(upstream) ruisseau Godbout, décharge du Stoke Lake, ruisseau Guillemette, ruisseau Fréchette, ruisseau Conrad-Laroche, ruisseau Conrad-Laroche, ruisseau des Labrie, ruisseau à Brochu, ruisseau Goupil.
• right
(upstream) ruisseau Péloquin, ruisseau Normandin, ruisseau Auger, Deuxième ruisseau, ruisseau Têtu, ruisseau du Dix.
The Stoke river (in French: rivière Stoke) is a tributary of the Saint-François River, in the administrative region of Estrie, on the South Shore of the St. Lawrence River, in Quebec, Canada. The course of the Stoke River successively crosses the territories of the municipalities of:
Brabant Lake (elevation: 426 metres (1,398 ft)) constitutes the head lake of the Stoke River. This lake is located in the municipality of Dudswell, north-west of the village of "Saint-Adolphe-de-Dudswell" and Lac d'Argent in the Le Haut-Saint-François Regional County Municipality, as well as east of Saint-Camille (MRC of Asbestos).
5.8 kilometres (3.6 mi) southwesterly, up to the municipal boundary between Dudswell and Stoke;
13.5 kilometres (8.4 mi) southwesterly, along route 216 and passing through the hamlet of Duplin, to the bridge located east of village of Stoke;
1.3 kilometres (0.81 mi) southwesterly, passing northwest of the village of Stoke, to the outlet of Stoke Lake (coming from the south);
11.7 kilometres (7.3 mi) (or 5.8 kilometres (3.6 mi) in a direct line) towards the west, comprising several serpentines, and passing between the mountains "Le dos de cheval" and "Mont-Carrier ", and collecting the waters of the Godbout stream (coming from the south-west), up to its confluence with the Watopeka River.[1]
The Stoke River empties on the east bank of the Watopeka River.