Rothar Routes

Cycle routes & pilgrim journeys in Ireland and Europe …..

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You never know what you will see out on your Bike!

One of the great advantages of cycling is you see so much more detail and have the chance to converse with people you bump into on your route.

Today was interesting.

Warning signs have been erected along the Barrow about the presence of crayfish plague in the river

Warning – Crayfish plague present

I got speaking to a couple of anglers, up past ‘the Sugar Factory’, and asked them had they any luck. They had caught a lot of pike – one of them 10 1/2 lb weight! What was interesting was they said the heads of the pike were scratched and they had ‘boils’ on the faces. They reckoned this was caused by the crayfish plague. It’s a serious threat to the native white clawed crayfish and the ecology of the Barrow system.

The fishermen were very concerned about it; it is probably too late now that the invasion has begun.

A little further on I met a guy with a big plastic sack and a paper picker. He was telling me he brings the dog for a walk and always picks up any discarded rubbish. Should have got his name. He’s a Dub judging by his accent who moved here 20 years ago and loves the Barrow Track.

In their own way all are guardians of this great resource.

Heron at Knockbeg

There seems to have been an explosion in heron numbers in recent years; every heron seems to have its own territory beside the many weirs along the river. Lovely elegant birds.

Autumn is a great time to visit the river – the banks of the river are lined with trees and are a feast of colour this time of year.

Autumn colours on the Barrow track

My route home took me through New Oak Estate and some lovely decorative gardens caught my eye! Well done to the residents of New Oak who have the area in tip top shape.

Flower Head

Flower Power

Fairy Garden

Carlow Wheelers

 

Sharing the Roads with Cyclists

There has been a n alarming spike in cycling road deaths in Ireland this year. Whether we cycle in an urban or rural environment it does feel at times as though we are invisible on the road to motorised traffic.

Most of my cycling is done on quiet country roads primarily to avoid sharing busy roads with cars and lorries. It is scary at times when passing motorists barely avoid contact as they do not appreciate just how close they are to the bike. This leaves no room for error and a pothole or a poor surface can cause a bike to go off line and the consequences could be disastrous. So the campaign ‘1.5 metres, Pass with Care’ is a great initiative to build awareness.

Safe cycling

We have all heard of the horrific cycling deaths in our cities, where trucks and buses turning left have collided with cyclists who are often difficult to see when stopped at traffic lights. It has become an unfortunate inevitability on our city streets. How can it be avoided?

France is one of the most bike friendly countries in the world and they have introduced a simple effective system that we should copy here.

Red lights: trust cyclists!

Autumn on the Barrow

Autumn is a great season to pay a trip to the Barrow, whether walking or cycling. A feast of colours, a nip in the clear air, a time of change.

Autumn Rowers

The Barrow promenade is a fantastic development that showcases the River in Town

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Carlow Rowing Club crews going through their paces

 

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Brought the touring bike up to see how it handled the soft track surface after recent rains. No problem! Save it!

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33 miles to St Mullins from the milestone at Bestfield Lock

Heron1

The river is alive with elusive herons, they don’t like encroachment, lovely river birds

Take Off

Sneaky take off!

Flight of the Heron

No flights cancelled on the Barrow!

The Wastegrass, its Mass rock and its people

A great insight into a troubled time in Ireland and County Carlow. ‘The more you know about the past, the better prepared you are for the future’. Theodore Roosevelt. Wise words for the times we live in.

Holiday at Home 4!

Peig Sayers was a great woman for recounting folk stories that were told around the fireside during her hard life on the Blascaod Mór. Her life story was on the curriculum when I did the Leaving Cert. Unlike many of my classmates i actually liked Peig; I loved the stories – probably because we holidayed in Ballyferriter for many years, I had and have a great affinity for all things West Kerry.

One of the stories she recounted was of an old woman who had never left the parish but one day set out to go to Dublin. When she reached the gap at Sliabh an Iolar she turned back horrified at the vast expanse of land ahead of her!

How times have changed. Today our young people (and my generation) are more familiar with the four corners of the World than with our own locality!

I have been fortunate to cycle in almost every county in Ireland and abroad from time to time. Especially along the Camino, and it was while cycling on the Camino that the thought first struck me that we have so much to offer to touring cyclists and hikers if we only opened up the country side and developed more trails. That’s beginning to happen now and hopefully we will see more of them.

Anyway I have had it in my head to cycle a route around County Carlow for a long time and I wanted the route to be as interesting as possible, with good views, historical sites and quiet roads. The weather has not been kind the past two weeks and I only got to complete the route today.

I started the final leg in Clonegal and marvelled at how well the village has captured the old stories and the old ways of life and commemorated them in the life of the village. Willie White was a great man for local history and he was one of the drivers behind the drive over many years before he passed away some years ago. I was day dreaming about Willie and times past as i was leaving and took the wrong road, heading out the Ardattin road instead of the Wicklow Way. realising the error of my way I detoured and after a fair old climb returned to the route none the worse for wear!

Today I headed up onto the Wicklow Way for a 5kms off road section. It’s a lovely route, very steep but the rewards make it worthwhile. There are great views right across Carlow, Ballon, Tullow and Carlow are all visible in the distance. Add in the Jays, the squirrels and the deer and there is plenty to keep the mind off the steep climb.

The Wicklow Way of course ends in Clonegal and there are road sections; the section out of Clonegal being the first if travelling north, and then later on towards Aghowle. The Church ruins in Aghowle are over the border in Wicklow but what’s a border but a line on a map. It’s one of my favourite places. A simple Church ruins facing towards the Wicklow hills. A beautifully remote setting. Continue past Aghowle and head straight past the famous Crablane Pub of John Byrne and soon you will be travelling along the award winning Pure Mile of Killinure. It’s a lovely pretty stretch of road, well manicured by the residents and notable for a number of road side shrines and a defibrillator conveniently mounted on the road side!

Rath Gall Ring fort is an incredible heritage sight that is under promoted and in need of investment. It could be a great attraction. You would need Carlow Weather’s Drone though to capture it’s magnificence!

It’s a short hop to Clonmore, another hugely important monastic site from the 6th century. There are a large number of slab crosses, a damaged high cross, a bullaun and Clonmore Castle. All worth seeing and knowing more about.

Haroldstown Dolmen is in my opinion a much nicer example of a Dolmen than Browneshill Dolmen and indeed Robert Kee must have thought so too as it featured on the cover of his book of the BBC series a History of Ireland. Very like Poulnabrone Dolmen in the Burren. Just across the road at Tobinstown is Lisnavagh House, home of historian Turtle Bunbury. An historic house owned by the Bunbury’s since the 1700s. Worth a visit!

Onward to Rathvilly, three times winner of Ireland’s Tidiest Town Award and closely associated with Kevin Barry who was executed in Mountjoy in 1920. Of course the town is also associated with St Patrick and there is a famous well where he baptised a local king and his family.

The route now headed back towards Carlow, but only staying on the main road as far as the Bull Ring Cross as this road is quite windy and busy. Turn right at the Cross and head into County Kildare for a short while, passing beautiful Kinneagh Church before turning left in the direction of Knocknacree Cross where another left turn is taken to head in the direction of Ducketts Grove and back into Carlow Town passing the Browneshill Dolmen.

74 kms in total and 1227 metres of climbing. A challenging route that packs in a lot of Carlow history and unspoilt scenery!

Here are a few photos from today: