Difference between revisions of "River Mourne"

From Wikishire
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "The River Mourne at Victoria Bridge The '''River Mourne''' is a riv...")
 
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[File:A "Brown flood" on the Mourne at Victoria Bridge. - geograph.org.uk - 434468.jpg|right|thumb|350px|The River Mourne at Victoria Bridge]]
 
[[File:A "Brown flood" on the Mourne at Victoria Bridge. - geograph.org.uk - 434468.jpg|right|thumb|350px|The River Mourne at Victoria Bridge]]
 +
{{county|Tyrone}}
 
The '''River Mourne''' is a river in [[Tyrone]], which ultimately becomes a tributary of the [[River Foyle]].  It goes by two names:  the Mourne from where the [[River Derg]] joins it below [[Newtownstewart]], and above that junction is the '''Strule River'''.
 
The '''River Mourne''' is a river in [[Tyrone]], which ultimately becomes a tributary of the [[River Foyle]].  It goes by two names:  the Mourne from where the [[River Derg]] joins it below [[Newtownstewart]], and above that junction is the '''Strule River'''.
  
Line 18: Line 19:
  
 
==Outside links==
 
==Outside links==
 +
*Location map: {{wmap|54.82166|-7.45817}}
 
*[http://www.salmon-ireland.com/salmon-rivers/foyle/river-mourne.jsp Salmon fishing on the River Mourne, from ''Salmon Ireland'']
 
*[http://www.salmon-ireland.com/salmon-rivers/foyle/river-mourne.jsp Salmon fishing on the River Mourne, from ''Salmon Ireland'']
  
Line 23: Line 25:
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}
  
{{coord|54.82166|N|7.45817|W|type:river_region:GB|display=title}}
+
[[Category:Rivers of Tyrone|Mourne]]
 
+
[[Category:Rivers of Tyrone]]
+

Latest revision as of 21:49, 27 May 2017

The River Mourne at Victoria Bridge

The River Mourne is a river in Tyrone, which ultimately becomes a tributary of the River Foyle. It goes by two names: the Mourne from where the River Derg joins it below Newtownstewart, and above that junction is the Strule River.

The Strule River

The Strule River is formed at Omagh, the county town, by the union in the middle of the town of the Drumragh River and the Camowen River. From here the river heads in a generally northerly direction. The A5 Omagh – Strabane road follows its valley. A little below Omagh the Strule picks up the Fairy Water and darts away, heading north again by wild meanders, looping around the Ulster-American Folk Park.

Close to Newtownstewart the Overkillew River joins, bringing waters from the Sperrin Mountains and the united waters flow north-westwards. After a few miles, the River Derg joins, and the two streams create the River Mourne belw this point

River Mourne

The River Mourne continues the north-western course of the Strule, broadening as it goes. It reaches Victoria Bridge and then heads north past Sion Mills (whose wheels the waters of the Mourne once powered) and on to Strabane.

At Strabane the River Mourne joins with the River Finn, coming off the Donegal hills, to form the River Foyle, which takes the waters to the sea.

Fish and songs

Fishing in the Mourne is largely for salmon, grilse and sea trout.[1]

The traditional folk song The Moorlough Shore (also called The Maid of Mourne Shore) refers to names and places along the river.[2]

Outside links

References