Glen River, County Donegal
River Glen Glen River | |
---|---|
Glen River and Croaghstraleel On the road between Carrick and Meenaneary | |
Native name | Irish: Abhainn Ghlinne |
Location | |
County | County Donegal |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | |
• coordinates | 54°41′04″N 8°37′13″W / 54.6844°N 8.62026°W |
The River Glen (Irish: Abhainn Ghlinne,[1] also known as the Glen River)[2] divides the parishes of Glencolmcille and Kilcar in the southwest of County Donegal, Ireland.[3] It is most famous for its waterfalls, known by anglers as the "Salmons Leap",[2] and as the name suggests, the falls are a good place to catch salmon. The river rises in the mountains above Ardara and empties into Teelin estuary in the shadow of Sliabh Liag.
During Storm Lorenzo in 2019, the largest flooding since 1939 occurred in the river and a popular footbridge that crossed the river at Carrick was damaged.[2][4] In November 2021 the bridge was replaced by a new steel footbridge.[4]
References
- ^ "Abhainn Ghlinne/Glen River". logainm.ie. Retrieved 15 December 2024.
- ^ a b c Maguire, Stephen (4 October 2019). "Iconic Donegal footbridge damaged by Storm Lorenzo". Donegal Daily. Retrieved 15 December 2024.
- ^ Bigger, Francis Joseph. "The mac Suibhne of Banagh and Fanad and na Dtuath, in Tir-Conaill. Copied from the Ordnance Survey Letters, R.I.A., Co. Donegal (Continued)". Ulster Journal of Archaeology. 15 (1). Ulster Archaeological Society: 16. JSTOR 20566355.
The Glen river separates Glencolumbcill from Kilcar, and the passage is quite correct.
- ^ a b Scanlon, Cronan (27 November 2021). "New footbridge officially opened in SW Donegal village". Donegal Daily. Retrieved 15 December 2024.