Rouvre

This article is about the river in Normandy, France. For towns named similarly, see Rouvres.
Rouvre

The river in woodland
Country France
Basin
Main source Beauvain, Orne, Normandy
316 m (1,037 ft)
River mouth Orne at Ménil-Hubert-sur-Orne
63 m (207 ft)
48°50′50″N 0°23′03″W / 48.8471°N 0.3842°W / 48.8471; -0.3842 (Orne-Rouvre)Coordinates: 48°50′50″N 0°23′03″W / 48.8471°N 0.3842°W / 48.8471; -0.3842 (Orne-Rouvre)
Progression OrneEnglish Channel
Basin size 309 km2 (119 sq mi)
Physical characteristics
Length 42 km (26 mi)

The Rouvre is a river in Normandy, in the Orne département, a tributary of the river Orne.

The river's source is in the commune of Beauvain, a few kilometres to the east of La Ferté-Macé. After crossing the Pays d'Houlme, it turns in a north-westerly direction to re-enter Norman Switzerland, and then in its last course of 15 km (9.3 mi) passes around Bréel.

The Rouvre then confluences into the Orne between the dam at Saint-Philbert-sur-Orne and Pont-d'Ouilly, and joins the Orne at Rouvrou (elevation 63 m (207 ft)).

The Rock of Oëtre

This last part of its course is through small wooded gorges and its fast waters can make for good kayaking, when the water level permits, and fishing for brown trout. These gorges are home to animal and plant species such as pearl mussels and Osmond Royal (water-fern),[1] and one may occasionally see otters and salmon.

The river's environment makes it an important tourist attraction in Norman Switzerland, with its rural and fluvial environment, The viewpoint from the Rock of Oetre into the valley is of 118 m (387 ft) below, the steepest drop.

References

  1. Culpeper, Nicholas (1814). "Osmond Royal". Culpeper’s Complete Herbal and English Physician. Retrieved 2009-04-10.

From the original article in French

French


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