river Great Ouse
{{Short description|River in England}}
{{For|other rivers named Ouse|Ouse (disambiguation){{!}}Ouse}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2015}}
{{Use British English|date=May 2015}}
{{Infobox river
| name = River Great Ouse
| name_native =
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| name_other =
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| image = DSCN1566-goba-mooring-after-brownshill-staunch 1200x900.jpg
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| image_caption = The River Great Ouse after Brownshill Staunch, near Over in Cambridgeshire
| map = River Great Ouse map.png
| map_size =
| map_caption = Great Ouse catchment
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| mapframe = yes
| mapframe-zoom = 7
| subdivision_type1 = Country
| subdivision_name1 = United Kingdom
| subdivision_type2 = Constituent country
| subdivision_name2 = England
| subdivision_type3 =
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| subdivision_type4 = Counties
| subdivision_name4 = Northamptonshire, Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Norfolk
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| length = {{cvt|230.|km|mi}}
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| discharge1_location= Denver Sluice[http://nrfa.ceh.ac.uk/data/station/info/33035 Ely Ouse at Denver Complex] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171028150114/http://nrfa.ceh.ac.uk/data/station/info/33035 |date=28 October 2017 }} gauging station. Catchment area 3430 km2
| discharge1_min =
| discharge1_avg = {{cvt|15.8|m3/s|cuft/s}}Catchment area 3430 km2
| discharge1_max =
| source1 =
| source1_location = Syresham, West Northamptonshire, Northamptonshire, England
| source1_coordinates= {{coord|52|05|33|N|01|05|35|W|display=inline}}
| source1_elevation = {{cvt|150|m}}
| mouth = The Wash
| mouth_location = King's Lynn, United Kingdom
| mouth_coordinates = {{coord|52|48|36|N|00|21|18|E|display=inline,title}}
| mouth_elevation = {{cvt|0|m}}
| progression =
| river_system =
| basin_size = {{cvt|8380|km2}}
| tributaries_left = Tove
| tributaries_right = Ouzel, Cam, Lark, Little Ouse, Wissey
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The River Great Ouse ({{IPAc-en|u:|z}} {{respell|ooz}}) is a river in England, the longest of several British rivers called "Ouse". From Syresham in Northamptonshire, the Great Ouse flows through Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Norfolk to drain into the Wash and the North Sea near Kings Lynn. Authorities disagree both on the river's source and its length, with one quoting {{cvt|160|mi|km}}{{cite book |last1=Clayton |first1=Phil |title=Headwaters: Walking to British River Sources |date=2012 |publisher=Frances Lincoln Limited |location=London |isbn=9780711233638 |page=45 |edition=First}}
and another {{cvt|143|mi|km}}.{{cite book |last=Owen |first=Susan |display-authors=etal |title=Rivers and the British Landscape |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_GeBAAAACAAJ |year=2005 |publisher=Carnegie |isbn=978-1-85936-120-7 |access-date=29 August 2020 |archive-date=20 August 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190820211053/https://books.google.com/books?id=_GeBAAAACAAJ |url-status=live }} Mostly flowing north and east, it is the fifth longest river in the United Kingdom. The Great Ouse has been historically important for commercial navigation, and for draining the low-lying region through which it flows; its best-known tributary is the Cam, which runs through Cambridge. Its lower course passes through drained wetlands and fens and has been extensively modified, or channelised, to relieve flooding and provide a better route for barge traffic. The unmodified river would have changed course regularly after floods.
The name Ouse is from the Celtic or pre-Celtic *Udso-s,{{cite book |title=Indogermanisches etymologisches Wörterbuch |first=Julius |last=Pokorny |at=entry 9}} and probably means simply "water" or slow flowing river.{{cite book |title=A Dictionary of British Place Names |year=2003 |isbn=0-19-852758-6 |publisher=Oxford University Press |first=Anthony David |last=Mills}} Thus the name is a pleonasm. The lower reaches of the Great Ouse are also known as "Old West River" and "the Ely Ouse", but the entire length of the river is often referred to simply as the Ouse in informal usage (the word "Great"{{snd}} which originally meant simply big or, in the case of a river, long{{snd}} is used to distinguish this river from several others called the Ouse).
