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Posted By: Greenwood Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 31st Dec 2017 10:24am
My daughter has just moved from Greasby to West Kirby and says the tapwater tastes better there. Does anyone know if all Wirral's water comes from the same source, or if different areas have different supplies? I've never really thought about it before, but now I'm curious. Couldn't find anything useful on the United Utilities website. It would be interesting to know.
Posted By: granny Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 31st Dec 2017 10:49am


As I understood, Liverpool water comes from a reservoir in Wales, and Wirral does too but not sure if it's the same reservoir.

Probably more chemicals added to different areas.
Posted By: dustymclean Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 31st Dec 2017 10:58am
There is a Spring Hill borehole in Balls Road.oxton Road Birkenhead Brewery also pumped their water.I would think there are others which could account for the difference. Wirral sits on permeable rock and has a large aquifer beneath it.Information from Peel Holdings land survey (Wirral Waters) and fracking surveys give an insight into local water extraction and potential for contamination?? or not.
Posted By: yoller Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 31st Dec 2017 11:47am
Birkenhead's main water supply used to come from the Alwen Reservoir in North Wales, which was built to supply the town. I don't know if the water still comes from there. See ...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alwen_Reservoir
Posted By: Excoriator Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 31st Dec 2017 3:52pm
Much of Wirral's water comes now from the River Dee from an abstraction plant in Chester.

There are many boreholes in Wirral a number of them used for water supply before the abstraction plant was completed.. They can be seen on a map here:

http://mapapps.bgs.ac.uk/geologyofbritain/home.html?

Many of them have details of depth, diameter, rate of abstraction of water etc. Of particular interest to me was a borehole at Bebington station, drilled in 1931. It is located in the heavily overgrown patch of land on the ALDI side of the embankment and was used to supply locomotives with water. There is a small building (now invisible under layers of bramble, ivy, nettles etc) above the well which is 27" in diameter and was drilled down to 300 feet.

It must have been quite heavily used. In 1949 51 million gallons were abstracted. Thirsty beasts, steam engines!
Posted By: diggingdeeper Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 31st Dec 2017 4:36pm
I was told all the Wirral boreholes no longer contribute to our water supply.

Most (if not all) comes from the Huntington extraction point on the River Dee and from there goes to Sutton Hall. There may still be some comes from the Heronbridge and Deeside extraction points but it would be a bit pointless as Huntington supplies huge capacity of 400 megalitres a day and has a capability of more, it is rated at 250,000 megalitres a year which is far more than the other two put together.
Posted By: fish5133 Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 31st Dec 2017 6:19pm
Lyn Celyn near Bala

Construction of the reservoir involved flooding the village of Capel Celyn and adjacent farmland, a deeply controversial move. Much of the opposition was brought about because the village was a stronghold of Welsh culture and the Welsh language, whilst the reservoir was being built to supply Liverpool and parts of the Wirral peninsula with water, rather than Wales.
Posted By: Greenwood Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 1st Jan 2018 9:21am
Thanks to all for your answers. There are a lot of well-informed people on here!
Posted By: dustymclean Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 1st Jan 2018 6:35pm
2013

Attached picture img20180101_18272449.jpg
Posted By: Greenwood Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 2nd Jan 2018 10:31pm
That makes interesting reading, thanks - good old Bunter sandstone!
Posted By: diggingdeeper Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 3rd Jan 2018 1:21am
It turns out that my memory of the boreholes being closed was totally wrong. A conversation I had in 2009 said ...

Water for Wirral comes in now either from:
Sutton Hall Water Treatment Works, fed from the Dee at points near Handbridge and Heron Bridge in Chester.

Ellesmere Port is split between Sutton Hall and a bulk supply point at Hapsford which combines water from Hurleston Treatment Works in Chester and Simmonds Hill Reservoir and Borehole at the back of Frodsham.

