Rothar Routes

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

Posts tagged ‘Carlow Routes’

Cycling and Wild Swimming!

The great excitement on the football fields came to a halt on Saturday evening so it was nice to unwind on Sunday along The Barrow Way.

When the sun shines in the south east there is no where like it!

Here’s a video of our cycle along The Barrow and in Clashganny Woods followed by a spot of what is fashionably called wild swimming nowadays! Look out for the goat too!

Route Map for the Carlow Way

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I’ve mapped out a 176kms on road – off road route of County Carlow.
The route starts and finishes at Carlow Tourist Office and takes in a lot of sacred sites dotted around the County and just over the borders.
It includes 50kms of the Barrow Track, the only riverside track in the entire country, a small section of the South leister Way and the Wicklow Way.
For anyone interested in bike touring it’s a nice route to get started on and a great way to see the best of Carlow.

Don’t Stop Cycling!

Just because the weather is changing and the evenings are closed in doesn’t mean the bike has to be put away. Autum in particular is a lovely time to get out and explore.

The Barrow Track is full of colours on October and November.

The longer you keep cycling the shorter the winter!

Most important though is to look after the bike if out on trails. A quick wash and the bike will need less maintenance.

I have this Specialised Rockhopper at least 10 years and 1,000s of kilometres later it is still flying.

Milestone – 35 miles to St Mullins. I won’t make it today!

A quick wash and it's like new!

A quick wash and it’s like new!

A peaceful Sunday morning on the Barrow Track near Knockbeg

A peaceful Sunday morning on the Barrow Track near Knockbeg

Carlow Camino Route

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Follow the link to the route maps!

The Carlow Way

I have spent a lot of time thinking about the Camino in Spain and about the beauty in our own County that is not recognised for what it is.

So I have mapped my own Carlow Camino. It is intended as a pilgrimage route – it visits many important ecclesiastical sites and honours our local saints who travelled to Europe and established famous monasteries across the continent.

I have cycled all of it and it is very achievable for anyone. The maps are designed with walkers in mind in 8 stages; cyclists of course will cover them much faster.

A large portion of it is off road – I wanted to enjoy nature and travel on traffic free paths. The roads I have used are mostly very very minor roads and all pleasant to walk or cycle.

I hope people will try it out – I know I will be doing it on fine summer days!

Been Camino!

Barrow Track ‘Bike Route’

There is a lot of disquiet about the proposed investment in a bike route along the Barrow towpath.

As a regular user of the track for cycling I was at first delighted to hear that it’s potential was now being recognised yet I wondered about the ‘development’ planned. I cycle on the Barrow Track every week from the Spring through to the Autumn, less regularly in Winter and so I know it pretty well.

 

Barrow at Milford

Barrow at Milford

A couple for things strike me about it.

  • Parts of it are stunning. From Goresbridge to St Mullins is possibly the finest riverside scenery in the country.
  • The extent of the Towpath is unique – thirty miles from St Mullins to Carlow.
  • All of it can be cycled. The are some difficulties in cycling it such when the grass gets too high (it’s not very well maintained) or where Waterways Ireland has butchered it in carrying out ‘repairs’ to the surface. They use heavy hardcore in places to provide grip for their four by four vehicles. Seriously, you would break an ankle walking over these rocks on sections the River Griese and Maganey Lock. Maybe a better solution would be to invest in more environmentally friendly vehicles.
  • It links with the Grand Canal and thus is a Greenway into and out of Dublin for walkers and cyclists alike.
  • Relatively small numbers use it. There are locals in various towns and villages who appreciate the wonderful gift of nature on their doorsteps but the majority of people would hardly have walked 500 metres on the track.
  • There’s a great story attached to the river reaching back as far as the mythology of the Fianna, the establishment of St Mullins, the use of the river to access the entire of the island, the use of it for invasion, for trade and of course the story of it’s bio diversity.
  • The Barrow has huge tourism potential and it would be good to develop it. But this needs to be considered and appropriate.

How best to serve the people who use it or who might use it in the future?

Barrow Promenade

Barrow Promenade

In my opinion, very little development is needed. The surface is excellent for 90% of the route. It does need some repair work – to be carried out to the highest standards and not by the methods used in the recent past.

Good signage, some more access points onto the track to create shorter loops, picnic areas and seating along it’s length; an interpretative centre centrally located, more investment in maintenance and provision of appropriate vehicles and machinery to do the job without causing more damage to the environment.

If reports of the type of surface that is being proposed are accurate it will be an unmitigated disaster. We need less hardcore surfaces, not more, we do not need to replace natural grass banks with plastic grass grids – that never work. Especially on the Barrow Track where nature will take it’s own course and regular flooding will ensure this system will not take root and we will end up with a disastrous surface that will not be replaced afterwards as it will cost millions.

Look at what nature can do on the Barrow track – here is a video of flooding in JUNE 2012!!! This after just 2 days rain.