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In 1590, Edmund Spenser in The Faerie Queene described the River Trent and its fish fauna as follows: [3] The beauteous Trent which in itself enseams, Thirty kinds of fish and thirty different streams. This couplet was closely echoed in 1612, in Michael Drayton's Poly-Olbion description of the Trent: [4] Or thirty kinds of fish that in my ...
This river is part of the Trent-Severn Waterway which leads to Georgian Bay. The river is 90 kilometres (56 mi) long. The Trent drains a large portion of south-central Ontario, [1] including most of the Kawartha Lakes and their supplying watersheds. The river is host to numerous species of birds, amphibians and fish.
Trent River • average: 97.17 cu ft/s (2.752 m 3 /s) at mouth with Trent River [5] Basin features; Progression: Trent River → Neuse River → Pamlico Sound → Atlantic Ocean: River system: Neuse River: Tributaries • left: West Prong Brice Creek Black Branch Georges Branch • right: East Prong Brice Creek Great Branch Lees Branch: Bridges
The River Trent is a river of the English Midlands, in the United Kingdom. Other rivers of the same name include: Trent River (Ontario) in Ontario, Canada; a hamlet Trent River in the municipality of Trent Hills along Trent River (Ontario) in Ontario, Canada. Trent River (North Carolina) in North Carolina, United States; Trent River (New ...
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Fishing on the Trent near Ingleby by George Turner, 1850 . Evidence of fishing along the Trent can be traced back to the Neolithic period, with the possible remnants of a fish weir discovered in the abandoned river channels at Hemington. [47] [148] More definitive finds from the medieval period were also found at this site and near Colwick ...
Trent River • average: 8.82 cu ft/s (0.250 m 3 /s) at mouth with Trent River [5] Basin features; Progression: Trent River → Neuse River → Pamlico Sound → Atlantic Ocean: River system: Neuse River: Tributaries • left: unnamed tributaries • right: unnamed tributaries: Bridges: Countyline Road, Murphy Road, Crump Farm Road
Ohio's oldest trout stream is the Mad River. Stocking of this river began in the late 19th century with the introduction of Brook trout. In 1884 Rainbow trout were introduced to the stream. In 1931 the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) Division of Wildlife took control of the Rainbow trout project. The department continued to support ...