Prenton is supplied partially from Crosshill Reservoir (water from Sutton Hall) or from Prenton Reservoir which gets it's water from Prenton Borehole (Prenton Dell Road) and Sutton Hall via Clatterbridge roundabout.

West Kirby gets water from both Newton and Grange boreholes as well as supplies from Crosshill and Heswall Reservoirs.
Posted By: Greenwood Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 6th Jan 2018 10:38pm
So we still have usable boreholes - that's good. At least we shouldn't be hit by water restrictions in summer, as it looks like the south east of England might be. Wonder if the idea of a 'water grid' to shift water around the country will ever become feasible? Probably just as feasible as HS2, I reckon...
Posted By: granny Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 6th Jan 2018 11:05pm


The south east i.e. Kent have there own boreholes. They closed them all of in the late 1970's . So they shouldn't need any of our water.
I think that idea will fall apart, it was probably another idea for unification of all water companies(eventually) .Only need to see how many shares of our utilities are owned by foreign Governments. I believe the French got a huge percentage of NW Water when the water authorities were floated on the stock market a number of years ago. I always did wonder what the French wanted with our water companies.
Posted By: granny Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 6th Jan 2018 11:11pm


SO far as HS2 goes, well that's different. I didn't think it was a good ide to begin with , now I'm not so sure. I do think it's a way of moving people out of London and bringing the 'bosses' to manage the companies they will re-locate. However, if it contributes to the regeneration of the area, then it must be good.
With the promised Peel Ports, things can't stay the same as they are now. Transport infrastructure and logistics has to be of main concern.
Posted By: granny Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 7th Jan 2018 12:07am

It tells which companies were sold off here. Pretty incredible !

Who owns Britain. Published in May 2010

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/b...aunches-first-uk-stock-take-1974079.html

Looks like Australia have a stake in our water !
Posted By: diggingdeeper Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 7th Jan 2018 3:34am
Something I read the other day, can't remember the exact details but it went along the lines of .....

"Although we privatised our water industry, it is still 30% Government owned, unfortunately they are foreign Governments."

When your own Governments asset strips your own country for their own gains, you know we need a revolution.
Posted By: granny Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 7th Jan 2018 3:18pm
It wasn't for our own Government gains it was for the United States of Europe !
Posted By: granny Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 3rd Jun 2020 2:09pm
Anyone know why Cross Hill Reservoir is having water transported to it/or from it ? Huge tankers have been going up and down for what seems the whole night and so far, most of today ?

I was only thinking the other day, why we haven't been told there is a drought in the offing.. Normally 4 weeks without rain and the heat we have had, they would be putting warnings out.
Much more water used these last 3 months with all the hand washing and cleaning.
Posted By: diggingdeeper Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 3rd Jun 2020 5:08pm
Possibly the other way around, extracting water to take it to a firezone, shortage or burst pipe somewhere else? They would take far too long to fill up from a hydrant.

Or maybe emptying Croshill for maintenance.
Posted By: granny Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 3rd Jun 2020 9:10pm

Could be DD. It's something I have not witnessed before, during 20yrs living here. They seem to have knocked off tonight but they have been going all day long.
Posted By: Salmon Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 4th Jun 2020 6:34am
These are undated as far as i can see but look about right
https://www.unitedutilities.com/about-us/Merseyside/jacksons-edge-resevoir/
and
http://www.abg-geosynthetics.com/case-studies/reservoir-roof-drainage-cross-hill-barnston-uk.html
Posted By: diggingdeeper Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 4th Jun 2020 11:59am
The roof membrane work was completed March 2017 https://www.ericwright.co.uk/case-studies/crosshills-service-reservoir-no-1/
Posted By: mikeeb Re: Origin of Wirral's tap water? - 4th Jun 2020 1:38pm
The main resevoir levels are lower, West Cumbria is only at 41.5% capacity.
I assume we get ours from Dee & Vyrnwy Reservoirs which have the most at 75.1%.
https://www.unitedutilities.com/help-and-support/your-water-supply/reservoir-levels/
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