Course
The river has several sources close to the villages of Syresham and Wappenham in West Northamptonshire. It flows through Brackley, provides the Oxfordshire/Northamptonshire border, then into Buckinghamshire where it flows through Buckingham, the Milton Keynes urban area (at Stony Stratford and Newport Pagnell) and Olney, then Kempston in Bedfordshire, which is the current head of navigation.
File:Huntingdon Old Bridge.jpg
Passing through Bedford, it flows on into Cambridgeshire through St Neots, Godmanchester, Huntingdon, Hemingford Grey and St Ives, reaching Earith. Here, the river enters a short tidal section before branching in two. The artificial, very straight Old Bedford River and New Bedford River, which remain tidal, provide a direct link north-east towards the lower river at Denver in Norfolk.
The river previously ran through Hermitage Lock into the Old West River, then joined the Cam near Little Thetford before passing Ely and Littleport to reach the Denver sluice. Below this point, the river is tidal and continues past Downham Market to enter the Wash at King's Lynn. It is navigable from the Wash to Kempston Mill near Bedford, a distance of {{cvt|72|mi|km}} which contains 17 locks.{{harvnb |Blair |2006 |p=7}} It has a catchment area of {{cvt|8380|km2|mi2|order=flip}}{{cite journal |url=https://www.int-res.com/articles/meps/142/m142p273.pdf |last1=Nedwell |first1=D.B. |last2=Trimmer |first2=M.T. |year=1996 |title=Nitrogen fluxes through the upper estuary of the Great Ouse, England: the role of the bottom sediments. |journal=Marine Ecology Progress Series |volume=142 |pages=273–286 |publisher=Inter Research Science |doi=10.3354/meps142273 |bibcode=1996MEPS..142..273N |doi-access=free |access-date=27 January 2020 |archive-date=30 October 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201030135613/https://www.int-res.com/articles/meps/142/m142p273.pdf |url-status=live }} and a mean flow of {{cvt|15.5|m3/s|cuft/s}} as measured at Denver Sluice.{{cite web |url=http://nrfa.ceh.ac.uk/data/station/meanflow/33035/ |title=NRFA Station Mean Flow Data for 33035 - Ely Ouse at Denver Complex |website=nrfa.ceh.ac.uk |access-date=5 January 2024 }}
Its course has been modified several times, with the first recorded modification in 1236, as a result of flooding. During the 1600s, the Old Bedford and New Bedford rivers were built to provide a quicker route for the water to reach the sea. In the 20th century, construction of the Cut-Off Channel and the Great Ouse Relief Channel have further altered water flows in the region, and helped to reduce flooding.
Improvements to assist navigation began in 1618, with the construction of sluices and locks. Bedford could be reached by river from 1689. A major feature was the sluice at Denver, which failed in 1713, but was rebuilt by 1750 after the problem of flooding returned. Kings Lynn, at the mouth of the river, developed as a port, with civil engineering input from many of the great engineers of the time. With the coming of the railways the state of the river declined so that it was unsuitable either for navigation or for drainage. The navigation was declared to be derelict in the 1870s.
A repeated problem was the number of authorities responsible for different aspects of the river. The drainage board created in 1918 had no powers to address navigation issues, and there were six bodies responsible for the river below Denver in 1913. When the Great Ouse Catchment Board was created under the powers of the Land Drainage Act 1930, effective action could at last be taken. There was significant sugar beet cargo traffic on the river between 1925 and 1959, with the last known commercial traffic sailing in 1974. Leisure boating had been popular since 1904, and the post-war period saw the creation of the Great Ouse Restoration Society in 1951, who campaigned for complete renovation of the river navigation. Until 1989, the river was in the care of the Anglian Water Authority until water privatisation, when the Environment Agency became the drainage and ecology authority as well as being the navigation authority.
