and Kent are among the areas that will see the extreme weather. Much of the Midlands – including major cities like Birmingham, Nottingham and Leicester – are likely to see temperatures varying largely from 26C and 28C, the weather maps have suggested. The northern areas of the country are likely to remain cooler as compared to the other parts of the UK. According to the weather maps, cities such as Edinburgh, Aberdeen Inverness and Wick may see the mercury levels oscillating between 16 and 18C on July 30. The Met Office's long-range forecast between July 30 and August 13 reads: "The end of July and first part of August will probably see a continuation of similar weather to the previous week or so - this being generally rather changeable with spells of rain or showers mixed in with some drier, brighter days. "Towards mid-August, there are tentative signs that high pressure may become rather more dominant, which would bring more in the way dry, settled weather more widely. "Temperatures are expected to continue to run above average overall, with a greater likelihood, compared to the preceding couple of weeks, of very warm or hot spells to develop by mid-August, especially further south and east." The dramatic maps comes at the time when the Met Office revealed that record-breaking and extreme weather has become increasingly commonplace in the UK due to the change in the climate conditions. The National Weather Agency explained that extreme hot weather and rainfall are becoming the norm in the country, with the last three years being the UK's top five warmest on record. 1. London 2. Surrey 3. West Sussex 4. East Sussex 5. Hampshire 6. Berkshire 7. Kent 8. Bucks 9. Herts 10. Oxfordshire

Associated Press
7 hours ago
- Associated Press
Golf in a hangar? DeChambeau's woes at the British Open get 'The Scientist' thinking
PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland (AP) — As a popular YouTuber and golfing enigma, Bryson DeChambeau is known for coming up with some wacky, radical ideas. 'The Scientist' might have another one in the pipeline. 'This is going to be wild,' DeChambeau proffered at the British Open on Tuesday, 'but imagine a scenario where you've got a 400-yard tent, and you can just hit any type of shot with any wind with all the fans. 'That's what I imagine, like in a hangar or something like that. A big stadium. That would be cool to test.' Don't put it past DeChambeau to go through with it. After all, he's open to anything if it means improving his patchy record at golf's oldest major championship. The 31-year-old American has played seven times at the Open Championship, where handling the fickle weather can be the key to success. He missed the cut on three occasions and only finished inside the top 30 once. It's a record that frustrates one of the sport's deeper thinkers. He remembers playing well at the Walker Cup at Royal Lytham St. Anne's — one of the courses on the British Open rotation — back in 2015, and was quick to point out he coped fine in windy conditions in LIV Golf events in Miami and Valderrama this year. Place him in the British Open, though, and he can get blown away — like last year at Royal Troon, when he shot 76-75 to miss the cut and said afterward: 'I can do it when it's warm and not windy.' 'The times I've been over here, for some reason, my golf swing hasn't been where it needs to be,' DeChambeau said Tuesday. 'Right now it feels as good as it's ever been. Hitting it far, hitting it straight as I can, and learning how to putt better on these greens in windy conditions and rain and all that. 'It's just figuring it out. It's just going to take time and something that I never really experienced growing up in California.' Lifting the claret jug — as unlikely as it would be, given his Open woes — would deliver the two-time U.S. Open champion a third major title and no doubt boost the already-swelling audience on his YouTube channel that has risen to more than 2 million subscribers. His popularity is clear over in Northern Ireland, too. Late Monday, dozens of people — mostly kids — were seen waiting outside Portrush to get a photo with, or the autograph of, DeChambeau. He obliged, happily. DeChambeau is using YouTube to have some fun and to show the world a different side to him. He even suggested it's just as important as the results he gets. 'I'm not going to be here forever,' he said. 'What footprint do I want to leave? I think it humbles me and almost makes me more passionate about what I'm doing off the professional golf course. 'Am I going to get frustrated playing bad golf?' he posed. 'Yeah. Am I going to want to still sign autographs? Yeah, because I care about the game.' That's not to say he doesn't still have a burning desire to win at Portrush this week — and secure a result that will impress Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley in the process, ahead of the match against Europe in September. 'I feel pressure every week to play good for not only Keegan, but myself, and the people that I love online and everybody that's watching me,' DeChambeau said. 'I'll walk through the fire,' he added, 'rather than run away from it.' ___ AP golf: