WELCOME TO THE RIVER DARENT - RISING IN WESTERHAM, KENT AND MEETING THE THAMES AT DARTFORD

Example of an artificial spring
What makes the River Darent special ?
- It supplies local population and parts of London with drinking water.
- In 1985 it was one of ten UK rivers likely to disappear.
- After considerable effort by the Environment Agency and water companies it still suffers from low flows and has been augmented by artificial springs
- The Darent is a chalk stream which creates an unusually diverse habitat for wildlife and vegetation.
- It provides fishing lakes which are potentially ideal for coarse fishing for leisure.
- It meanders through beautiful countryside and villages and delights residents and visitors.
- Check out our News and Comment page here

Summer 2019 - Darent in Danger again
Given the low rainfall in 2017/18/19 and continued pressures from house building in Kent, DRIPS is again worried about the river
Download the Autumn 2019 DRIPS newsletter HERE
Look at what the WWF has been saying about UK rivers
The WWF website here
Follow the WWF campaign for rivers at Westminster October 2017 HERE
and read a WWF blog on Chalk Streams by Charles Rangeley Wilson HERE
If you would like to know more about DRiPS, email us at darentdrips1985@gmail.com
Given the low rainfall in 2017/18/19 and continued pressures from house building in Kent, DRIPS is again worried about the river
Download the Autumn 2019 DRIPS newsletter HERE
Look at what the WWF has been saying about UK rivers
The WWF website here
Follow the WWF campaign for rivers at Westminster October 2017 HERE
and read a WWF blog on Chalk Streams by Charles Rangeley Wilson HERE
If you would like to know more about DRiPS, email us at darentdrips1985@gmail.com

2019 Autumn meeting and AGM
Castle Hotel, Eynsford Thursday 24th October at 7pm
Directions: in the middle of Eynsford High St, DA4 0AB.
The AGM was followed by presentations by the Environment Agency, Thames Water, the SE Rivers Trust and Sir Michael Fallon. Stuart Merrylees presented "A Layman's guide to Aquifers". We discussed the critical lack of water in SE England and its effect on the Cray and Darent and the EA Love Water campaign.
Download our 2019 Newsletter here.
Download presentations from the meeting
Thames Water presentation here
Environment Agency presentation here
South East Rivers Trust presentation here

"LOVE WATER" The Environment Agency asks us all to help.
Water is precious stuff and we're all treating it too casually
To watch Sir James Bevan (EA CEO) talking, click here
Water is precious stuff and we're all treating it too casually
To watch Sir James Bevan (EA CEO) talking, click here
See tips on saving water from WATERWISE www.waterwise.org.uk/save-water
Alan WILLIAMS

The DRiPS committee was sad to announce the death of Alan Williams in June 2018. Alan had been involved with the Society since its very beginning and been chairman for many years. He had a lifetime of experience on the river and will be sorely missed by his many friends and colleagues.
The picture, taken in March 2015, shows Alan Williams (right) shaking hands with Jamie Riches, Thames Water, at a DRiPS visit to the Aquifer Storage and Recovery project in Horton Kirby. ASR is still being evaluated and as of 2019, is still not in production.
The picture, taken in March 2015, shows Alan Williams (right) shaking hands with Jamie Riches, Thames Water, at a DRiPS visit to the Aquifer Storage and Recovery project in Horton Kirby. ASR is still being evaluated and as of 2019, is still not in production.

DARENT and CRAY CATCHMENT IMPROVEMENT GROUPS
DRiPS is a member of the Darent Catchment Improvement Group and also attends the CRAY meetings. The "CIG" meetings are chaired by SERT and NWKCP.
To read more, go to the Darent and Cray Partnership website https://darentpartnership.org.uk, or the SE Rivers Trust website at www.southeastriverstrust.org. To read about the North West Kent Countryside Partnership go to www.nwkcp.org

River Darent - Living on the Edge ?
The Environment Agency has produced a document for riparian owners and managers.
Click on Living on the Edge to download the pdf.
The River Restoration Centre, to which we are affiliated, also publishes regular bulletins.
Click here for the Jan 2014 bulletin on "Back to Nature" flood management
The Darent Catchment Improvement Group, organised by the North West Kent Countryside Partnership in conjunction with the Environment Agency, are keen for everyone to get familiar with the river and to know h what you think would help improve it. Visit the NWKCP website to read about the Darent and the Cray.
The Environment Agency has produced a document for riparian owners and managers.
Click on Living on the Edge to download the pdf.
The River Restoration Centre, to which we are affiliated, also publishes regular bulletins.
Click here for the Jan 2014 bulletin on "Back to Nature" flood management
The Darent Catchment Improvement Group, organised by the North West Kent Countryside Partnership in conjunction with the Environment Agency, are keen for everyone to get familiar with the river and to know h what you think would help improve it. Visit the NWKCP website to read about the Darent and the Cray.
COMPLETION OF THE DARENT ACTION PLAN
At the Society's Annual Meeting in Eynsford on Wednesday 17th April 2013 we reviewed and celebrated the completion of the Darent Action Plan - a historic landmark for the river. To read the chairman's report and see presentations from the Environment Agency and Southern Water, click here
To read the Spring 2013 edition of the Society's NewsFlow Newsletter, click here and here
To read the Spring 2013 edition of the Society's NewsFlow Newsletter, click here and here
HISTORY of the DROUGHT and The DARENT ACTION PLAN

