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After The Devastation - Canoeing The River Greta

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This video has been uploaded in 1080 HD.

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The River Greta underwent significant change as a result of Storm Desmond in December 2015, which resulted in severe flooding in many parts of the UK, particularly in the Lake District.

In this video we canoe down the classic Thelkeld to Keswick section of the Greta. The modern road bridges of the A66 road, which share this river valley perch loftily on reinforced concrete fins, a long way from the river bed. The 19th century bridges of the old Cockermouth, Keswick and Penrith railway, the route of which criss-crosses the River Greta as it meanders, were built on a much lower level. They'd survived 150 years but Storm Desmond took its toll and demolished two of them and inflicted severe structural damage on others.

The evidence of the colossal force of nature was not limited to the bridges. Uprooted trees lay strewn on river banks, marooned on rocky islands, and wedged in the river itself. On the outside of several bends, where the river cuts deep into the terrain the water has cut through the earth like a knife through butter. In slack sections of river and in the shadow of solid impediments to the water, new deposits of silt and gravel have formed.

The name of this river derives from an Old Norse name that literally means "stony stream". At the level we paddled it, this stream certainly lived up to its Norse reputation, despite the shaping forces of nature on this landscape in recent times. Rapids range up to grade 3 and it's a route which makes for a lively mixture of paddling and lining. A real mini-adventure....

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Paul Kirtley

Paul Kirtley

Bushcraft, survival skills and outdoor safety with professional instructor Paul Kirtley.

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