Quay, Muckross, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Transport Infrastructure
On the south-eastern shore of Castlelough Bay, on the edge of the Muckross peninsula in Killarney National Park, a small stone platform sits on a rock outcrop just above the water.
It measures roughly 1.9 metres east to west and 1.5 metres north to south, its surface laid with flagstones, and it is reached by descending twelve stone steps cut into the rock above it. That is the entirety of it: a quay barely larger than a dining table, designed to serve a purpose that once made complete sense and now requires a little imagination to reconstruct.
The scale speaks to how lake transport once worked in this part of Kerry. Lough Leane and its connected waters were practical routes long before roads made overland travel straightforward, and small private landings like this one were the equivalent of a garden gate, allowing goods, people, and boats to move between estate or farmland and the lake without ceremony. A platform this size would have accommodated a rowing boat or a small traditional craft with ease. The flagstone surface would have given a firm, level footing for loading and unloading, and the flight of steps allowed access down from higher ground without scrambling over bare rock. Nothing about it is showy; it is purely functional, the kind of infrastructure that rarely survives in the record precisely because it was so ordinary to those who used it.