A playwright called Helena Enright is seeking recorded reminiscences of the Shannon for a project that is part of the Elemental Arts & Culture Festival in Limerick on Saturday 15 September 2012. More info here.
h/t Stephen Powell
A playwright called Helena Enright is seeking recorded reminiscences of the Shannon for a project that is part of the Elemental Arts & Culture Festival in Limerick on Saturday 15 September 2012. More info here.
h/t Stephen Powell
Here is an article from 1792 about the virtues of the River Shannon. It was written by an unidentified Traveller from Shincliffe, near Durham. It is interesting as an earlyish example of the Irish waterways cargo cult which, it has been pointed out to me, resembles the business plan of the underpants gnomes.
Posted in Ashore, Drainage, Economic activities, Engineering and construction, Extant waterways, Ireland, Natural heritage, Operations, People, Politics, Scenery, Shannon, shannon estuary, Sources, The cattle trade, Tourism, waterways
Tagged 1792, black cattle, Clare, estuary, Galway, Ireland, Kerry, King's County, Leitrim, Limerick, Longford, Offaly, Roscommon, Shannon, Shincliffe, Shinkliff, Tipperary, traveller, Westmeath
North Tipperary LEADER Partnership (lead), Clare Local Development Co. and Galway Rural Development Co. intends to contract an individual or company with relevant experience who will work in conjunction with the Lough Derg Marketing Strategy Group to identify tourism projects that would be eligible for funding under the Rural Development Programme. The aim, through animation and capacity building, is to assist the tourism sector in the three regions with the supports they require to develop Lough Derg as a key destination for water based activities combined with a range of very high quality walking, cycling, heritage and culture and food experience.
More info here; not sure whether you need to register to see it.
Posted in Ashore, Economic activities, Extant waterways, Industrial heritage, Ireland, Irish waterways general, Operations, Politics, Scenery, Shannon, Tourism, Water sports activities, waterways, Waterways management
Tagged Clare, Galway, Ireland, Killaloe, Limerick, Lough Derg, Shannon, Tipperary, tourism, waterways
Posted in Ashore, Built heritage, Charles Wye Williams, Drainage, Economic activities, Engineering and construction, Extant waterways, Industrial heritage, Operations, Restoration and rebuilding, Shannon, waterways, Waterways management, Weather
Tagged canal, Clare, floods, Ireland, Killaloe, Limerick, lock, Lough Derg, Shannon, water level, waterways, Waterways Ireland, weir
The old Limerick Navigation included a section of canal at Killaloe, with three locks. The uppermost, now disused, is still visible at Killaloe; the middle lock (Moys) is accessible by small boat; the third (Cussaun) is under water in the Flooded Area created by Parteen Villa Weir. The wall that divided the canal from the river downstream of Killaloe bridge forms an island whereon are the former eel-packing station run by the ESB, the former goods store (inhabited by Waterways Ireland) and the former marble mill (now an ESB engineering works). The island hosts the Killaloe market on Sunday mornings.
The curious can (obstructions permitting) walk a little further downstream to where the wall was breached, allowing boats to access the canal below the bridge without having to go as far as Moys Lock.
The west side of the canal, below the slip, was lined with trees.
MARINE NOTICE No. 86 of 2011
Shannon Navigation
Lough Derg
Killaloe CanalCanal Maintenance – Tree Cutting
Waterways Ireland wishes to advise all masters and owners of vessels that tree cutting will take place along the Killaloe Canal banks from the vicinity of the cathedral downstream to the lower entrance from the river
Shannon, from Monday 19th Sep until about mid Oct.Access to this section of the canal will be closed during this period. […]
Marine Notice 24/2012 of 16 March 2012 said
Works are still ongoing along the Killaloe Canal banks from the vicinity of the Cathedral downstream to the lower entrance from the river Shannon.
Access to this section of the canal will be closed until further notice.
That notice has not (as of 10 June 2012) been withdrawn so it must be assumed that the works continue.
The works photographed on 10 June 2012.
Posted in Ashore, Charles Wye Williams, Economic activities, Engineering and construction, Extant waterways, Industrial heritage, Ireland, Natural heritage, Operations, Scenery, Shannon, waterways, Waterways management
Tagged bridge, canal, Clare, ESB, Ireland, Killaloe, Limerick, lock, lost, Lough Derg, marble mill, Operations, quay, Shannon, trees, Waterways Ireland
Watery news from the Guardian.
That is, of course, the Nenagh Guardian, not that other provincial stalwart the Manchester Guardian.
Four items in the issue of 2 June 2012 caught my eye.
First, the members of the Nenagh Canoe Club have been cleaning up … the Nenagh River, a laudable endeavour.
Second, a community project in Ballina (Killaloe’s oppo) “will see a new jetty with a thirty-year lease built on the site of the old Lakeside Marina”. The paper says that …
[…] Jim Watkins, Eoin Little and Cllr Phyll Bugler of “The Friends of the Lake” have now initiated a project, which will be funded by Leader.
I have no idea what it’s for; I would welcome more information about the project and about the Friends of the Lake, whereof I know nothing.
Third, the Lough Derg Marketing Strategy Group (which god preserve), which is coordinated by the Mid West Regional Authority (who knew?), is holding meetings about signposts. What would be really nice, though, would be if the MWRA took down the pic in its header showing adults and children in an open boat without lifejackets.
Finally, there’s a story about a proposed “fountain auditorium” planned for Birdhill [which was on the old N7, between Nenagh and Limerick, being chiefly famous for winning Tidy Towns competitions and being home to Matt the Threshers pub and eatery]. The “fountain auditorium” was, for reasons that are not entirely clear, to be a temporary operation, running until the end of 2016. It was to be located in a warehouse on the Shannonside Business Park (which is some miles from the Shannon).
The fountain auditorium was to have a pool 20m X 8m and “fountains capable of pumping water 9m into the air through more than 150 rotating nozzles”. The article says that
The proposed development is to serve as a tourist attraction centring on a fountain auditorium, in which audiences would be treated to pre-recorded shows marrying features of water, sound and synchronised lighting. The shows would have a “welcome to Lough Derg” theme, and the centre would provide visitors with information on the likes of walking and cycling routes, accommodation options, and food establishments, together with information on the history of Lough Derg.
It is not clear whether the words “fountain auditorium, in which” mean that the audience would be sitting in the pool or around it. The site was to have a “gift shop and café”. It expected to have 25,000 visitors in 2012 and 40,000 by 2016, after which it would move to permanent purpose-built premises with “a more comprehensive exhibition on Lough Derg”.
Alas! The proposed widening of the R494 road from Birdhill to Ballina, to serve the new bridge over the Shannon, would mean the loss of the space on which visitors’ coaches were to be parked. So, although the project received conditional planning permission on 16 May 2012, the promoters, Glance Promotions Ltd, withdrew their application shortly afterwards. However, that does at least suggest that they were not having any problem in providing the funding, which is good to hear in these difficult times.
* The relevance of the title of this piece will be clear to the many admirers of the oeuvre of the 4th Baron St Oswald.
Posted in Ashore, Economic activities, Engineering and construction, Extant waterways, Ireland, Irish waterways general, Operations, People, Politics, Restoration and rebuilding, Shannon, Water sports activities, waterways, Waterways management
Tagged Ballina, Birdhill, boats, canoe, fountain auditorium, Killaloe, Lakeside, lifejacket, Limerick, Lough Derg, marina, Matt the Thresher, Nenagh, river, Shannon, signposts, Tipperary, tourism, waterways