The Irish Times reports that numbers of passengers on the Western Rail Corridor from Limerick to Galway are at about two thirds of the level assumed in the “business case”.
Well I never. Who could have known?
The Irish Times reports that numbers of passengers on the Western Rail Corridor from Limerick to Galway are at about two thirds of the level assumed in the “business case”.
Well I never. Who could have known?
… didn’t cross the Rine, which is a river in County Clare, flowing into the estuary of the River Fergus which, in turn, joins the estuary of the River Shannon. The Rine is also known as the Quin and the Ardsollus and its downstream end is called Latoon Creek, no doubt because it flows by the townlands of Latoon North (which is to the east) and Latoon South (to the west). There is a quay there, hidden under one of the three road-bridges that cross the Latoon side by side. Sea-manure (seaweed used for fertiliser) was landed there and Samuel Lewis tells us that fifty-ton lighters were used, but more information is needed about their operations.
Read about it here.
Posted in Extant waterways, Forgotten navigations, Industrial heritage, Irish inland waterways vessels, Irish waterways general, Operations, shannon estuary
Tagged Ardsollue, boats, bridge, Clare, Clarecastle, creek, Ennis, Fergus, fertiliser, Hely Dutton, Ireland, Latoon, lighters, lost, M18, N18, pier. three German officers, quay, Quin, Rine, Samuel Lewis, sea-manure, seaweed, Shannon, turf, vessels, water level, waterways