Poster from campaign in 2012
The Darent River Preservation Society (DRiPS) was established in 1985 at which time there was often a dry river bed in Shoreham, Eynsford or Farningham, especially when rainfall was low. This was largely the result of over-extraction. Prompted by DRiPS, the Environment Agency and the various water authorities together drew up a scheme to help restore the river - the River Darent Action Plan. This strategy is helping the river to recover, so that it now has the chance to remain a priceless asset for everybody young and old alike – a place to walk, go bird-watching, paint, paddle or fish, or to just sit on the banks and let the world go by.
Today, stretches of the Darent lie undisturbed, and in these places the natural habitat of the river can be maintained, where fish, animals, plants and other wildlife can thrive in peace.
However, such optimism does not mean that the threats to the river’s health and well-being have disappeared – far from it. Housing development throughout the catchment is increasing to meet the demands of a burgeoning population.
We must all understand more about our rivers and learn to take more care of our water.
Today, stretches of the Darent lie undisturbed, and in these places the natural habitat of the river can be maintained, where fish, animals, plants and other wildlife can thrive in peace.
However, such optimism does not mean that the threats to the river’s health and well-being have disappeared – far from it. Housing development throughout the catchment is increasing to meet the demands of a burgeoning population.
We must all understand more about our rivers and learn to take more care of our water.
All about Aquifer Storage Recovery - what is ASR?
Aquifer Storage and Recovery is a system where at times of surplus, water is deliberately pumped into underground aquifers and stored there for subsequent abstraction. Thames Water has developed a trial scheme at Horton Kirby to store good quality water in the Lower Greensand aquifer which is separated from the Chalk aquifer by 69m of impermeable Gault Clay, thereby isolating the abstraction from the river. Read more...
It is a significant new development in helping to store our drinking water.
See Thames Water press release of March 2015 here.
WWTOnline press release here
Aquifer Storage and Recovery is a system where at times of surplus, water is deliberately pumped into underground aquifers and stored there for subsequent abstraction. Thames Water has developed a trial scheme at Horton Kirby to store good quality water in the Lower Greensand aquifer which is separated from the Chalk aquifer by 69m of impermeable Gault Clay, thereby isolating the abstraction from the river. Read more...
It is a significant new development in helping to store our drinking water.
See Thames Water press release of March 2015 here.
WWTOnline press release here
the European Water Framework Directive

It is highly laudable that the EU should set out plans for all the River Basins across Europe. But does one plan fit all? DRIPS feels that the European Water Framework Directive could impact badly on rivers such as the Darent that suffer from low flows.The WFD states that fish must be able to migrate freely (and we agree with that in principle), and it requires the Environment Agency (EA) to review all impoundments on the river and to remove ones it deems unnecessary. There are approximately 29 significant weirs or sluices on the Darent and many minor ones. The EA says it intends to remove all structures which impede the migration of fish. The alternative would be to install fish passes, but these are too expensive.
DRIPS does not believe the river at present is capable of supporting a self-replicating fishery and will not be able to do so until there is a more constant minimum flow. Removing these structures will only exacerbate the low flow to which the river is prone. In all of the surveys carried out on the Darent over many years – including the current Darent Action Plan – not one of them suggests that the removal of impounding structures would benefit the river.
Clearly, the Darent is not the Danube: DRIPS is anxious to raise public awareness and understand how the WFD will be interpreted.
In January 2013, our chairman wrote a letter to parish councils which will also be of interest to riparian owners. Click here to download.
DRIPS does not believe the river at present is capable of supporting a self-replicating fishery and will not be able to do so until there is a more constant minimum flow. Removing these structures will only exacerbate the low flow to which the river is prone. In all of the surveys carried out on the Darent over many years – including the current Darent Action Plan – not one of them suggests that the removal of impounding structures would benefit the river.
Clearly, the Darent is not the Danube: DRIPS is anxious to raise public awareness and understand how the WFD will be interpreted.
In January 2013, our chairman wrote a letter to parish councils which will also be of interest to riparian owners. Click here to download.
The Darent River Preservation Society is Reg Charity No 1002300