Posting a comment earlier about the meres in Cheshire, Staffs and north Shrops reminded me of a red letter day in June 2013. One dawn wading through a shallow weedy corner of a mere I noticed an odd shaped piece of timber lying submerged in the gin clear margins. I didn't think anything of it at first and returned to my swim and carried on fishing around late-morning once the main tench feeding spell had ended, I returned back to the odd shaped piece of timber and hauled it out on to the bank.
Instantly I knew this was something out of the ordinary and it looked to me like an old log boat - but it couldn't be.. could it? Anyway with the permission of the landowner that afternoon I sent some pics to the County Council Archaeology officer and within 15 mins I got an call from the County Archaeologist asking what I had done with it, and could they see it? I took them to the spot the next morning where I had re-submerged the log boat and they set about taking various measurements and samples. They thought it could be a log boat and sent their findings to an eminent Dutch professor of archaeology who was categoric that this was certainly a log boat - but was unsure of the likely date. Anyway, soon afterwards samples takes from the log boat were carbon dated Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre who reported the tree (oak) from which the log boat was made died between AD 1040–1220, so late Saxon - Norman period.
According to the archaeologists hunters would use these log boats for hunting wildfowl and fish...I would love to think it once belonged to a fisherman who would have been hunting for the same species I fish for some 800 years later.
Anyway, there was some talk of the log boat being removed and treated with a special preservation process which takes over 12-months in a special temperature/moisture controlled process, the cost of which would extend north of £25K!. So it's been put back into a slightly deeper part of the mere and covered over with silt to keep it preserved on the advice of the experts.
Anyway, excuse the long-winded post but thought it might of interest to some. It was a real privilege to have had the fortune to have stumbled upon it, and a reminder that here is always so much more to fishing than catching fish.