Llyn Brenig is a reservoir located on Denbigh Moors in North Wales. The artificial lake, which was constructed between 1973 and 1976, was created by building an embankment dam across the Afon Brenig valley. It lies at 1,200 ft (370 m) above sea level on the border between the counties of Conwy and Denbighshire. It is used to manage the flow in the River Dee as part of the River Dee regulation system.
Construction began in 1973 and was completed in 1976. An earthen bank with stone, which is up to 45 m (148 ft) at its highest point, dammed the Afon Brenig near the village of Pentre-Llyn-Cymmer, Cerrigydrudion. The northern half of the reservoir is in community of Nantglyn. Its perimeter is about 9 miles (14 km).
Brenig, which has a capacity of 60 million m³, was first filled in 1979. Water supply of the catchment into the lake is significantly "over-reservoired", this means the catchment area of Llyn Brenig does not have capacity to refill the reservoir within one annual hydrological cycle. It can take several years for the reservoir to refill again after its water level have been drawn down.[1] Water is only drawn from Llyn Brenig during drought conditions when Llyn Celyn and Bala Lake are no longer predicted to be capable of maintaining the flow in the River Dee.
Commercial logging is conducted around parts of the lake.
Leisure
Llyn Brenig is a popular destination for outward bound activities such as hiking and mountain biking, fishing and watersports. It has a visitor centre and cafe.
During construction of the Llyn Brenig, archeologist found that the Afon Brenig valley had been used for thousand of years by upland communities crossing the Denbigh Moors. Finds included a camp used by Mesolithic people (radiocarbon analysis of the charcoal from their fires to around 5700 BC), Bronze Age artifacts, a ring cairn (a Bronze Age burial mound), and several barrows. There are a number of archaeological trails around Llyn Brenig.
Ospreys
A pair of ospreys began breeding at the lake in 2018, becoming the fifth site in Wales.[3] In 2020 filming of The Bridge, a Channel 4reality television programme, may have disturbed the ospreys during the breeding season.[4] In April 2021, vandals cut down the osprey nest platform with a chainsaw.[5] The same pair of ospreys returned to Llyn Brenig in 2022 and hatched chicks at a replacement nest in the same location. [6] The Brenig Osprey Project, partnership between North Wales Wildlife Trust and Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water, provides a manned viewpoint, a hide, and online video streaming of the nest during the nesting season. [7]