Divoká Orlice

The Divoká Orlice (Polish: Dzika Orlica, German: Wilde Adler) is a river in the Czech Republic and Poland.

It flows through Lower Silesian Voivodeship in Poland and through the Hradec Králové and Pardubice regions.

The name Orlice is derived from the Slavic word orel, i.e. 'eagle' (literally "female eagle").

[4][5] The longest tributaries of the Divoká Orlice are:[6] The river flows through the territories of the gminas Szczytna, Bystrzyca Kłodzka and Międzylesie in Poland and through the municipal territories of Orlické Záhoří, Bartošovice v Orlických horách, Klášterec nad Orlicí, Pastviny, Nekoř, Líšnice, Žamberk, Helvíkovice, Záchlumí, Potštejn, Záměl, Doudleby nad Orlicí, Kostelec nad Orlicí, Častolovice, Čestice, Lípa nad Orlicí and Žďár nad Orlicí in the Czech Republic.

The largest of them is Pastviny I Reservoir with an area of 63 ha (160 acres), built directly on the Divoká Orlice.

The upper course at Lasówka
Confluence of the Divoká Orlice and Rokytenka