Menu

Ireland's sailing, boating & maritime magazine

Displaying items by tag: North West Personal Watercraft Club

North West Personal Watercraft Club

Our club was initially set up to save PWC users from being banned from a local lake. Now that we’ve successfully saved our lake we want to grow our club by increasing its members and arranging days out.

dsc04498.jpgPictures from the Fun Day, 6th September, 2009

pict0572.jpg

We are a growing group of friendly, likeminded people that just want to have fun and be safe on a variety of personal privately owned watercrafts including boats, jetskis and standups.


The NWPWC website is a base for all things related to our club so please take some time to have a look around and feel free to get in contact and discuss becoming a member if you like what you see.

Our club is based in the North West of Ireland with committee and members from both sides of the border. 

North West Personal Watercraft Club, 191 Melmount Road, Sion Mills, Co Tyrone BT82 9LA, N. Ireland. Email: [email protected]
 
or c/o Yel McClintock, Balliscadden, Coolboy, Letterkenny, Co Donegal. Fax: 0044 288 165 9111

Have we got your club details? Click here to get involved

 

Published in Clubs

Forty Foot Swimming Spot on Dublin Bay

The 'Forty Foot' is a rocky outcrop located at the southern tip of Dublin Bay at Sandycove, County Dublin from which people have been swimming in the Irish Sea all year round for 300 years or more. It is popular because it is one of few spots between Dublin city and Greystones in County Wicklow that allows for swimming at all stages of the tide, subject to the sea state.

Forty Foot History

Traditionally, the bathing spot was exclusively a men's bathing spot and the gentlemen's swimming club was established to help conserve the area.

Owing to its relative isolation and gender-specific nature it became a popular spot for nudists, but in the 1970s, during the women's liberation movement, a group of female equal-rights activists plunged into the waters and now it is also open to everyone and it is in the control of Dun Laoghaire Rathdown County Council.

Many people believe that swimming in extremely cold water is healthy and good for the immune system.

Is it safe to swim at the Forty Foot?

The Forty-Foot is a great place to swim because there is always enough water to get a dip but like all sea swimming, there are always hazards you need to be aware of.   For example, a lot of people like to dive into to the pool at the Forty-foot but there are submerged rocks that can be hazardous especially at low water.  The Council have erected signs to warn people of the underwater dangers. Other hazards include slippy granite cut stone steps that can often be covered with seaweed and of course marine wildlife including jellyfish that make their presence felt in the summer months as do an inquisitive nearby Sandycove seal colony.

The Forty-foot Christmas Day swim

A Dublin institution that brings people from across Dublin and beyond for a dip in the chilly winter sea. Bathers arrive in the dark from 6 am and by noon the entire forty foot is a sea of red Santa hats!