Annacloy River

Annacloy River is a river in County Down, Northern Ireland, which rises in the Dromara Hills and flows into Strangford Lough.[1]

Annacloy River at Annacloy, September 2010

Course

The Ballynahinch River, flowing east through Ballynahinch, and the Carson's Dam River, flowing south through Crossgar, join at Kilmore, and the united stream is called the Annacloy River, and lower down the River Quoile, falling into the southwest angle of Strangford Lough near Downpatrick.[2]

On the river between Mason's bridge and Kilmore there are regular and continuous rapids and weirs. Between Kilmore and Annacloy the river is quieter although there are still a couple of weirs. There are at least 2 dangerous weirs between Raleagh and Rademon. Below Annacloy the river calms down to Jane's Shore in Downpatrick. Canoeing is not at present permitted below Jane's Shore as entry to the Quoile Pondage National Nature Reserve is not permitted.[1] The river is generally known as the River Quoile from Annacloy down through Downpatrick to the Barrage where it flows into Strangford Lough.[3]

gollark: Thus implying that it is in fact already doing the vector growth thing but at a lower level.
gollark: Gibson claims that realloc will expand in place.
gollark: It doesn't use less memory if realloc is just doing stuff internally.
gollark: This is why the thing where all C programs contain their own data structures is bee.
gollark: It's 2-based Fibonacci indices.

See also

References

  1. "Annacloy River". White Water - Canoe NI. Archived from the original on 26 February 2009. Retrieved 27 February 2009.
  2. "Down - Atlas and Cyclopedia of Ireland (1900)". Library Ireland. Retrieved 27 February 2009.
  3. "Quoile Estuary". Flat Water - Canoe NI. Retrieved 27 February 2009.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.