Cambridgeshire Lodes

52°08′49″N 0°18′47″E / 52.147°N 0.313°E / 52.147; 0.313

Cambridgeshire Lodes
The pumping station and flood gates at the end of Bottisham Lode
Map
Specifications
Locks2
StatusSome Navigable
Navigation authorityEnvironment Agency
History
Original ownerDrainage Commissioners
Date of actnone
Date of first useRoman period onwards
Geography
Connects toRiver Cam, River Great Ouse
Cambridgeshire Lodes
River Great Ouse
Soham Lode sluice
Soham Lode
Railway Bridge
Soham
Reach Lode Lock
Wicken Lode
Burwell Lode
Reach Lode
High Head Bridge
Lifting bridge
Monks Lode
Reach
Burwell
River Cam
Swaffham Lode Lock
Swaffham Bulbeck Lode
Slades Farm
Bottisham Lode
Disused railway bridge
Lode
Lode Mill
Quy Water
Commercial End

The Cambridgeshire Lodes are a series of man-made waterways, believed to be Roman in origin, located in the county of Cambridgeshire, England. Bottisham, Swaffham Bulbeck, Reach, Burwell, Wicken and Monks Lodes all connect to the River Cam, while Soham and Cottenham Lodes connect to the River Great Ouse. All have been navigable historically, but some are no longer officially navigable.

Bottisham Lode was navigated throughout the 19th century, and although the flood gates at its mouth were replaced in 2001, it carries a "No unauthorised vessels" notice. Swaffham Bulbeck Lode has been rendered unnavigable by the removal of the lower lock gates, and the replacement of the upper lock gates with a guillotine gate which provides little headroom. Reach Lode is quite deep, as a result of the surrounding land sinking, and the banks being built up. The lower gate of the entrance lock has been replaced by a guillotine gate, enabling boats up to 63 feet (19 m) long to use it.

Burwell Lode is a tributary of Reach Lode, and is another deep lode. Barges were built and maintained at Burwell until 1936, and it was used commercially until 1963, when carriage of sugar beet ceased. Wicken Lode is another tributary of Reach Lode, and was important for the carriage of peat and sedge. It runs through Wicken Fen, one of the oldest nature reserves in England, as the National Trust bought their first part of it in 1899. Soham Lode is more recent than most, probably dating from the 1790s. It ran by Soham Mere, a large inland lake which was drained in the late 18th century.

In 2007 a strategy plan considered options for the management of the lodes which included rebuilding most of them at a lower level, but concluded that maintaining the banks at the existing level was a better long-term solution.