Lowes Loch, Ayrshire
Encyclopedia
Lowes Loch, The Lochs or Loch of Hill is now a small natural freshwater loch in the North Ayrshire
Council Areas (KA15 2JR), lying in a glacial 'Kettle hole', once of greater extent, lying below Brownmuir and Lochland Hills on the Threepwood Road, near Beith
, in the Parish of Beith
. The loch may once have had a small island within it.
The name 'Lowe' is said to have derived from the Celtic for 'Hill' and Lochlands Hill was once known as Lowes Hill. Before the Cadgerford Burn was deepend the lochs level would have been higher and may have once drained to the west and east.
Lows Cottage
This building was originally a retting or rhetting
cottage, later becoming a small farm with a byre attached.
Cartographic evidence
Blaeu's map of 1684, pbased on Timothy Pont
's map of circa 1604, names a 'Loch of Hill' and Roy's map of circa 1747 shows two small lochs, with the outflow of the western loch running down to the Muir Burn and then into the Roebank Burn. Thomson's map of 1832 shows a single loch lying below Lows Farm and draining east into the Dusk water. OS maps of the 1850s do not indicate open water and a discreet clump of trees suggests a small island.
The abandoned Rakerfield Farm lies above the site on the lower slopes of Brownmuir or Brimmer Hill. This farm was occupied by the elderly couple, Mrs & Mrs Blair, at the time of the construction of Kirklee Green reservoir and was purchased upon their death by Ayrshire County Council and the roof removed.
The Cadgerford Burn
The name of the inflow and outflow burn indicates, as stated, a ford on this old road once used by cadgers or carriers on horseback of goods, including items such as Dunlop cheeses. The burn is the existing inflow and outflow from Lowes Loch to the Dusk Water; it has been canalised and greatly deepend to lower the level of Lowes Loch. The burn now flows into the Kirkleegreen Reservoir, built after 1858 and by 1891. The waters of this old reservoir, now an angling loch, run into Cuffhill Reservoir and then into the Dusk Water. The ford may have been where a culvert now carries the outflow of the small loch in front of Lows Cottage down towards Lowes Loch.
Beith's annual fair, called Tennant's or Saint Tinnan's Day, was previously held on the Cuff Hill It was famous for its show, and interestibgly it's Cadger's parade and sale of horses.
The lochan in front of Low Cottage was a retting pond and the cottage was built as a retting cottage for the preparation of flax. The loch no longer has any open water. Retting is the process of taking off the outer part of flax by laying flax in water.
Thomson's map of 1832 and the OS maps show that the loch flowed via the Cadgerford Burn into the millpond of the old Threepwood Bleach and Dye works below Cuff Hill and thus helped to power the factory's waterwheel. Since at least 1891 the waters of the loch have flowed into the Kirkleegreen and Cuffhill Reservoirs.
Dugald Semple
, vegetarian and the Scottish Apostle of the simple life lived at Davie's o'the Mill from the 1930s until around 1950, when it was a smallholding. Dugald was a hippy before hippies officially existed. He travelled widely to healthy living conferences in Norway, USA and elsewhere and died in Edinburgh aged 79. A regular visitor to Ailsa Craig
, he was known locally as the 'Bird Man' and was an enthusiast for outdoor living, publishing a book entitled A Free Man's Phiosophy. He welcomed walkers and cyclists who often camped on his land.
. The Common Hawker
or Sedge Darner (Aeshna juncea) breeds at the site. An extensive woodland of willow and birch extends towards Lowhouse Farmlands. Extensive areas of rushes (Juncus sps) are present.
which became part of Western SMT
. It was demolished as part of precautions intended to prevent any possible contamination of the reservoir water.
In 1956 it is recorded that a Mr.Newall found a stone slab built into the ruin of Lochlands, presumably the more modern building, bearing a carved circle, 15ins in diameter, containing a simple cross with one arm extended to represent the shaft. This ancient stone cross may relate to the nearby site of Kirklee Green with its obvious religious links. It has not been seen since 1956.
A small church may have been built here, possibly at the site of the original small Lochlands building, which stood on the bank of a small loch, to 'counteract' the many pagan sites located at Cuff Hill, such as the lost 'Druid's Stone Circle, the Druids' Graves or Caves (a long barrow), the now destroyed Four Stones, a standing stone, etc. The name Cuff itself has been interpreted as meaning Druid or Priest. Saint Inan's Well and Chair are close by and one of the hills in the area, marked as Krelig Hill, was once topped by a cross.
this moor is the same as the "Wood of Belt" in which, at the close of the day, a battle, supposed to have taken place in
the latter half of the sixth century.
Curling stones were produced at a site near Kirklee Green Reservoir for a number of years in the 19th century and it is said that a considerable number were used in the construction of the reservoir's dam.
An old cheese press stone is located outside Low Cottage.
