River Lugg

River Lugg
The Lugg at Hampton Bishop
Map
Native nameAfon Llugwy (Welsh)
Location
CountryWales, England
CountiesPowys, Herefordshire
SettlementsLlangynllo, Presteigne, Leominster, Hope under Dinmore, Bodenham, Marden, Lugwardine
Physical characteristics
SourceLlangynllo
 • locationRadnor Forest, Radnorshire, Wales
 • coordinates52°21′29″N 3°12′20″W / 52.35806°N 3.20556°W / 52.35806; -3.20556 (source)
 • elevation497 m (1,631 ft)
Mouthconfluence with River Wye
 • location
Mordiford, Herefordshire, England
 • coordinates
52°01′52″N 2°38′10″W / 52.03111°N 2.63611°W / 52.03111; -2.63611 (mouth)
 • elevation
46 m (151 ft)
Length63 mi (101 km)[1]
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftRiver Frome
 • rightRiver Arrow
River Lugg
Source of the Lugg
Heart of Wales Line
B4356 bridge
B4356 Greenstreet Bridge
tributary
B4356 Llangunllo Bridge
A488 Glan-Llugwy Bridge, Monaughty
tributary
B4357 Whitton Bridge
Cascob Brook
B4356 Rock Bridge
B4355 Boultibrooke Bridge
Norton Brook
Lugg Bridge, Presteigne
Rosser's Bridge
Hindwell Brook
Lime Brook
Lyepole Bridge
A4110 Aymestry Bridge
B4362 Lugg Bridge, Mortimer's Cross
Lugg Bridge, Lugg Green
Kenwater
Pinsley Brook
B4361 bridge, Leominster
Welsh Marches Line
Ridgemoor Brook
A44 Ridgemoor Bridge
Cheaton Brook
Kenwater
A49 Mosaic Bridge
A44 Eaton Bridge
River Arrow
Ford Bridge, Ford
A417 Hampton Court Bridge
Humber Brook
Bodenham Brook
Bodenham Bridge
Welsh Marches Line
Welsh Marches Line
Laystone Bridge, Marden
Wellington Brook
Moreton Bridge
Wergins Bridge
Moreton Brook
Cotswold Line
River Little Lugg
A4103 Lugg Bridge
A438 Lugwardine Bridge
River Frome
B4224 Mordiford Bridge + remains of lock
Pentaloe Brook
River Wye

The River Lugg (Welsh: Afon Llugwy) rises near Llangynllo in Powys, Wales. From its source, it flows through the border town of Presteigne and then into Herefordshire, England. It meets its main tributary, the River Arrow, to the south of Leominster, then flows into the River Wye downstream of Hereford at Mordiford, around 63 miles (101 km) from its source. Its name comes from a Welsh root, and means "bright stream".[2]

As it passes through the countryside, it is crossed by a number of bridges, many of which are listed structures. Lugg Bridge at Lugwardine and the bridge at Mordiford with its associated causeway both date from the 14th century. The river at Leominster was altered significantly in the 1960s, when it was diverted to the south and then along the course of the Leominster and Kington Railway around the northern edge of the town, as part of a flood defence scheme. In the past, it was important for milling, supplying power to nearly one third of the mills in Herefordshire at the time of the Domesday Book. There are a few mills left, and some obvious mill sites, but many of the mills below Leominster were bought up and their weirs demolished as part of a scheme to make the river navigable in the 1690s. This was not a success, as the water levels dropped creating shoals, and in the 1720s, some of the weirs were reinstated, with pound locks to enable boats to bypass them. Navigation up to Leominster was for a time possible, although it was never hugely successful, and ceased in the 1860s, once railways had been built in the area.

The river was a free navigation as a result of powers obtained in an act of Parliament, the Rivers Wye and Lugg Navigation Act 1695 (7 & 8 Will. 3. c. 14), but in 2002, the Environment Agency became the navigation authority following the passing of the Wye Navigation Order 2002 (SI 2002/1998). This reaffirmed the right of navigation on the river, but prohibited the building of locks and weirs, and so most boating is by canoes and kayaks. The river is also used for fishing, as it has good populations of wild brown trout and grayling. Water quality of the river system is moderate, although some of its tributaries have poor water quality, and some bad. In common with many rivers, the chemical quality changed from good to fail in 2019, following the introduction of testing for chemicals not previously included in the quality assessment. The whole of the river is a Site of Special Scientific Interest, and since 2003, a policy of building fish passes where there are weirs has led to significant improvements to the presence of migratory fish in the river.

  1. ^ Jacklin 2015, p. 2.
  2. ^ Ekwall, Eilert (1947). The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names. Oxford: The Clarendon Press. p. 292.