The brook emerges from the old route of the River Lea at the northeast corner of Lockwood Reservoir[2] and flows south, running alongside the members of the Lee Valley Reservoir Chain until it crosses the Lea Valley lines railway, just to the west of St. James Street railway station in Walthamstow.[2] For this section of its route it forms a part of the Lee Flood Relief Channel, constructed between 1947 and 1976. The flood channel turns west on the south side of the railway and the brook's original course splits off, continuing southeast under Lea Bridge Road until going underground at the site of the former Leyton Sewage Works.Шаблон:Efn[2] It briefly returns to the surface for a short stretch by Ruckholt Road, at which point it vanishes underground to eventually join the Waterworks River.[2] In the 19th century the brook also, at that point, joined a network of artificial channels that ran through the marshy Temple Mills area.[2]
Ecology
The brook has been designated a site of Local Nature Conservation Importance. Different species of birds that can be spotted along it include the kingfisher. Mammals including foxes and rabbits have also been recorded.