The River Cong (Irish: Abhainn Chonga)[1] is a short river of moderate flow in Ireland, primarily in County Mayo but also touching County Galway.

River Cong
River Cong
River Cong (Ireland) is located in Ireland
River Cong (Ireland)
Source of the River Cong within County Mayo
Native nameAbhainn Chonga (Irish)
Location
CountryIreland
CountyCounty Galway
County Mayo
ProvinceConnacht
Physical characteristics
SourceVillage of Cong, County Mayo
MouthFlows into Lough Corrib
 • coordinates
53°31′58″N 9°17′04″W / 53.53276°N 9.28451°W / 53.53276; -9.28451
Length1 mi (1.6 km)
Discharge 
 • average37.6 m3/s (1,330 cu ft/s)

Course edit

The river issues from the large springs in the village of Cong, County Mayo, springs for which the village is justly famous.[2] The springs are fed by underground flow through caverns in the limestone bedrock of the district from Lough Mask, a little over four miles (6.4 km) to the north.[3] The river is only about one mile (1.6 km) long but some 100 yards (91 m) wide in places. It is divided by an island at one point. It flows strongly past Ashford Castle and into Lough Corrib.[4]

Recreation edit

The river is popular with fishermen, having a State salmon hatchery and a strong spring salmon run. The peak of the spring run is in April and then the grilse come in May. June to early July are particularly good, and salmon are taken in lesser numbers for the rest of the season. The river also holds stocks of ferox trout (brown trout). The upper stretch has open access, while the lower part is managed by Ashford Castle, and local gillies are available.[4][5]

The Cong Canal edit

The Cong Canal was designed to provide a navigable link between Lough Corrib at the village of Cong and Lough Mask, six kilometres to the north. It was part of the large Corrib, Mask and Carra Drainage and Navigation project intended to provide land drainage to the Loughs Corrib, Mask and Carra catchments and open up a navigation from the sea at Galway Bay to those lakes. The design and construction of the works was carried out by the government organisation known as the Board of Works (also known as The Commissioners of Public Works) over the period 1844 to 1859. Survey work commenced in June 1844 and a report with a proposed design was published in March 1846.[6]This was one of four works of navigation part funded by the Treasury during the famine years (1845 to 1849) in Ireland. The other three were Lough Neagh and the River Bann in County Antrim; the Ballinamore-Ballyconnell Canal linking Lough Erne to the Shannon across County Leitrim; and Lough Oughter and Lough Gowna in County Cavan. The navigation from the sea at Galway Bay to Lough Corrib and through Lough Corrib was completed as planned. The navigation work on the Cong Canal, in Lough Mask and on the River Robe was abandoned in 1854 when an instruction issued from the Board "to suspend the execution of all navigation works in this division of the district, and complete only such as were necessary for the regulation of the waters of Lough Mask, for drainage purposes."[7] The abandoned canal has remained an enigma ever since. The canal was brought to wide public attention in 1872 by the writer William Wilde[8]who coined the name ‘The Dry Canal’. The canal has become something of a tourist attraction in the village of Cong, County Mayo where a fully completed lock, the excavated dry channel and other heritage features may still be seen. In summer periods, the entire six kilometre stretch of the canal is completely dry and it is possible to walk along it. (Stout boots and a hiking stick are recommended for anyone wishing to undertake this walk.) In winter, flood waters rush down the channel to an overflow just north of Cong village, The lower one-and-a-half kilometre stretch of the canal at Cong village remains dry at all times. The Board of Works stated that the project was halted because it was proving to be too expensive, that labour had become scarce, and that railways had rendered canals redundant.[9][10]The local folk memory has retained a different story down through the nearly two centuries since the canal was abandoned: it says that the engineers failed to take account of the cavernous nature of the limestone in the district and when they realized this, the work was halted. The overall Corrib-Mask project was initially planned as a straightforward drainage and navigation project but, due to the potato famine it was rushed forward as a Famine relief project to provide employment to the starving locals. Significant changes were made to the original proposed design and basic errors were made at the detailed design stage.[11] Full account was not taken of the effect on milling interests of running off flood storage, and to compound this error, flood runoff was then directed into the tailraces of the mills of Cong. Legal action against the Board by the millers was successful. But an even greater error was made at the head waters of the canal where, as the local folk memory correctly records, the Board failed to take account of the cavernous nature of the limestone in the district. The result was that at times of low flow, all flow discharged through underground passages leaving the canal high and dry. Rather that admit its mistake, the Board opted for obfuscation and erected Sluices to essentially block up the channel it had just spent six years excavating through solid rock. The huge rusting Sluices may still be seen at Killimor about six kilometres north of Cong village, but they are difficult to access. (Anyone accessing the Sluices by walking along the canal bed should not under any circumstances walk under the hanging sluice gates.)

References edit

  1. ^ "Príommhbhord lascaigh agus Boird lascaigh Réigiúnacha Tuarascaíl Bhliantúil Dhieridh" [Central Fisheries Board and Regional Fisheries Boards Derry Annual Report] (in Irish). Archived from the original on 24 September 2016. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
  2. ^ Ordnance Survey, The Complete Road Atlas of Ireland:Published in 1997 by Ordnance Survey of Ireland. Map page 31, ISBN 1-901496-81-3
  3. ^ Drew, D. P. and Daly, D., Groundwater and Karstification in Mid-Galway, South Mayo and North Clare, Geological Survey of Ireland, Report Series 93/3, Dublin, 1993.
  4. ^ a b "Lough Corrib, Lough Mask and Cong". Mayo, Ireland. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  5. ^ "Lough Corrib and its tributaries". Angling Ireland. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  6. ^ McMahon, John (1846). Loughs Corrib, Mask and Carra District: Report to the Commissioners on the Drainage of the Flooded Lands in the Lough Corrib Division of this District, on the Improvement of the Navigations throughout the District; and on the Improvement of Mill-Power in the Town of Galway. HMSO.
  7. ^ Commissioners of Public Works (Ireland) (1855). Twenty-Third Report with Appendices. HMSO. p. 141.
  8. ^ Wilde, William (1872). Lough Corrib, Its Shores and Islands: with notices of Lough Mask. McGlashan & Gill, Dublin. p. 161.
  9. ^ Delany, Ruth (2004). Ireland's Inland Waterways. Appletree Press. p. 173.
  10. ^ Semple, Maurice (1981). By the Corribside. Self-Published.
  11. ^ Dillon, Peter (2023). THE CONG CANAL Mystery of an Abandoned Waterway. Kenilworth & Collins.