The lake Vättern has been famous for the excellent quality of its transparent water. Many of the municipalities in the area receive their drinking water directly from Vättern. The lake water requires very little treatment before being pumped into the municipal systems and the natural, untreated water can be safely drunk from almost any point in the lake. It has been suggested that Vättern is the largest body of potable water in the world. The surrounding municipalities process 100% of their sewage. Vättern is known for the annual recreational cycling race
Vätternrundan, attracting some 20,000 participants to finish the 300 km trip around the shores of the lake. Vättern is also noted for its fishing, serving people in the nearby districts. Tourist sport fishermen and vacationers are free to fish in the lake as long as they don't use nets. The lake is also used for commercial fishing.
The drainage basin A number of industries provide employment in the drainage basin: mining, manufacturing, forestry and paper. Agriculturalists raise cattle, sheep, swine and poultry.
Cultural notes According to the Catholic Church, Saint
Catherine of Vadstena performed a miracle involving three people in peril on lake ice.
Thomas Nashe mentions this lake (Lake Vether) in his
Terrors of the Night (published 1594), although he mistakenly locates the lake in Iceland: Admirable, above the rest, are the incomprehensible wonders of the bottomless Lake Vether, over which no fowl flies but is frozen to death, nor any man passeth but he is senselessly benumbed like a statue of marble. All the inhabitants round about it are deafened with the hideous roaring of his waters when the winter breaketh up, and the ice in his dissolving gives a terrible crack like to thunder, whenas out of the midst of it, as out of Mont-Gibell, a sulphureous stinking smoke issues, that wellnigh poisons the whole country. Lake Vether is also mentioned in
Samuel Johnson's essay for
The Idler No. 96, on Hacho of Lapland.
John Bauer, his wife Ester and their three-year-old son, Bengt, drowned in the sinking in bad weather of the steamer
Per Brahe on the lake on the night 19 November 1918. ==See also==