• The River Great Ouse (/uːz/ ooz) is a river in England, the longest of several British rivers called "Ouse". From Syresham in Northamptonshire...
  • The bridge over the Great Ouse at St Neots connects the Great North Road to the west with the town to the east of the river...
  • The River Great Ouse is also affected by tidal bore, which can be observed as far upstream as Bedford when the tide is exceptionally high.
  • The Great Ouse river is navigable from Bedford to the Wash at King’s Lynn. ... The length of the River Great Ouse that is navigable. 18 locks.
  • The River Great Ouse flows from Buckinghamshire through Bedfordshire and into Cambridgeshire before it arrives in Norfolk and then flows into the North...
  • The River Great Ouse and its tributaries, the Rivers Cam, Lark, Little Ouse, and Wissey provide approximately 255 kilometres of navigable waterway.
  • Source and Route of the River Great Ouse. The river has several sources close to the village of Syresham and Sulgrave in Northamptonshire.
  • The river is sometimes called the Great Ouse, probably to distinguish it from its tributary the Little Ouse.
  • It’s just a few miles south from there to Pope’s Corner where the River Cam joins, while the Great Ouse undergoes a sudden transformation.
  • The River Great Ouse – not to be confused with the River Ouse or River Little Ouse – is a nature lover’s dream, and is popular with coarse fishermen.