"In 1973, Roger Deakin, a British writer and environmental activist, acquired a tumbledown sixteenth-century farmhouse outside the ancient village of , in , and began a restoration, repairing stone walls and replacing roof tiles. Among the attributes of Walnut Tree Farm, as the house was called, was a deep, spring-fed . It didn’t surround the house, as with a fortified castle, but was excavated into the land, in roughly parallel lines, at the front and the back of the property. The moat had served its original, Elizabethan owner as a water supply, a cooler, and a status symbol. Over the centuries, it fell into disrepair, becoming silted up from falling leaves and rotting tree roots. Deakin had the moat dredged to a depth of ten feet; staked a wooden ladder by the bank, near the spreading roots of a tree; and began regularly swimming in the cold, greenish water. He gained what he called a frog’s-eye view of the changing seasons, and an intimate familiarity with the creatures sharing the moat, from to s."
— Roger Deakin

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University of Cambridge alumniNon-fiction authors from EnglandEnvironmentalists from EnglandSwimmers
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University of Cambridge alumniNon-fiction authors from EnglandEnvironmentalists from EnglandSwimmers

Roger Deakin

(11 February 1943 – 19 August 2006) was an English author, maker, and environmentalist. His 1999 book Waterlog: A Swimmer's Journey Through Britain, published by , was a bestseller in the UK, inspired the start of the movement, and is generally regarded as a classic of .

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