- The
gandelow is a
traditional wooden fishing boat used on the
River Shannon on the west
coast of Ireland. The boat has been in use by
fishing communities...
- However, they are not as
seaworthy as the
Swampscott or
Banks dories. The
Gandelow, much like a dory
design from
midships forward, is
native to the Shannon...
-
along its length. At Limerick,
fishermen based on Clancy's
Strand used the
Gandelow to
catch Salmon. The
Abbey Fishermen used a net and a boat type
known as...
-
traditional Irish boats are
constructed by the students,
including the
gandelow,
currach and dory. In addition, the
school was
involved in the rebuilding...
- nearby, once emplo****
hundreds of men. The boat most
commonly used was the
Gandelow which was also used as a
small Lighter (barge) to
ferry goods to and from...
-
along its length. At Limerick,
fishermen based on Clancy's
Strand used the
gandelow to
catch salmon.[page needed] In the 1920s the
construction of a dam at...
- Island, in the
American Revolutionary War, in
which gundalows were used
Gandelow, a type of flat-bottomed
fishing boat used on the
River Shannon in Ireland...
-
living from the
nearby Shannon River by drift-net
fishing for
salmon in
gandelow boats,
cutting reed that
grows along the
Shannon for sale as thatch, brick...
-
could reasonably be
construed as
predecessors of the dory. In Ireland, the
Gandelow was used to fish for
salmon in the
Shannon estuary from the 1600s onwards...