The Ouse Washes are an internationally important area for wildlife. Sandwiched between the Old Bedford and New Bedford rivers, they consist of washland which is used as pasture during the summer but which floods in the winter, and are the largest area of such land in the United Kingdom. They act as breeding grounds for lapwings, redshanks and snipe in spring, and are home to varieties of ducks and swans during the winter months.{{cite web |url=http://www.rspb.org.uk/reserves/guide/o/ousewashes/ |title=The RSPB: Ouse Washes |work=The RSPB |access-date=19 April 2009 |archive-date=10 February 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090210061203/http://rspb.org.uk/reserves/guide/o/ousewashes/ |url-status=live }}
=Port of King's Lynn=
{{Infobox UK legislation
| short_title = Eau Brink Act 1795
| type = Act
| parliament = Parliament of Great Britain
| long_title = An act for improving the drainage of the Middle and South Levels, part of the great level of the fens, called Bedford Level, and the low lands adjoining or near to the river Ouze, in the county of Norfolk, draining through the same to sea by the harbour of King's Lynn, in the said county; and for altering and improving the navigation of the said river Ouze, from or near a place called Eau Brink, in the parish of Wiggenhall Saint Mary, in the said county, to the said harbour of King's Lynn; and for improving and preserving the navigation of the several rivers communicating with the said river Ouze.
| year = 1795
| citation = 35 Geo. 3. c. 77
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| royal_assent = 19 May 1795
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After the river had been diverted to King's Lynn, the town developed as a port. Evidence for this can still be seen, as two warehouses built in the 15th century for trade with the Hanseatic League have survived. However, the harbour and the river below Denver sluice were affected by silting, and the problem was perceived to be the effects of the sluice. Sand from The Wash was deposited by the incoming tide, and the outgoing tide did not carry it away again. Colonel John Armstrong was asked to survey the river in 1724, and suggested returning it to how it was prior to the construction of the drainage works. John Smeaton rejected this idea in 1766, suggesting that the banks should be moved inwards to create a narrower, faster-flowing channel. William Elstobb and others had suggested that the great bend in the river above King's Lynn should be removed by creating a cut, but it took 50 years of arguing before the {{visible anchor|Eau Brink Act 1795}} (35 Geo. 3. c. 77) was obtained to authorise it, and another 26 years until the cut was finally opened in 1821. During this time, most of the major civil engineers of the time had contributed their opinions.{{harvnb |Boyes |Russell |1977 |pp=144–146}} The original project head and chief engineer was Sir Thomas Hyde Page.
The work was overseen by John Rennie and Thomas Telford and construction took four years. It proved to be too narrow, resulting in further silting of the harbour, and was widened at an additional cost of £33,000 on Telford's advice. The total cost for the {{cvt|2+1/2|mi|km|adj=on}} cut was nearly £500,000, and although the navigators, who had opposed the scheme, benefitted most from it, there were new problems for drainage, with the surrounding land levels dropping as the peaty soil dried out. The Eau Brink Act 1795 created Drainage Commissioners and Navigation Commissioners, who had powers over the river to St Ives, but both bodies were subject to the Bedford Levels Corporation. Although often in opposition, the two parties worked together on the construction of a new lock and staunch at Brownshill, to improve navigation above Earith.
In 1835, King William IV brought a case against the Ouse Bank Commissioners regarding a mandamus writ issued in 1834 about the Eau Brink Cut and possible damages it caused to the King's Lynn harbour.{{harvnb |Adolphus |Ellis |1837 |pp=544–550}}
=The Railway Age=
Denver sluice was reconstructed in 1834, after the Eau Brink Cut had been completed. Sir John Rennie designed the new structure, which incorporated a tidal lock with four sets of gates, enabling it to be used at most states of the tide. Sir Thomas Cullam, who had inherited a part share of the upper river, invested large amounts of his own money in rebuilding the locks, sluices and staunches in the 1830s and 1840s. The Bedford Level Act 1827 (53 Geo. 3. c. ccxiv) created commissioners who dredged the river from Hermitage Lock to Littleport bridge, and also dredged several of its tributaries. They constructed a new cut near Ely to bypass a long meander near Padnall Fen and Burnt Fen, but although the works cost £70,000, they were too late to return the navigation to prosperity. Railways arrived in the area rapidly after 1845, reaching Cambridge, Ely, Huntingdon, King's Lynn, St Ives, St Neots and Tempsford by 1850. The river below King's Lynn was improved by the construction of the {{cvt|2|mi|km|adj=on}} Marsh Cut and the building of training walls beyond that to constrain the channel, but the railways were welcomed by the Bedford Levels Corporation, for whom navigation interfered with drainage, and by King's Lynn Corporation, who did not want to be superseded by other towns with railway interchange facilities.{{harvnb |Boyes |Russell |1977 |pp=146–149}}
