What is the most important (because first listed) skill for those seeking employment with Waterways Ireland as general operatives (basic)?
I am very glad to hear it.
What is the most important (because first listed) skill for those seeking employment with Waterways Ireland as general operatives (basic)?
I am very glad to hear it.
Waterways Ireland and a local authority have cooperated in opening a canalside walking and cycling path!
And an excitable minister opened it, saying
This has huge potential for tourism but it also has a huge knock on effect for communities in the health benefit facilities like this bring and this, in turn has benefits in reducing the press on our health services as well. I want to see more walkways because I want to see more people out walking and seeing the natural beauty that we here in Ireland are blessed to have around us.
And rightly so. But you don’t need an expensive canal in order to provide a walk.
Posted in Economic activities, Engineering and construction, Extant waterways, Foreign parts, Forgotten navigations, Irish waterways general, Natural heritage, Non-waterway, Operations, People, Politics, Restoration and rebuilding, Scenery, Ulster Canal, waterways, Waterways management
Tagged Ballinamore, boats, bridge, canal, Clones, department of arts heritage and the gaeltacht, Erne, Ireland, Lough Neagh, Michael Ring, Operations, Shannon, Shannon-Erne Waterway, Ulster Canal, walk, waterways, Waterways Ireland
PS if you’re the man on the mast, and want copies of the pic above and others, leave a Comment below.
Posted in Extant waterways, Ireland, Irish inland waterways vessels, People, Water sports activities, waterways
Tagged boats, capsize, dinghy, Dromineer, heeling, Ireland, Lough Derg, mast, Mountshannon, sailing, Shannon, yacht
Not on the Shannon or on the Erne but on the Mississippi. It seems the level is now 53 feet below the flood level of last May and eight to ten feet below normal.
Posted in Economic activities, Extant waterways, Foreign parts, Operations, Waterways management, Weather
Tagged Mississippi, water level
One of the government’s proposed schemes for saving the economy is a bypass of New Ross:
The N25 New Ross Bypass will provide approximately 13.6 kilometres of new road from Glenmore at the eastern border of Kilkenny and crossing over the River Barrow via a new bridge into Wexford.
That means it will cross around here. You should be able to see Glenmore west of the Barrow. The crossing will be in the area of navigation under the authority of the New Ross Port Company.
Here is a one-page article from the July/August issue of Engineering Inc, the magazine of the American Council of Engineering Companies. It’s about an American firm called Collins Engineers Inc, of Chicago, which is listing and assessing bridges and some other structures owned by Waterways Ireland. The project will run through 2015. The link relies on Flash, alas; if you prefer a PDF, try this link.
The joint communiqué from the latest North-South Ministerial Council inland waterways sectoral meeting, held on 9 July 2012, is here as a web page and here as a PDF.
The exciting bits:
The waterways maintenance part includes the claim that “97.5% of waterways remain[ed] open during the months of April and May”. That depends on how you measure things, though. The summit level of the Royal Canal was closed for almost the whole of that two-month period, so the canal (one seventh, about 14%, of WI’s waterways) was impassable throughout.
Posted in Ashore, Built heritage, Drainage, Economic activities, Engineering and construction, Extant waterways, Foreign parts, Forgotten navigations, Ireland, Operations, Politics, Restoration and rebuilding, Sources, Ulster Canal, Waterways management
Tagged boats, canal, Clones, department of arts heritage and the gaeltacht, Erne, Ireland, Lough Neagh, North/South Ministerial Council, Royal Canal, Ulster Canal, water level, waterways, Waterways Ireland
8 July 2012
Posted in Extant waterways, Ireland, Irish inland waterways vessels, Operations, Shannon, waterways, Waterways management, Weather
Tagged boats, buoy E, Clare, coastguard, Dromineer, Goat Island, Ireland, lifeboat, Lough Derg, Operations, RIB, RNLI, Shannon, The Goat, Williamstown
Lough Derg 8 July 2012
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