Category Archives: People

Snug in Mountshannon

For many years Molly enlivened the Sunday market at Killaloe with her mini-pizzas, breads, chocolate biscuits and other delights — and her good humour. Then, she says, she realised that if she could sell cold pizza in the rain in Killaloe, she could sell hot pizza from the pizza oven, indoors, in Mountshannon. She is now running the Snug restaurant in Mountshannon and has a Facebook page and a website. Hot wings followed by a pizza? I’ll be there ….

NAMA and the River Suir

NAMAWineLake has a story here. More on the Suir in Clonmel here.

Kildare canal history

John W Freeman of Donadea, near Naas, Co Kildare, has very kindly sent me a copy of his third book, Reflections through a Parish Window, which he published in November 2010, and tells me that he is at work on his fourth book. As usual, his third has several items of waterways interest from the land between the canals: Donadea is south of the Royal and north of the Grand.

John gives special thanks to Essie Conroy of Lowtown (19th Lock), who died in September 2010. There is an article (p111 et seq) about her grandparents, Murt and Mary Murphy; Murt, originally from Ballycowan near Tullamore, died in 1922 aged 73. The Lowtown section also includes photos of a model flyboat, the wooden canal boat 104B (Maid of Erin, owned by Roches of Tullamore) and Essie Conroy with one of Ted Barrett’s boats at Lock 19. Her husband John Conroy is pictured on p123.

There is a photo of another wooden canal boat at Lowtown. It has the name Ocean Star written across its stern and what look like horizontal wooden slots on both sides of the rudder. The crew are named as William Connolly and his son Patrick, with Thomas Murphy (Essie Conroy’s father) standing on the bow holding a rope.

Other Grand Canal items include a photograph of 31M at Landenstown (p56)  and two photos of Robertstown, one undated (p120) and the other taken in 1895 (p116). There is a photo of the Royal at Kilcock (p64), perhaps taken in the 1980s, and a short article about the Royal with a photo of Lock 1 (pp137–8). There is even a photo of Guinness Liffey barges of, I think, the first fleet (p68).

Perhaps the most surprising item is a photograph from the Irish Press of 23 October 1947 with this caption:

Propeller-driven “water-bike”, built by motor and cycle mechanic Patrick Kennedy, of Corduff, Co Kildare, to contact his clients in their village homes along the Grand Canal. Comfortably seated on the kitchen chair “tandem seat” is Christie Brereton, Patrick’s assistant, enlivening the pair’s progress with his accordion. These mechanics say that they will perfect this style of transport for river and lake travel.

The photograph is a little blurred, but the two men can be seen clearly, with Patrick in front clasping the handlebars. The structure of the craft seems to include at least two 40-gallon drums but the steering and propulsion methods are not specified. If anyone has any more information about this craft, do please leave a Comment below.

All in all, a lot of very interesting material once again, and I am looking forward to John’s fourth book.

 

River and canal keepers

No, not Waterways Ireland, the soi-disant “guardian of Ireland’s inland navigations” (it says here), which is actually responsible for only seven of them on the island, whereof only six are actually navigable, what with nobody’s having noticed that it wasn’t raining, but the Irish Wildlife Trust, which is providing training for river and canal keepers, although I can’t find any mention of it on IWT’s own website.

 

Killaloe eel fishery

Text of aD in Limerick Leader seen on 5 April 2012

Conservation of Silver Eels on the River Shannon

Expressions of interest are invited from all interested parties to assess eligibility for a competitive tender process to award Silver Eel Operations contract on the River Shannon at ESB Eel Weir Killaloe, Co Clare.

To be eligible for consideration interested parties must have:

  • the appropriate eel fishing experience ;
  • knowledge of the River Shannon and Killaloe region as applicable;
  • suitable certified equipment;
  • appropriate insurances;
  • tax certificates, if appropriate;
  • Training records
  • other documentation as may be deemed necessary by ESB.

To register your interest, please contact:

ESB Fisheries Conservation,
Ardnacrusha Generating Station,
Limerick, Co.Clare

before 16.00hrs on Friday 13th April 2012.

Phone: 061 350598/350538; Fax 061 344560
Email: tom.obrien1@esb.ie

================================

More on the eel fishery here.

Estuarial islands

The Shannon Fergus Islands Group is seeking consultants to undertake

research on access, tourism and agricultural sustainability of the islands while identifying how best to deliver on the vision being ever mindful of the primary constraints of physical access limitations and environmental designation.

 

Seamus McDonnell …

… is paddling from Maynooth on the Royal Canal to the Shannon, down the river (and across Lough Ree) to Shannon Harbour, eastward along the Grand Canal and then (in May, during the IWAI Dublin Rally) into Dublin, across the Liffey and back to Maynooth. He is raising money for the Irish Hospice Foundation.

Here he is on Tuesday 3 April 2012 at the stop-lock near Edenderry on the Grand, heading towards Dublin.

 

You can donate to the Hospice Foundation here.

Lowtown

Statement from Lowtown Marine here.

Competition closed

Nobody has attempted to identify this quay, so the competition is now closed and I’ll drink the sherry myself.

It is, of course, the downstream quay at Clarecastle at the head of the Fergus Navigation.

Clarecastle downstream

Here is the upstream quay, just around the corner.

Clarecastle upstream

The upstream quay bears the following inscription.

Inscription at Clarecastle

I really must return and get a better photo when it’s less slippy. Note that, although this is on tidal waters, Thomas Rhodes was the engineer.

Did you know that Clarecastle still has its own port authority? Go to this excellent pub and ask John Power about it. His brother (Dr Joe) wrote the definitive history of Clarecastle. John has lots of interesting old photos and maps on display in a really good traditional pub. He’s got a facetweet thingie too.

On the occasion of Her Majesty’s Diamond Jubilee …

… (that is, of course, Her Late Victorian Majesty), F E Prothero suspended his explorations of Irish waterways after he had descended the Nore, from Abbeyleix to New Ross, in May 1897. Here is his account of that trip.