A large interchange dock was built at Ely, to facilitate the distribution of agricultural produce from the local region to wider markets. In addition, coal for several isolated pumping stations was transferred to boats for the final part of the journey, rather than it coming all the way from King's Lynn. Decline on most of the river was rapid, with tolls halving between 1855 and 1862. Flooding in 1875 was blamed on the poor state of the navigation, and it was recommended that it should be abandoned, but there was no funds to obtain an act of Parliament to create a drainage authority. The navigation was declared to be derelict by three county councils soon afterwards. It was then bought by the Ouse River Canal and Steam Navigation Ltd, who wanted to link Bedford to the Grand Junction Canal, but they failed to obtain their act of Parliament. A stockbroker called L. T. Simpson bought it in 1893, and spent some £21,000 over the next four years in restoring it. He created the Ouse Transport Company, running a fleet of tugs and lighters, and then attempted to get approval for new tolls, but was opposed by Bedfordshire and Huntingdonshire county councils. Protracted legal battles followed, with Simpson nailing the lock gates together, and the county councils declaring that the river was a public highway. The case, Simpson v Godmanchester Corporation, eventually reached the House of Lords in 1904, who allowed Simpson to close the locks.{{harvnb |Boyes |Russell |1977 |pp=149–151}}
=The Leisure Age=
File:Kings-lynn-river-great-ouse.JPG
Simpson's victory in 1904 coincided with an increased use of the river for leisure. As he could not charge these boats for use of the locks, the situation was resolved for a time in 1906 by the formation of the River Ouse Locks Committee, who rented the locks between Great Barford and Bedford. Over 2,000 boats were recorded using Bedford Lock in a three-month period soon afterwards. Despite pressure from local authorities and navigation companies, the upper river was closed for trade, and a royal commission reported in 1909 on the poor state of the lower river, the lack of any consistent authority to manage it, and the unusual practice of towing horses having to jump over fences because there were no gates where they crossed the towing path. The Ouse Drainage Board was formed in 1918, but had no powers to deal with navigation issues, and it was not until the powers of the Land Drainage Act 1930 (20 & 21 Geo. 5. c. 44) were used to create the Great Ouse Catchment Board that effective action could be taken.{{harvnb |Boyes |Russell |1977 |pp=151–153}}
The catchment board bought the navigation rights from Simpson's estate, and began to dredge the river and rebuild the locks. There was an upturn in commercial traffic from 1925, when the sugar beet factory at Queen Adelaide near Ely was opened. They operated six or seven tugs and a fleet of over 100 barges, and three tugs and 24 barges from the Wissington sugar beet factory on the River Wissey also operated on the river. Local commercial traffic continued around Ely until after the Second World War. The sugar beet traffic ceased in 1959, and the last commercial boat on the upper river was "Shellfen", a Dutch barge converted to carry {{cvt|4000|impgal|L|abbr=off}} of diesel fuel, which supplied the remote pumping stations until 1974, when the last ones were converted to electricity.{{harvnb |Boyes |Russell |1977 |pp=153–154}}
Below Denver, the situation was complicated by the fact that there were six bodies with responsibility for the river in 1913. No dredging took place, as there was no overall authority. The training walls were repaired in 1930 by the King's Lynn Conservancy Board, and the Great Ouse Catchment Board reconstructed and extended them in 1937. After major flooding in 1937 and 1947, and the North Sea flood of 1953, flood control issues became more important, and the Cut-Off Channel was completed in 1964, to carry the headwaters of the River Wissey, River Lark and River Little Ouse to join the river near Denver sluice.{{harvnb |Boyes |Russell |1977 |pp=154–156}} The Great Ouse Relief Channel, which runs parallel to the main river for {{cvt|10+1/2|mi|km}} from here to Wiggenhall bridge, was constructed at the same time. It joins the river at a sluice above King's Lynn, and was made navigable in 2001, when the Environment Agency constructed a lock at Denver to provide access.{{cite web |url=http://www.jim-shead.com/waterways/river.php?wpage=GORC |author=Jim Shead's Canal pages |title=Great Ouse Relief Channel |access-date=10 October 2009 |archive-date=20 February 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120220083204/http://www.jim-shead.com/waterways/river.php?wpage=GORC |url-status=live }}
By 1939, the Catchment Board had reopened the locks to Godmanchester and then to Eaton Socon; in 1951 the Great Ouse Restoration Society was formed to continue the process, and successfully campaigned for and assisted with the restoration.{{harvnb|Cumberlidge |2009 |p=232}} The Restoration Society campaign included the establishment of the Bedford to St. Neots Canoe Race in 1952 to publicise the case for navigational restoration. Now known as the Bedford Kayak Marathon, it is the longest established canoe race in the UK. In 1961 its organisers formalised canoeing activities on the river by forming the Viking Kayak Club.
