Love Your River Stour

Stour

Love Your River Stour

A project to transform the forgotten Rivers of the Black Country.

Love Your River Stour aims to improve the condition of the River Stour, its tributaries (including the Smestow brook) and the adjacent surrounding habitat to create a corridor for wildlife to thrive through the heart of the Black Country.

Following a successful 18 month with work focused in Dudley and Wolverhampton, we're now at work on Phase 2 of the project, working along a stretch of the River Stour running from Cradley Heath to Lye thanks to £100,000 of funding from the WMCA Community Green Grants!

We will continue to encourage communities to act for their local river and surrounding habitat, creating a legacy of engaged individuals who will help protect it long into the future.

Learn About the River Stour

The River Stour rises in the Clent Hills of Northern Worcestershire, before flowing in a northerly direction down into the Black Country towns of Halesowen and then due west through Cradley and Lye to Stourbridge and beyond into South Staffordshire where it joins the Smestow Brook before flowing South and on into Worcestershire once more where it joins the River Severn. Comprising 11 Water Framework Directive (WFD) water bodies and multiple tributaries, the River Stour catchment is over 200km in length.  

The Stour once helped to power the industrial revolution, and the countless mills and forges which were found all along the rivers course, particularly in the upper reaches within the Black Country.

The industrial heritage severely impacted on the health of the river, which turned from a largely pristine Salmonid River to one very polluted with sewage and industrial run off. Weirs and dams were built across it to power waterwheels. This all but destroyed the fish and invertebrate populations to a point that the river became ecologically dead and flowed the colour of khaki.

From a River whose origins all the towns and villages along its banks owed their existence, the Stour became a dirty word, something to be avoided, a stream of lifeless filthy water that could often be smelt before it was seen. Over the years as the industry declined water quality improved, but the weirs and dams remained and increasing urban pressures resulted in rubbish being dumped, sewage releases, misconnections from drains as well as run-off from roads all contributing to the continued challenges. 

Now there is a growing fervour to help put right the damage of the past and a growing desire to restore what once was lost. Now the Stour Valley is recognised as an important wildlife corridor running East to West in the Southern Black Country linking Western Birmingham to the border of South Staffordshire, and when all the tributaries are included it makes up a large network of interconnected corridors where wildlife can move through a densely populated urban area.

Stour

Volunteer with us

Would you like to help us improve our rivers and their banks for wildlife and people? Join us on one of our regular volunteer days! No experience necessary, we'll provide all of the tools and equipment you'll need.

Find out more
Pollution

Report River Pollution

If you notice pollution, you should call Severn Trent Water immediately on 0800 783 4444 and tell them:

  • what you saw and when
  • where you saw it
  • whether sewage is entering a river or any other watercourse

Please use a postcode, road name, What Three Words location or a local landmark to let them know where you've seen the pollution.

You can also report your pollution directly to the Environment Agency on the EA Hotline reporting Number: 0800 807060.

WMCa