Connecting the Culm Discover the River Culm... Flowing through 100 square miles of stunning Devon countryside to meet the River Exe

Discover this beautiful, but often overlooked, landscape

The River Culm flows through the Redlands of Mid and East Devon and is the longest tributary of the River Exe. It rises in the Blackdown Hills at a spring near RAF Culmhead in Somerset, and flows west through Hemyock, then Culmstock (in the Culm Valley) to Uffculme.

The river then turns south, through Cullompton (alongside the M5 motorway), skirting the northern boundary of Killerton Park to join the River Exe north-west of Exeter.

https://connectingtheculm.com/discover-the-culm/

 

Environment Agency Catchment Data Explorer

The Catchment Data Explorer helps you explore and download information about the water environment. It supports and builds upon the data in the river basin management plans

Lower Culm https://environment.data.gov.uk/catchment-planning/WaterBody/GB108045014970 

Middle Culm https://environment.data.gov.uk/catchment-planning/WaterBody/GB108045014980 

Upper Culm https://environment.data.gov.uk/catchment-planning/WaterBody/GB108045015000 

 

River Levels

https://riverlevels.uk/river-culm-culmstock

https://riverlevels.uk/river-culm-woodmill

https://riverlevels.uk/river-culm-rewe 

 

Open Street Map

https://www.openstreetmap.org/relation/4250229 

 

Wikipedia The River Culm flows through the Devon Redlands in Devon, England and is the longest tributary of the River Exe. It rises in the Blackdown Hills at a spring near RAF Culmhead in Somerset, and flows west through Hemyock, then Culmstock (in the Culm Valley) to Uffculme. The river turns south, through Cullompton (and alongside the M5 motorway), skirting the northern boundary of Killerton Park to join the River Exe on the north-western outskirts of Exeter. The name of the river is thought to mean 'knot' or 'tie', in reference to the river's twists and loops.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_Culm

 

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