Cuff Hill Lochan
This small lochan (0.214 acres) is located on the south facing slopes of Cuff Hill and may be artificial as suggested by the number of old whinstone quarries located in the vicinity. It is marked on the 1858 OS map and was been deepened and modified for use as a reservoir, with a sluice and filter bed, probably once serving The Cuff Farm below it. The site is rich in wildlife, including Common Hawker
dragonflies. The rare White Climbing Fumitory Adlumia fungosa grows amongst gorse nearby.
North Ayrshire
North Ayrshire is one of 32 council areas in Scotland with a population of roughly 136,000 people. It is located in the south-west region of Scotland, and borders the areas of Inverclyde to the north, Renfrewshire to the north-east and East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire to the East and South...
Council Areas (KA15 2JR), lying in a glacial 'Kettle hole', once of greater extent, lying below Brownmuir and Lochland Hills on the Threepwood Road, near Beith
Beith
Beith is a small town situated in the Garnock Valley in North Ayrshire, Scotland approximately 20-miles south-west of Glasgow. The town is situated on the crest of a hill and was known originally as the "Hill o' Beith" after its Court Hill.-History:-Name:Beith's name is thought to emanate from...
, in the Parish of Beith
Beith
Beith is a small town situated in the Garnock Valley in North Ayrshire, Scotland approximately 20-miles south-west of Glasgow. The town is situated on the crest of a hill and was known originally as the "Hill o' Beith" after its Court Hill.-History:-Name:Beith's name is thought to emanate from...
. The loch may once have had a small island within it.
The lochs site
Marked on Ordnance Survey maps as 'The Lochs', it was locally known as the Lowes Loch and lies on the old 'Lowes Lands'. Four lochs may have once been present, a small one in front of Lows Cottage, a second along to the west of the surviving loch, and a smaller fourth one, now partly drained by a deep ditch, sitting next to the older of the two Lochlands Farms ruins.The name 'Lowe' is said to have derived from the Celtic for 'Hill' and Lochlands Hill was once known as Lowes Hill. Before the Cadgerford Burn was deepend the lochs level would have been higher and may have once drained to the west and east.
Lows Cottage
This building was originally a retting or rhetting
Retting
Retting is a process employing the action of micro-organisms and moisture on plants to dissolve or rot away much of the cellular tissues and pectins surrounding bast-fibre bundles, and so facilitating separation of the fibre from the stem...
cottage, later becoming a small farm with a byre attached.
Cartographic evidence
Blaeu's map of 1684, pbased on Timothy Pont
Timothy Pont
Timothy Pont was a Scottish topographer, the first to produce a detailed map of Scotland. Pont's maps are among the earliest surviving to show a European country in minute detail, from an actual survey.-Life:...
's map of circa 1604, names a 'Loch of Hill' and Roy's map of circa 1747 shows two small lochs, with the outflow of the western loch running down to the Muir Burn and then into the Roebank Burn. Thomson's map of 1832 shows a single loch lying below Lows Farm and draining east into the Dusk water. OS maps of the 1850s do not indicate open water and a discreet clump of trees suggests a small island.
The abandoned Rakerfield Farm lies above the site on the lower slopes of Brownmuir or Brimmer Hill. This farm was occupied by the elderly couple, Mrs & Mrs Blair, at the time of the construction of Kirklee Green reservoir and was purchased upon their death by Ayrshire County Council and the roof removed.
The Cadgerford Burn
The name of the inflow and outflow burn indicates, as stated, a ford on this old road once used by cadgers or carriers on horseback of goods, including items such as Dunlop cheeses. The burn is the existing inflow and outflow from Lowes Loch to the Dusk Water; it has been canalised and greatly deepend to lower the level of Lowes Loch. The burn now flows into the Kirkleegreen Reservoir, built after 1858 and by 1891. The waters of this old reservoir, now an angling loch, run into Cuffhill Reservoir and then into the Dusk Water. The ford may have been where a culvert now carries the outflow of the small loch in front of Lows Cottage down towards Lowes Loch.
Beith's annual fair, called Tennant's or Saint Tinnan's Day, was previously held on the Cuff Hill It was famous for its show, and interestibgly it's Cadger's parade and sale of horses.
Uses
Flax rettingThe lochan in front of Low Cottage was a retting pond and the cottage was built as a retting cottage for the preparation of flax. The loch no longer has any open water. Retting is the process of taking off the outer part of flax by laying flax in water.
Thomson's map of 1832 and the OS maps show that the loch flowed via the Cadgerford Burn into the millpond of the old Threepwood Bleach and Dye works below Cuff Hill and thus helped to power the factory's waterwheel. Since at least 1891 the waters of the loch have flowed into the Kirkleegreen and Cuffhill Reservoirs.
