The Guardian Weekly

MAELOR SAESNEG

- Wrexham, Wales Jim Perrin

The English Maelor! It’s the appendix to Wales that dangles off the bulge of the Welsh north-eastern border and reaches almost as far as Whitchurch in Shropshire. DH Lawrence regarded this as a Welshflavo­ured county, and some of the earliest Welsh poetry, dating back to the sixth century, locates here.

The great Welsh warrior chieftain Owain Glyndŵr, at the end of the 14th century, also rode this way, past the deep and phragmites-fringed lake, to marry Margaret Hanmer. Six centuries later, the outstandin­g feminist literary critic Lorna Sage (1943-2001) was brought up in nearby Hanmer, and her award-winning memoir Bad Blood (2000) leaves a vivid impression of the place and her childhood there.

This country around Ellesmere is a haunting, fascinatin­g place, terrific for birds, and not just for the waterfowl either, though who can resist the bizarre courtship rituals of the great crested grebe, which you have as good a chance of witnessing here as anywhere I know? The smaller, rarer birds are also well represente­d. Sitting by the lake at Hanmer, I focused my glass on the reedbeds surroundin­g it.

Most of “the Shropshire meres” (a common name for this magical region) are kettle holes, formed by the melting of great blocks of ice left behind as the glaciers retreated in the last ice age, and Hanmer’s has similar origins. The mimicry of a sedge warbler drifted on the damp air. Small flocks of long-tailed tits scattered past.

Lake water lapped with low sounds, the faint scent of the guelder rose in flower filled the air, and only the thrum of a tractor muck-spreading and the skirling of children at play in the village disturbed the long peace.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: CLIFFORD HARPER ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: CLIFFORD HARPER

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