Tag Archives: Clare

Irish Times catches up …

… with this site, reporting on both Seol Sionna and the gandalows, which were covered here and here.

 

“It’s worth a bit of suffering to create some good memories”

… or why taking a boat into Dublin by canal, or to Limerick via Ardnacrusha, is a Good Thing, even if it’s a hassle at the time.

The surprising importance of the Shannon steamers in the 1830s

A short, lavishly illustrated talk in Killaloe Cathedral, Co Clare, at 6.00pm on Sunday 29 April 2012, as part of the Waterways Ireland Discover Killaloe and Ballina thingie.

 

 

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 ….

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.

Sunset on the Lower Shannon

A poem by Sir Aubrey de Vere, father of the more famous Aubrey Thomas de Vere. The family estates were at Curraghchase, now a forest park, on the south side of the Shannon estuary and now best known as the home of Caroline Rigney, producer of some of Ireland’s best bacon. Sir Aubrey’s wife was one Mary Rice, of the Mount Trenchard family, one of whose members had a major role in the development of the Shannon in the 1840s.

Sunset on the Lower Shannon

How beautiful the tints of closing even!
The dark blue hills, the crimson glow of heaven,
The shadows purpling o’er the wat’ry scene,
Now streaked with gold — now tinged with tender green;
And yon bright path that burns along the deep,
Ere the sun sinks behind his western steep,
Soft fades the parting glory through the sky,
Commingling with the cool aerial dye;
While every cloud still kindling in the beam,
In mirrored beauty prints the waveless stream,
Light barques, with dusky sails, scarce seen to glide,
Bend their brown shadows o’er the glowing tide;
And hark! at intervals the sound of oars
Comes, faint from distance, to the silent shores,
Blent with the plaintive cadence of the song
Of boatmen, chanting as they drift along.
But see the radiant orb now sinks apace —
Gradual and slow, he stoops his glorious face;
And now — but half his swelling disk appears —
And now, how quickly gone! he scarcely rears
One burning point above the mountain’s head —
And now, the last expiring beam has fled.

Sir Aubrey de Vere in The Dublin Penny Journal Vol 1 No 17
October 20 1832

The “light barques” probably included some turf boats.

There are more poems by Sir Aubrey here.

Stolen engines

KBSR's Noosacat

 

If you’re offered any cheap 90hp outboards, be suspicious: two of them have been stolen from Killaloe-Ballina Search and Recovery Unit’s Noosacat.

Limerick dredging

The Limerick Post has news here.

You don’t often see …

… a completely calm Lough Derg.

From Castlelough

From The Lookout 1

From The Lookout 2

 

Killaloe bridge

More on the new bridge here with the full public notice here [PDF]. Interesting to see how many of the names of landowners are known to me.

I see on page 6 of the notice that the ESB owns two rivers, which are occupied by the ESB, Waterways Ireland, the Inland Waterways Association of Ireland and other unknown persons. There is a canal, whose owners are unknown, which is occupied by WI, IWAI and the persons unknown, as is an island. I do hope that the council will return the canal, rivers and island when they’ve built the bridge.