Moorings on the River Ribble
Key facts
- Type
- River
- Managed by
- Environment Agency
- Total length
- 121 km(75 miles)
- Region
- North West England
The River Ribble flows 121 kilometres from its source in the Yorkshire Dales through the Ribble Valley, Clitheroe and Preston before broadening into the Ribble Estuary and discharging into the Irish Sea between Lytham St Annes and Southport. The navigable section is centred on the tidal river below Preston, and is most famous among boaters for the Ribble Link — the engineering project completed in 2002 that connects the Lancaster Canal at Preston to the Leeds & Liverpool Canal at Tarleton via a tidal passage across the Ribble Estuary. For boat owners, the Ribble is therefore both a destination in its own right and a vital network connector — without it, the Lancaster Canal would remain an isolated waterway. Long-stay moorings are available at Preston Marina (a former dock now redeveloped with apartments and bars), Tarleton Yacht Club at the mouth of the Douglas, and a number of swinging moorings in the estuary. The tidal passage requires careful tide-and-weather planning, an experienced skipper and bookable Link transits, but it's a genuine adventure. Wider craft and sea-going boats can use the estuary for cruising to Liverpool, the Mersey and onward. Preston offers full city facilities and direct trains on the West Coast Main Line. The Ribble is a real boater's waterway — a tidal challenge wrapped around a vital network connection.