[MR] BBC: Welsh Castles
Garth Groff
ggg9y at virginia.edu
Mon May 7 04:58:26 PDT 2012
Noble friends,
Today the BBC is featuring a brief slide show with ten views of Welsh
castles. Or more properly, views of mostly English castles build in
Wales during Edward I's conquest. Very nice slides:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-17861853 .
The photo for Carew Castle mentions a tide mill. Though intact, this
mill is no longer working. The current structure and machinery date from
the late 18th/early 19th century. A tide mill has been on this site
since since at least the 1500s. And what is a tide mill, you ask? Simply
a water mill which is powered by tidal water flowing back and forth,
supplemented by water stored in ponds at high tide that can be released
at low tide. Tide mills used to be common in the low-lying coastal areas
of England (and there were some in the US too). Only four such mills
remain in Great Britain, and only two still work. You can read about the
Carew mill in the Wikipedia entry for Carew Castle:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carew_Castle . The Eling Mill in Hampshire
can be found at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eling_Tide_Mill . The
apparently recently restored Woodbridge Mill in Suffolk has its own web
site: http://www.woodbridgetidemill.org.uk/ . These mills are really out
of our period, but the technology was common enough in the SCA times to
make them a legitimate item for study.
Kind regards,
Lord Mungo Napier, Avid Mill Enthusiast
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