Lago della Ninfa is a lake that originated from a large landslide,[1] now artificially maintained, located at 1,500 m (4,900 ft) altitude at the foot of Monte Cimone, in the municipality of Sestola, Province of Modena, Emilia-Romagna, Italy.

Lago della Ninfa
A body of water surrounded by pine trees.
Ninfa Lake in autumn
LocationSestola, Province of Modena, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
Coordinates44°12′39″N 10°43′30″E / 44.21083°N 10.72500°E / 44.21083; 10.72500
TypeArtificial lake, originally formed by a landslide
Basin countriesItaly
Surface area
0.1536 km2 (0.0593 sq mi)
Surface elevation
1,500 m (4,900 ft)
SettlementsSestola
Map
Interactive map of Lago della Ninfa

Once called Lago dei Budaloni, it took its current name from the refuge built on site in 1928, which referred to an ancient legend according to which a beautiful and wicked nymph lived in the lake, attracting hunters, shepherds, and travelers to drown them in the whirlpools she created in the waters.[2]

The lake is now maintained artificially: to make it more attractive for tourism, the marsh vegetation at the bottom was removed, along with the thin natural silty-clay layer that waterproofed the bottom. This intervention caused the lake to drain. To remedy this, the bottom was asphalted, and the lake is artificially fed through a fountain to maintain a constant level.[3]

It is surrounded by beech forests and coniferous woods, but in the past, the surrounding slopes were bare (as shown in some vintage postcards), with only a few ancient beech trees standing out, most of which were cut down during World War II by the Germans who needed wood during the occupation of Sestola. A surviving beech tree can still be admired near one of the adjacent refuges.[4]

Ski resort

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Near the lake, there is an equipped ski resort belonging to the Cimone ski area [it]. It consists of:[5]

  • a medium-difficulty alpine ski slope about 900 m (3,000 ft) long with a chairlift for ascent,
  • a cross-country skiing track,
  • a slope for children and beginners equipped with a moving walkway,
  • a snow park for snowboarding,
  • a paid baby park with inflatable games and a conveyor belt serving a small training field for children and a slope for descending with small rubber dinghies.

Notes

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  1. "I Geositi dell'Emilia-Romagna — Geologia, sismica e suoli — E-R Ambiente — Lago della Ninfa" [Geosites of Emilia-Romagna — Geology, seismicity, and soils — E-R Environment — Lago della Ninfa]. geo.regione.emilia-romagna.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2023-10-14.
  2. Tiziano Bedostri. "Sul lago di Ninfa a cavallo della natura" [On Ninfa Lake astride nature]. Cavallo 2000 (in Italian). Retrieved 2023-04-07.
  3. "I Geositi dell'Emilia-Romagna — Geologia, sismica e suoli — E-R Ambiente — Lago della Ninfa" [Geosites of Emilia-Romagna — Geology, seismicity, and soils — E-R Environment — Lago della Ninfa]. geo.regione.emilia-romagna.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2023-04-06.
  4. Eugenio Soliani (2022-04-23). "Il Lago della Ninfa" [The Ninfa Lake]. In Appennino Modenese (in Italian). Retrieved 2023-04-07.
  5. "Cimone Sci - Piste ed impianti" [Cimone Sci - Slopes and lifts]. cimonesci.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2023-10-14.