Davie's o'the Mill
Davie's o'the Mill is a possibly an old flax mill associated with the retting cottage. The Davie's o'the mill ruins lie nearby, once powered by a burn that runs down from the Saint Inan's well site. A right of way still runs down to the site from near Cauldhame Cottage and a lane runs up to the old mill from near Mill o'Beith and the Warlock Craigie. Lying quite close to Loanhead Quarry the steading is now ruinous (2011).Dugald Semple
Dugald Semple
Dugald Semple , was a Scottish advocate of 'simple living', a naturalist, prolific author, and Fruitarian. No record of marriage or children appears to exist.-Life:...
, vegetarian and the Scottish Apostle of the simple life lived at Davie's o'the Mill from the 1930s until around 1950, when it was a smallholding. Dugald was a hippy before hippies officially existed. He travelled widely to healthy living conferences in Norway, USA and elsewhere and died in Edinburgh aged 79. A regular visitor to Ailsa Craig
Ailsa Craig
Ailsa Craig is an island of 219.69 acres in the outer Firth of Clyde, Scotland where blue hone granite was quarried to make curling stones. "Ailsa" is pronounced "ale-sa", with the first syllable stressed...
, he was known locally as the 'Bird Man' and was an enthusiast for outdoor living, publishing a book entitled A Free Man's Phiosophy. He welcomed walkers and cyclists who often camped on his land.
Natural history
The relatively small area of open water is dominated by floating pondweeds (Potamogeton sps), and has some water lilies Nuphar luteaNuphar lutea
Nuphar lutea is an aquatic plant of the family Nymphaeaceae, native to temperate regions of Europe, northwest Africa, and western Asia.-Growth:...
. The Common Hawker
Common Hawker
The Common Hawker or Sedge Darner is one of the larger species of hawker dragonflies. It is native to Eurasia and northern North America. The flight period is from June to early October.It is long with a brown body...
or Sedge Darner (Aeshna juncea) breeds at the site. An extensive woodland of willow and birch extends towards Lowhouse Farmlands. Extensive areas of rushes (Juncus sps) are present.
The Lochlands Farms
A small building, marked as a ruin in 1856 and now entirely absent, with its own entrance and sheep fauld, sat within woodland in line with the small loch and later substantial drainage ditch feature that runs down to the main loch. The larger Lochlands Farm (NS378555) buildings lay closer to the road a little further back from the Lowes Loch. It has been abandoned since before the 1950s, shown as active in 1914 from the record of the OS map. A photograph of the early 1900s shows a substantial and unusual design for a farm building; 'L' shaped and 'Council House' like in appearance. The OS map shows that this later building had an orchard or ornamental garden and was more of a dwelling than a farm, being occupied by a family who owned the Cunningham bus company in PaisleyPaisley
Paisley is the largest town in the historic county of Renfrewshire in the west central Lowlands of Scotland and serves as the administrative centre for the Renfrewshire council area...
which became part of Western SMT
Western SMT
Western Scottish Motor Traction Co. Limited was a bus operator in south-west Scotland from 1929 to 1985.The company was formed in 1929 by the renaming of Scottish General Transport Co. Ltd, after the British Electric Traction subsidiary formed in 1913 was acquired by the Scottish Motor Traction...
. It was demolished as part of precautions intended to prevent any possible contamination of the reservoir water.
In 1956 it is recorded that a Mr.Newall found a stone slab built into the ruin of Lochlands, presumably the more modern building, bearing a carved circle, 15ins in diameter, containing a simple cross with one arm extended to represent the shaft. This ancient stone cross may relate to the nearby site of Kirklee Green with its obvious religious links. It has not been seen since 1956.
A small church may have been built here, possibly at the site of the original small Lochlands building, which stood on the bank of a small loch, to 'counteract' the many pagan sites located at Cuff Hill, such as the lost 'Druid's Stone Circle, the Druids' Graves or Caves (a long barrow), the now destroyed Four Stones, a standing stone, etc. The name Cuff itself has been interpreted as meaning Druid or Priest. Saint Inan's Well and Chair are close by and one of the hills in the area, marked as Krelig Hill, was once topped by a cross.
Micro-history
It has been speculated that that the Cuff Hill range was the Moor of Beith, and thatthis moor is the same as the "Wood of Belt" in which, at the close of the day, a battle, supposed to have taken place in
the latter half of the sixth century.
Curling stones were produced at a site near Kirklee Green Reservoir for a number of years in the 19th century and it is said that a considerable number were used in the construction of the reservoir's dam.
An old cheese press stone is located outside Low Cottage.
Cuff Hill Lochan
This small lochan (0.214 acres) is located on the south facing slopes of Cuff Hill and may be artificial as suggested by the number of old whinstone quarries located in the vicinity. It is marked on the 1858 OS map and was been deepened and modified for use as a reservoir, with a sluice and filter bed, probably once serving The Cuff Farm below it. The site is rich in wildlife, including Common Hawker
Common Hawker
The Common Hawker or Sedge Darner is one of the larger species of hawker dragonflies. It is native to Eurasia and northern North America. The flight period is from June to early October.It is long with a brown body...
dragonflies. The rare White Climbing Fumitory Adlumia fungosa grows amongst gorse nearby.