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River Clyst

River in Devon, England


River in Devon, England

The River Clyst is a river of Devon, England. The name derives from Old English, and translates as Clean-stream (the Welsh name of Clydach, has similar origins). The river lends its name to several settlements on its route, Clyst Honiton, Clyst St Lawrence, Clyst St George, and Broadclyst. The William part of Clyst William derives from the Old English of aewelm, which means river source.

Rising near the village of Clyst William near Cullompton, the river runs for 38 km, west and southwest, flowing through the settlements of Norman's Green, Plymtree, Clyst Hydon, Clyst St. Lawrence, Westwood, emerging in the Clyst Valley.

From there, the river goes southward through Broadclyst, West Clyst, Clyst Honiton, Clyst St. Mary and Clyst St. George, eventually flowing into the Exe estuary at Bowling Green Marsh, immediately south of the port of Topsham near Exeter. The river discharges 1.3 m3 per second on average, and is tidal from the Exe estuary as far as Newcourt Barton.

In 2011 work started on a new cycle and pedestrian bridge crossing the River Clyst at Fishers Mill, Topsham, forming part of the Sustrans’ National Cycle Network [NCN]. The bridge feeds into the Exe Estuary Trail, part of NCN2, and was opened in November 2013. A 225 m elevated timber boardwalk was planned across the salt marshes and flood plain with a main bridge spanning 120 m across the river. The new bridge is downstream from an existing narrow grade II listed masonry highway bridge.

In winter, the flood plain attracts large flocks of Brant geese and Canada geese. On the north side of the Clyst, just west of the Exmouth railway line, is Bowling Green Marsh, a small RSPB reserve with a hide (SX971877). In 1988, a spill of diesel oil into the estuary threatened the habitat and the birds in the area around the river mouth. Special booms and pumps were brought in to remove the 5,000 impgal spill. A 1994 survey of fish species in the river determined that it contained bullhead, dace, eel, minnow, stone loach, stickleback, mullet and flounder. The only salmonids were some trout in one of the tributaries. By 2008, concerns were being raised about the quality of the water citing a high level of pollution.

References

References

  1. (1947). "The concise Oxford dictionary of English place-names". Clarendon Press.
  2. (2011). "The book of English place names : how our towns and villages got their names". Ebury Press.
  3. "Upper Clyst".
  4. "Lower Clyst".
  5. (December 2013). "Classification of Bivalve Mollusc Production Areas in England and Wales".
  6. (2015). "Exeter & the Exe Valley". Ordnance Survey.
  7. (15 July 2015). "Exe Estuary Trail".
  8. (15 November 2013). "Bridge brings cycle route nearer". BBC News.
  9. (25 November 2013). "Ceremony marks Exe Estuary Trail milestone {{!}} The Exeter Daily". The Exeter Daily.
  10. {{NHLE
  11. "Bowling Green and Goosemoor Nature Reserve, Devon".
  12. (9 November 1988). "Oil threatens birds - River Clyst". infoweb.newsbank.com.
  13. (February 1995). "Devon Area Report". National Rivers Authority.
  14. (9 February 2008). "Water check after decline in river's fish and wildlife". infoweb.newsbank.com.
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