The Barrow Blueway - Vicarstown to Athy - The Barrow Line
The Barrow Blueway previously known as the The Barrow Line, when completed will run from Lowtown in Kildare, through the towns of Rathangan, Monasterevin, Vicarstown to Athy. At the time of publishing the section from Vicarstown to Bert bridge a distance of 7km has been completed and is suitable for walking, cycling and buggies. From Bert bridge the path is on grass and well maintained for walking. It is certainly also doable on a good bike.
Walking south along the Barrow Way from Vicarstown, the Barrow Way stays on the right bank of the canal. You pass a bench that commemorates the poet Patrick Kavanagh's lines: "And Look! A barge comes bringing from Athy and other far flung towns mythologies".
The towpath crosses a substantial aqueduct over the lush and green Stradbally River. Then you pass Ballymanus Bridge, as the canal skirts woods and forestry. There is a mink farm on the west bank of the canal just beyond the bridge.
You pass rich green fields, hedgerows of alder, willow and elder, and the canal landscape becomes surrounded by large tillage fields.
Soon the canal goes under Milltown Bridge. If you climb up to the bridge, you can see Bert House, an ostentatious Georgian mansion. The River Barrow flows between the house and the canal.
The towpath beyond the bridge can be overgrown, but you can also follow the road here and then rejoin the canal towpath up ahead by a gate.
You pass a couple of bridges and follow a tree-lined avenue into Athy (from the Irish Ath-Ae, meaning the ford of Ae), passing new and old industrial buildings. The canal arrived here in 1791. The Barrow Line of the canal ends up ahead, and the Barrow Way joins the river for which it is named. In the past boats sometimes used the river upstream of here, rather than the canal, to avoid tolls and fares.