Since 1996, the river has been the responsibility of the Environment Agency, who issue navigation licences.{{harvnb |Cumberlidge |2009 |p=233}} The upper river was fully reopened to Bedford with the rebuilding of Castle Mills lock in 1978.
=Navigation connections=
The non-tidal reaches of the river are used for leisure boating, but remain largely separated from the rest of the British inland waterway system. Several of its tributaries are navigable, including the River Cam, the River Lark, the River Little Ouse and the River Wissey. Close to Denver sluice, Salters Lode lock gives access to the Middle Level Navigations,{{harvnb |Cumberlidge |2009 |pp=228–229}} but the intervening section is tidal, and deters many boaters. Access to the Middle Level Navigations used to be possible via the Old Bedford River and Welches Dam lock, but the Environment Agency piled the entrance to the lock in 2006 and this route is no loger available for navigation. The proposed Fens Waterways Link, which aims to improve navigation from Lincoln to Cambridge may result in this section being upgraded, or a non-tidal link being created at Denver.{{harvnb |Cumberlidge |2009 |pp=7–8}}
There are two more proposed schemes to improve connections from the river to the Midlands waterway network (in addition to the Gt Ouse{{spaced ndash}}Nene link via the Middle Level).
- The first is for a Bedford and Milton Keynes waterway, to connect the river to the Grand Union Canal. This idea was first proposed in 1812, when John Rennie the Elder costed a {{cvt|15|mi|km|adj=on}} junction canal from Fenny Stratford to Bedford. His estimate of £180,807 scared investors, and no progress was made. In 1838, there was another (failed) proposal to extend the Newport Pagnell Canal.{{harvnb |Cumberlidge |2009 |pp=5–6}} The idea was revived once more in the 1880s, when the Ouse River Canal and Steam Navigation Ltd bought the river with the aim of creating the link. A bill for an enabling act of Parliament was defeated, although Major Marindin, acting for the Board of Trade, was optimistic about the likely benefits. The modern version of the proposal is in progress since 1994, by the Bedford and Milton Keynes Waterway Trust, who have formed a partnership with 25 bodies, including local councils, British Waterways (and its successor, the Canal & River Trust) and various government agencies. A feasibility study was carried out in 2001, which looked at nine possible routes; by 2006, the cost of the preferred route was between £100 and £200 million.
- The second scheme is for an extension of the Great Ouse Relief Channel to link it to the River Nar, and provide a non-tidal link to King's Lynn. The project would include a large marina, and would be part of a much larger regeneration project for the south side of the town. Two locks would be required to raise boats from the Relief Channel to the River Nar.[http://www.waterways.org.uk/Waterways/PrincipalNavigations/RiverNartotheGreatOuseFloodReliefChannelLinkUnderRestoration Inland Waterways Association: Kings Lynn to the Great Ouse Flood Relief Channel Link] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081204181537/http://www.waterways.org.uk/Waterways/PrincipalNavigations/RiverNartotheGreatOuseFloodReliefChannelLinkUnderRestoration |date=4 December 2008 }}, accessed 10 October 2009
Wildlife
File:Seal in the Great Ouse.jpeg, Norfolk]]
As the water quality has improved, otters have returned to the river in numbers such that fishing lakes now require fencing to protect stocks. Paxton Pits nature reserve near St Neots has hides from which otters are regularly seen. Coarse fishing is still popular, with a wide range of fish in the river, but it is many years since large sturgeon were caught. Seals have been recorded as far upstream as Bedford.{{cite web |title=SLIDESHOW: Seal in the River Great Ouse |url=http://www.bedfordtoday.co.uk/news/slideshow-seal-in-the-river-great-ouse-1-1094310 |website=Bedford Times & Citizen |access-date=11 October 2015 |archive-date=30 January 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160130224712/http://www.bedfordtoday.co.uk/news/slideshow-seal-in-the-river-great-ouse-1-1094310 |url-status=live }}{{cite web |title=Surprise guest puts seal on festival's pearl |url=http://www.bedfordshire-news.co.uk/Surprise-guest-puts-seal-festivals-pearl-celebrations/story-21710209-detail/story.html |website=Bedfordshire On Sunday |access-date=11 October 2015 |archive-date=24 February 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220224131956/http://www.bedfordshire-news.co.uk/index.html |url-status=live }}{{cite news |title=Sunbathing seals make long trip inland from the Wash |work=BBC News |date=11 August 2015 |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cambridgeshire-33865252 |access-date=11 October 2015 |archive-date=15 September 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150915094956/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cambridgeshire-33865252 |url-status=live }} Huntingdonshire seems to be the most popular area for breeding animals in recent years. {{cite web | url=https://plantcom.com.au/n8xd1u/river-great-ouse-flooding-b2ff3e | title=River great ouse flooding - river great ouse flooding }}
Tributaries
File:River Great Ouse at Little Paxton.jpg.]]
