Sinn Féin has a TD called Martin Kenny who, in the Dáil on 29 May 2019, asked about repairs to a walkway across Meelick Weir. He said that
The weir is a crossing point on the Shannon on an important walkway, the Beara-Breifne Way, which runs from Breifne in Leitrim to the Beara Peninsula, straight through Ireland’s Hidden Heartlands.
I’m not sure that he’s got the direction of travel right, but let that pass. He also said
The problem is that people using the walkway have not been informed it is closed. Many businesses, particularly tourism businesses, are directing people up the walkway as far as the bridge but they cannot cross it. Over the past several days, some tourists could not cross the river at the point.
One Seán Kyne, a mini-minister, said in reply that
In 2009, during an extreme weather event, the weir and its walkway from which the weir boards are placed and removed were extensively damaged. In the 2015-16 severe weather event, the last remnants of the walkway were destroyed.
If the “many businesses, particularly tourism businesses” have not noticed that the walkway has been out of action for almost ten years, it suggests that the Beara-Breifne Way is used by very few people and that its reinstatement is not important, or at least not urgent. On the other hand, it might suggest that the operators of the tourism businesses in question have not paid as much attention to the route as they might have.
The minister, by the way, said
Meelick weir was originally built in the 1790s as part of the Shannon navigation.
I thought it was built by the Shannon Commissioners in the 1840s.
No use crying over spilt Meellck.
But as you imply – nitwits.
Keep up the good work.
Et cum spiritu tuo: I returned today from a week’s absence to find a week’s worth of reading on your blog, and I am looking forward to catching up over the next few days. bjg