48 HERTFORDSHIRE. HUNTINGDONSHIRE. 



XY. HEREFORDSHIRE. 



THE Wye runs -through Hereford, Ross, &c., into 

 Gloucestershire; the Lug runs easterly from Radnor to 

 Leominster, where it receives the Oney, the Endwell, 

 and the Arrow, and then falls into the Wye, below 

 Hereford; the Frame and the Loden flow southerly, 

 until they unite near Stratton, and soon after reach the 

 Wye, as do also the Monow, which is a compound of 

 several small rivulets, as well as of the Doyer, which 

 flows from the Golden Vale; and the Trothy, which, 

 flowing from the interior of Monmouthshire, falls into 

 the Wye below Monmouth. These are all capital 

 rivers for angling in. They abound with salmon, 

 salmon-trout, grayling, trout, and almost every other 

 kind of fish. The salmon of the Wye are always in 

 season. 



XVI. HERTFORDSHIRE. 



THE Lea, the Colne, and the New River are the chief 

 rivers of this county, but it has a large number of 

 smaller streams, most of which, with the larger ones, 

 abound with trout, pike, carp, bream, tench, perch, 

 gudgeons, roach, &c. The trout are particularly good 

 near Ware, 



XVII. HUNTINGDONSHIRE. 



THE Ouse, which enters this county at St. Neot's, and 

 passes out of it near St. Ive's, and the Nerr, or Nine, 

 which rises in two branches on the north and south of 



