Moorings on the River Douglas
Key facts
- Type
- River
- Managed by
- Canal & River Trust
- Total length
- 32 km(20 miles)
- Region
- North West England
The River Douglas flows roughly 32 kilometres from the Lancashire coalfields near Wigan north-west through Parbold and Tarleton to discharge into the Ribble Estuary at Hesketh Bank. The navigable section is the lower river from Tarleton Lock — where it joins the Leeds & Liverpool Canal at the Rufford Branch — down to the tidal estuary and beyond. For boat owners, the Douglas is principally a connecting route: it forms the seaward leg of the Ribble Link cruising adventure, allowing narrowboats on the Leeds & Liverpool to lock down at Tarleton, cross the tidal Ribble Estuary, and lock up onto the Lancaster Canal at Preston. This is one of the most challenging tidal passages on the inland network and requires careful planning, the right tide window and a CRT bookable transit, but it opens otherwise impossible cruising. Long-stay moorings on the Douglas itself are limited but available at Tarleton (multiple boatyards and Douglas Boatyard) and at swinging moorings on the estuary for sea-going boats. The river also provides access to the Irish Sea via the Ribble for capable craft. Liveaboards based at Tarleton enjoy quiet rural surroundings with reasonable road access to Southport and Preston, and the satisfaction of being moored on one of the more interesting connecting waterways in the UK system.