Tag Archives: Ireland

Floods November 2009: kayaks at Curragour

One beneficial aspect of the floods is that there is lots of water for kayakists. Here are some pics taken at Curragour, on the Shannon in Limerick city, on 28 November 2009.

Sailing directions: Shannon Estuary and Loughs Derg (1838-9), Ree (1837) and Erne (1835-6)

Here are the Sailing Directions for the Shannon Estuary (completed before 1848) and for Lough Erne (1835-6), Lough Ree (1837) and Lough Derg (1838-9). They were compiled by Commander James Wolfe RN, who was one of those who drew up the relevant Admiralty Charts. Like the Charts, these Directions have not been updated, so boaters should not rely on them for navigation.

The Google Books Team have kindly permitted me to extract these from a larger document, which was one of those they had scanned and placed online, and to make them available (free, of course) to visitors to this site. Note that I have omitted part of the description of the smaller Lough Derg, which is not part of the connected waterways system.

Shannon & Erne sailing directions

Online maps

Much of what I’ve learned about old Irish waterways has come from studying the Irish Ordnance Survey maps of the ~1830s and ~1900s (the tilde shows that the dates are approximate: individual sheets were surveyed and published on different dates). However, I had to pay a subscription to get access to them online, so I couldn’t refer visitors of this site to them. Instead, I suggested that visitors consult the free Google Maps and the Griffiths Valuation online maps.

Now, however, the Ordnance Survey maps are available, free of charge, online. “Historic” is the ~1830s maps in colour and “Historic 25i” is the ~1900s maps. Contemporary orthophotographic maps are also available and, best of all, you can overlay a modern map on an old one. Hours of innocent enjoyment and highly recommended.

Conway’s Canal and the Doonass bleach mill

The fall of the Shannon is concentrated between Killaloe, at the bottom of Lough Derg, and Limerick, at the head of the Shannon Estuary. It is that fall, of almost 100 feeet, that made possible the construction of the hydroelectric power station at Ardnacrusha in the 1920s. Its designers were not the first people to realise the usefulness of the water-power of the Shannon in that area, but they were almost the first to use it: there were few mills between Killaloe and Plassey, and that at O’Briensbridge used water from the Bridgetown direction rather than from the Shannon.

There were, however, two bleach mills, one at Doonass on the County Clare side of the Shannon and one at Castleconnell on the Co Limerick side. The Doonass mill seems to have been set up, around 1760, by Hercules Browning or Brownriggs. There is little trace of the mill itself, but its intake and outlet canals are still to be seen. The really interesting thing is that there are two outlets: the shorter returns to the Shannon almost immediately below the mill while the longer runs for almost half a mile, behind a hill, before it rejoins the river.

I don’t know why it has two outlets. It is possible that the system catered for much higher water levels with greater variation between summer and winter. It is conceivable that the longer arm might have been used to carry the produce of the mill downstream, although I have no evidence for that and I’m not sure where the goods would have gone after the outlet rejoined the river. The watercourse is referred to locally as Conway’s Canal, but I don’t think that is evidence that it ever carried anything.

Anyway, here are maps, photos and as much background information as I could find. Comments, suggestions and explanations will be welcome.

Loos talk

On recent visits to two waterways sites, I found old loos that had been provided for the use of the workers. Here are some photographs. There must be more such loos out there; I’d love to hear from anyone who knows of any.

Wooden boats at Lowtown

After a recent visit to Lowtown, the junction between the Barrow Line and Main Line of the Grand Canal, I’ve set up a new page of photos of wooden boats at Lowtown. There are some interesting boats there, and several conversions of varying degrees of elegance. There are also some sunken boats. And there is an Artwork.

In most cases I was unable to name the boats; I would welcome information on their names of any aspect of their histories (you can leave a Comment at the bottom of the page).

Laying buoys

Here is a short page with a few photographs showing a Waterways Ireland crew at work in Athlone, where they were laying buoys to mark a course for the swimming element of a triathlon. Waterways Ireland is the main sponsor of the event and had evidently committed staff resources as well as cash.

The Anner canal

Just east of the Bulmers factory in Clonmel, Co Tipperary, the Anner runs southwards to its confluence with the River Suir. A short distance north of the N24 (the road to Waterford), a canal separates off from the river and runs down the far side of a field, passing under the N24 a short distance to the east of the Anner. The bridge under which it passed is (or was, on the 1904 Ordnance Survey map) called Canal Bridge, which is the only information I have to suggest that this watercourse was thought of as a canal. I have a few photos of it here.

The upper Suir: Clonmel to Carrick

I have just put up a page about the Upper Suir navigation, from Clonmel downstream to Carrick-on-Suir. This was an extraordinarily difficult navigation, with a fall of 57′ in about twelve miles — and not a single lock of any kind. There were shallows, rapids and floods: the level of the Suir could change very quickly in response to rainfall, and the currents, bad enough at the best of times, could rapidly become extremely dangerous. It is not surprising, therefore, that the worst accident in Irish inland waterways history was the drowning of over 100 people, most of them women and children, who were travelling downstream from Clonmel to Carrick.

And this navigation was worked entirely by horse power, with up to fifteen horses employed at times to haul the boats upstream.

This account includes extracts from poems and links to old photos, as well as many, many photos of major sections of the navigation. There is also a diversion to cover the millstreams and weirs of Clonmel and there are opinions from the authors of early guidebooks for oarsmen and canoeists. However, there are undoubtedly errors and omissions, and I welcome Comments that might help to improve this account.

Some updates

I’ve added some extra photos of

Waterways Ireland workboats (four photos down the bottom of the page)

non-WI workboats (several photos in several categories)

sailing boats (a single photo taken on Lough Ree)

traditional boats (three photos of Nore cots).

If you don’t want to have to scroll through everything on each page, ask your browser to find “July 2008” (all pages except Traditional boats) or “June 2008” (Traditional boats).