Tributaries of the River Great Ouse: (upstream [source] to downstream by confluence)
- Padbury Brook: Two streams that join to form one watercourse just south of Padbury in Buckinghamshire: the eastern twin starts near Addington and the Claydons and flows {{cvt|5|mi|km|0}} northwest to join the western twin, which starts near Somerton in Oxfordshire. From here it flows due East, through Fewcott, Stoke Lyne, Fringford and Twyford, before joining its twin and flowing {{cvt|5|mi|km|0}} north to join the Great Ouse east of Buckingham.{{cite web |url=http://getamap.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/getamap/frames.htm |title=Get-a-map online |publisher=Ordnance Survey |access-date=26 March 2013 |archive-date=29 November 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131129143647/http://getamap.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/getamap/frames.htm |url-status=dead }}
- River Leck
- River Tove
- River Ouzel (or Lovat)
- River Ivel
- River Kym
- River Cam
- Soham Lode
- River Lark
- River Little Ouse
- River Wissey
- Old Bedford River
- New Bedford River (also known as Hundred Foot Drain)
- River Nar
- Gaywood River
- Babingley River
Water sports
{{more citations|section|date=November 2020}}
In 1944 the annual Boat Race between the Oxford and Cambridge universities took place on this river, between Littleport and Queen Adelaide, the first time that it had not been held on the Thames; it was won by Oxford.{{cite web |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/cambridgeshire/out_about/2004/02/historic_boat_race.shtml |title=Celebrate the 1944 University Boat Race! |publisher=BBC |date=February 2004 |access-date=25 December 2019 |archive-date=29 November 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061129095703/http://www.bbc.co.uk/cambridgeshire/out_about/2004/02/historic_boat_race.shtml |url-status=live }} The 2021 Boat Race was again held on the river because of the COVID-19 pandemic.{{Cite web |date=2020-11-26 |title=The Boat Race 2021 to be raced at Ely, Cambridgeshire |url=https://www.theboatrace.org/news/the-boat-race-2021-to-be-raced-at-ely-cambridgeshire |access-date=2020-11-26 |website=The Boat Race |language=en-GB |archive-date=21 January 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210121075536/https://www.theboatrace.org/news/the-boat-race-2021-to-be-raced-at-ely-cambridgeshire |url-status=live }} The Great Ouse has been used by three clubs from Cambridge University for the training of rowers, with the Boat Club (CUBC),{{cite web |url=http://www.cubc.org.uk/rowing/facilities.html |title=CUBC: Facilities |access-date=22 October 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080926173304/http://www.cubc.org.uk/rowing/facilities.html |archive-date=26 September 2008 |df=dmy-all}} the Women's Boat Club (CUWBC){{cite web |url=http://www.cuwbc.org/training/cuwbc-facilities |title=CUWBC: Facilities |access-date=22 October 2010 |archive-date=13 November 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101113180504/http://www.cuwbc.org/training/cuwbc-facilities |url-status=live }} and the Lightweight Rowing Club (CULRC), all using facilities at Ely; the clubs merged in 2020.
