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The River Wye in Hereford reached 20ft – or just over 6 metres – on Monday.
Map showing the River Wye from source to sea, excluding tributaries. The River Wye (/waj/; Welsh: Afon Gwy) is the fourth-longest river in the UK, stretching some 250 kilometres (155 miles) from its source on Plynlimon in mid Wales to the Severn Estuary. [1] The lower reaches of the river forms part of the border between England and Wales.
It crossed the River Wye at Kerne Bridge on a single-track skew bridge constructed of plate girders. The single-track bridge was built by Edward Finch of Chepstow and was 133 metres (436 ft) long. Kerne Bridge railway station was the first initially station after leaving Ross-on-Wye, though Walford Halt at Walford was built later between them ...
River Wye: 906.1 2239 1978 AONB, WT, ... Natural England Reports and Statistics data for Hereford and Worcester This page was last edited on 6 January 2024, at 11:16 ...
A farther Wye feeder stream at the west, defining the parish border with Whitney-on-Wye, flows south 1 mile from the Whitney-on-Wye hamlet of Stowe on the A438 road. The A438, which connects the M5 motorway Junction 9 to Hereford, is the only major road through the parish, running west to east for 2 miles (3 km) and connecting Winforton and ...
Symonds Yat Rock overlooks a spectacular gorge through which the River Wye snakes. This rock is a good viewpoint from which to watch raptors: a pair of peregrine falcons that nest annually within sight of the rock can be watched through telescopes set up by the RSPB .
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Kerne Bridge was built over the River Wye in the County of Herefordshire, England in 1825–28, on the site of an ancient ford crossing known as Flanesford. It is designated as a Scheduled Monument. Carrying the B4229 road, it connects the parishes of Walford on the river's left bank and Goodrich on the right.