River Dove, North Yorkshire

River Dove

The River Dove near Farndale
Country England
Basin
Main source Farndale Moor, Nth Yorkshire
372 metres (1,220 ft)
54°24′24″N 1°2′23″W / 54.40667°N 1.03972°W / 54.40667; -1.03972 (Primary source of River Dove)
River mouth River Rye near Salton
24 metres (79 ft)
54°12′7″N 0°54′35″W / 54.20194°N 0.90972°W / 54.20194; -0.90972 (Mouth of River Dove, North Yorkshire)Coordinates: 54°12′7″N 0°54′35″W / 54.20194°N 0.90972°W / 54.20194; -0.90972 (Mouth of River Dove, North Yorkshire)
Basin size 59.2 square kilometres (22.9 sq mi)
Physical characteristics
Length 30.22 kilometres (18.78 mi)

The River Dove is a river in North Yorkshire, England. It rises on the North York Moors and flows south to join the River Rye, itself a tributary of the River Derwent. The upper valley of the river is known as Farndale. The name is of Brittonic Celtic origin, meaning "dark river".[1] Its principal tributary is the Hodge Beck.

Course

The river flows through Farndale south-east past several small settlements to Church Houses. Here it turns south and continues meandering past Low Mill to Lowna. At Gillamoor it heads south-east again past Hutton-le-Hole before returning southwards past Ravenswick and to the east of Kirkbymoorside. It continues past Keldholme and Kikrby Mills to Great Edstone. From there it flows south south-east to where it joins the River Rye in the Vale of Pickering near the village of Salton.

The Environment Agency have a gauging station at Kirby Mills where the average low river level is 0.2 metres (0.66 ft) and the high river level 0.52 metres (1.7 ft) with a record high level of 2.45 metres (8.0 ft). The record high level shows the river can be susceptible to flooding.[2]

Geography

Both the River Dove and Hodge Beck are partly swallowed by the local limestone aquifer and issue again further down the valley. During summer months the bed of Hodge Beck often runs dry. The soil in the valley floor is loam over clay. The bedrock is Jurassic limestone with some sandstone.[3]

Leisure

Between Church Houses and Low Mill in Farndale, the River Dove is popular with walkers due to its picturesque setting. The banks of the river are known for their wild daffodils which are rumoured to have been planted by monks from nearby Rievaulx Abbey. Along this part of the valley is The Farndale Daffodil Walk, an 11.4-kilometre (7.1 mi) circular walk starting at Lowna Bridge.[4][5]

In Literature

William Wordsworth's poem, She dwelt among the untrodden ways from the Lucy series of poems refers to the eponymous Lucy living close to the "springs of Dove", a reference to the source of the river.

Lists

Tributaries

  • Middle Heads
  • Gill Beck
  • Gill Dike
  • Oak Beck
  • Low Dike
  • Green Slack Dike
  • Fish Beck
  • West Gill Beck
  • Lapa Green Dike
  • Yealand Rigg Slack
  • Shortsha Beck
  • Hodge Beck
  • Carr Dike

Settlements

  • Church Houses
  • Low Mill
  • Lowna
  • Gillamoor
  • Hutton-le-Hole
  • Ravenswick
  • Kirkbymoorside
  • Keldholme
  • Kirkby Mills
  • Great Edstone
  • Salton

Crossings

  • Thorn Wath Bridge, Church Houses
  • Mill Bridge (foot)
  • Waste Bridge, Low Mill
  • Mercer's Bridge (foot)
  • Dale End Bridge (foot)
  • Birch Hagg Bridge
  • Lowna Bridge, Lowna
  • Yoadwath Ford
  • Unnamed road, Ravenswick
  • Keldholme Bridge, Keldholme
  • A170, Kirkbymoorside
  • Unnamed road near Salton

Sources

References

  1. Watts, Victor, ed. (2010), "Dove", The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names, Cambridge University Press
  2. "River Levels". Environment Agency River and Sea Levels. Retrieved 28 August 2011.
  3. "Geology". Retrieved 28 August 2011.
  4. "Walking". Retrieved 28 August 2011.
  5. "Farndale daffodils". Retrieved 28 August 2011.
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