The Great Ouse is a very popular river for canoeing and kayaking, particularly around Bedford which is a regional centre for the sport.{{cn|date=November 2020}} Viking Kayak Club organise the Bedford Kayak Marathon with canoe racing held along the Embankment on Bedford's riverside and dates back to the original Bedford to St Neots race in 1952, believed{{by whom|date=November 2020}} to be the first of its kind in the country.{{cn|date=November 2020}}
File:FloatingCurraghBedford.JPG
Bedford also benefits from the presence of weirs and sluices, creating white water opportunities. Viking organise national ranking Canoe Slalom events at the Cardington Artificial Slalom Course (CASC), which was the first artificial whitewater course in the UK,{{cn|date=November 2020}} opened in 1982 adjacent to Cardington Lock, in a partnership with the Environment Agency who use it as a flood relief channel.{{cn|date=November 2020}} CASC is also the venue each year for the UK's National Inter Clubs Slalom Finals, the largest canoe slalom event by participation in the UK.
Since 1978, the Bedford River Festival has been held every two years, to celebrate the link between Bedford and the coast.{{cite web |url=http://www.visitshefford.co.uk/afield/bedfordembankment.shtm |title=Visit Shefford, Bedford Embankment |access-date=1 November 2010 |archive-date=3 June 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100603224515/http://www.visitshefford.co.uk/afield/bedfordembankment.shtm |url-status=live }} In addition to craft often seen on the river, the 2008 festival featured a reconstruction of a 1st-century currach, consisting of a wicker framework covered in cow hide, and capable of carrying ten people.
See also
{{Portal|United Kingdom|Transport}}
- Bedford & Milton Keynes Waterway Trust
- Bedford Rowing Club
- The Boat Race
- Cardington Artificial Slalom Course
- The Ouse Valley Way (Long-distance footpath along the Ouse)
- Rivers of the United Kingdom
- RSPB Ouse Washes (Royal Society for the Protection of Birds reserve)
- WWT Welney (Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust reserve)
- Viking Kayak Club
References
{{Reflist|25em}}
Bibliography
{{refbegin}}
- {{Cite book |first1=John Leycester |last1=Adolphus |first2=Thomas Flower |last2=Ellis |author-link=John Leycester Adolphus |title=Reports of cases argued and determined in the Court of King's Bench'', (Volume 3, Cases from 1835, Great Britain. Court of King's Bench) |year=1837 |location=London |publisher=Saunders and Benning |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NzVFAAAAYAAJ&q=Eau+Brink+cut+to+King%27s+Lynn&pg=PA544 |access-date=28 October 2020 |archive-date=24 February 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220224131947/https://books.google.com/books?id=NzVFAAAAYAAJ&q=Eau+Brink+cut+to+King%27s+Lynn&pg=PA544 |url-status=live }}
- {{Cite book |first=Andrew Hunter |last=Blair |title=The River Great Ouse and tributaries |year=2006 |publisher=Imray Laurie Norie and Wilson |isbn=978-0-85288-943-5}}
- {{Cite book |first1=John |last1=Boyes |first2=Ronald |last2=Russell |title=The Canals of Eastern England |year=1977 |publisher=David and Charles |isbn=978-0-7153-7415-3}}
- {{Cite book |title=Inland Waterways of Great Britain, 8th Ed |year=2009 |first=Jane |last=Cumberlidge |publisher=Imray Laurie Norie and Wilson |isbn=978-1-84623-010-3}}
- {{Cite book |first=Sue |last=Owen |title=Rivers and the British Landscape |year=2005 |publisher=Carnegie Publishing |isbn=978-1-85936-120-7 |display-authors=etal}}
{{refend}}
External links
- {{commons category-inline|River Great Ouse}}
- [http://www.jim-shead.com/waterways/river.php?wpage=GO Useful information on the river from Jim Shead]
- [http://www.fenlandlincs.com/GreatOuse Drainage and Rivers of Fens]{{dead link|date=February 2025|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}
- [http://www.ousewashes.info The Ouse Washes Website]
- [https://www.flickr.com/photos/ciamabue/4739584722 Seal, Bluntisham]
{{River Great Ouse}}
{{Rivers and Watercourses of Buckinghamshire}}
{{Transport in Buckinghamshire}}
{{Rivers of Norfolk}}
{{Rivers and Watercourse of Northamptonshire}}
{{authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Great Ouse, River}}
Category:Rivers of Northamptonshire
Category:Rivers of Buckinghamshire
Category:Rivers of Bedfordshire