Cycling the Royal Canal, from Dublin to the Shannon

Camping gear strapped to our bikes, we headed off for a blissful weekend

Irish Times, September 28, 2019

After finishing work one Friday in high summer, my girlfriend Michelle and I left her house in Cabra, took a short cycle up to the Royal Canal, and followed it all the way to the Shannon. 


It was a warm, grey evening. We left having done minimal research: we just knew that a cycling greenway was under construction along the canal, and that it was mostly complete. Camping gear strapped to our bikes, we would figure out the rest as we went.

But we soon learned, the hard way, that from Dublin to Maynooth the greenway is far from finished. And while some sections of towpath here are ok for cycling, others are not, and our dainty road bikes weren’t up to the rougher bits. So we followed the canal in parts, and then detoured onto roads when the terrain got rougher, cycling under pale skies through the city’s outer suburbs. 

We eventually pulled up to a supermarket in Maynooth, and while I waited outside for Michelle, I thought about what an odd way to travel this was: finishing work and spending your Friday evening, under a darkening sky, racing out through commuter towns and industrial estates, looking for somewhere half-decent to camp. 

But there was an understated beauty here too: the old canal with its hedgerows, lock-cottages and limestone bridges holding its own among the housing estates, motorways and shopping centres.  

From Maynooth west, the greenway is mostly complete. Waterways Ireland currently advise starting from Maynooth, so you could put your bike on the train and begin there. We cycled briskly, eventually camping on the grassy embankment by Ferran’s Lock, a few kilometres past Kilcock. We sipped some beers in the dusk and slept deeply. 

In the morning we made coffee in the sun, then followed the roads into Enfield for a hearty breakfast. Soon were back on the towpath as the day grew hot and blue. Now the canal started to feel something like a secret passageway. West of Enfield, we could see cars on the motorway in the distance, but they could not see us.  

We stopped for refreshments at the little harbour at the Hill of Down, Co Meath, and sat in the sun outside Moran’s pub and shop, which occupies the old train station that closed in 1947. The Midland Great Western Railway purchased the canal in 1845 to build the railway alongside it. Even by then, less than 30 years after it was completed, the canal’s days as a means of transport were numbered as the railways started to take over.  

Feeling lazy and tired, we stopped again 8 km further on at Nanny Quinn’s pub by Thomastown harbour for a cold beer in the heat. Something felt quite old about this mode of travel: cycling a little-used waterway, long past its heyday, stopping at old pubs and harbours. The canal had started to feel like a hidden world: entirely its own, with little need to interact with modern life outside it.

Later we arrived into Mullingar after a lush and green stretch of the canal, darkly shaded by tall ash trees. We were hot and sweaty, so cycled north to cool off in Lough Owel before coming back into the town. 

We settled on a curry for dinner, and it felt surreal sitting in our dirty cycling clothes in an Indian restaurant among the neatly dressed couples and families out for a Saturday night meal.

Back on the towpath the sun was going down, and we pitched our tents under the trees at the gorgeous Coolnahay Harbour, with its neatly-kept flower beds and picnic tables, 10 km west of Mullingar.

In the morning we made coffee and porridge and lazed like lizards in the sun. As we cycled on, the big productive farms of the east gave way to small rushy fields, hilly pastures, forest and bog. Towns on the canal became sparser, and the waterway began to feel wilder.

At Ballynacarrigy, Co Westmeath we ate ice cream on the sleepy main street. Sitting there, it felt like there was something innocent and new about traveling through towns and villages like this, that still see little tourism: where a cyclist carrying a tent is still a strange sight, where you feel you are seeing a place fresh. 

Back on the canal, the waterway was still and green, fringed with reeds and rushes, its verges full with wildflowers: creamy meadowsweet, orange-red poppies, the blue-purple of tufted vetch, red clover, and common spotted orchids. We cycled on past the villages of Keenagh and Killashee, which lie just off the canal, and pedalled the last few miles to Richmond Harbour in Clondra, Co Longford, where the canal meets the Shannon. 

It was a hot, sunny Sunday, and the picnic tables were full of cyclists and day-trippers out eating toasted sandwiches and drinking cider. We had a celebratory drink, and cooked up some noodles on our stove in the shade of some trees by the 46th, and final, lock. 

Then it was back on our bikes and on the road to Longford town where, exhausted and sweaty, we scoffed down takeaway pizzas and pushed our way through the wild crowds gathered for the Longford Summer Festival. We crammed our bikes onto the train for the trip back to Dublin, the canal gliding by beneath our noses as we slept. 


Royal Canal Greenway: How to Do it 

The Royal Canal is 145km long. West of Maynooth it is almost finished, bar a few sections. 

But work is still in planning and construction on much of it from Dublin to Maynooth. Find the latest updates on https://www.waterwaysireland.org/royalcanalstatus. Useful info at www.royalcanalgreenway.ie too.

Be prepared to take road detours or walk sections where construction is underway or surfaces are unsuitable for cycling. Most of the finished greenway surfaces are dusty gravel or tarmac. We managed it fine on road bikes, though hybrid or mountain bikes would be better in parts. Note that no cycling is allowed on the narrow ‘Deep Sinking’ section between Castleknock and Clonsilla. 

Signage can also be poor in places. Make sure you are on the correct side of the canal before cycling each section.