River Till | |
---|---|
Location of the mouth within Northumberland | |
Location | |
Country | United Kingdom |
County | Northumberland |
Physical characteristics | |
Mouth | |
• coordinates | 55°40′49″N 2°12′30″W / 55.6802°N 2.2082°W |
The River Till is a river of north-eastern Northumberland. It is a tributary of the River Tweed, of which it is the only major tributary to flow wholly in England. Upstream of the locality of Bewick Bridge, 8.5 km to the southeast of Wooler[1] the river is known as the River Breamish. It rises on Comb Fell in the Cheviot Hills.
Its tributaries include Wooler Water, which originates in the Cheviots, and the River Glen in Glendale. It meets the Tweed a mile to the west of Twizell Bridge, 4 km downstream of Coldstream. According to local folklore:
- Tweed said to Till
- "What gars ye rin sae stil?"
- Says Till to Tweed,
- "Though ye rin wi' speed
- And I rin slaw
- Whar ye droon yin man
- I droon twa"
Recent environmental projects have included an attempt to conserve the native brown trout.
References
- ↑ "Northumberland (Old Series) XXV.7 Revised: 1896, Published: 1897". National Library of Scotland. Retrieved 5 December 2021.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to River Till, Northumberland.
- A walk along the River Till bank from Etal to Tiptoe
- Brown trout conservation project
- Local history
- Map sources for: NT908178 - source of the Breamish and NT870430 - confluence with the Tweed
- https://www.antonychessell.co.uk/Breamish and Till:From Source to Tweed, TillVAS,2014
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