Although the Lough is used for a variety of recreational and commercial activities, it is exposed and tends to get extremely rough very quickly in windy conditions.
Water supply According to
Northern Ireland Water, Lough Neagh supplies 40.7% of Northern Ireland's drinking water. There have long been plans to increase the amount of water drawn from the lough, through a new
water treatment works at Hog Park Point, but these are yet to materialise. The lough's ownership by
the 12th Earl of Shaftesbury has implications for planned changes to state-run domestic water services in Northern Ireland, as the lough is also used as a
sewage outfall, and this arrangement is only permissible through
Crown immunity.
Navigation Traditional working boats on Lough Neagh include wide-beamed
clinker-built,
sprit-rigged working boats and smaller flat-bottomed "cots" and "flats". Barges, here called "lighters", were used until the 1940s to transport coal over the lough and adjacent canals. Until the 17th century, log boats (
coití) were the main means of transport. Few traditional boats are left now, but a community-based group on the southern shore of the lough is rebuilding a series of working boats. In the 19th century, three
canals were constructed, using the lough to link various ports and cities: the
Lagan Navigation provided a link from the city of
Belfast, the
Newry Canal linked to the port of
Newry, and the
Ulster Canal led to the
Lough Erne navigations, providing a navigable inland route via the
River Shannon to
Limerick, Dublin and
Waterford. The Lower Bann was also navigable to
Coleraine and the Antrim coast, and the short
Coalisland Canal provided a route for coal transportation. Of these waterways, only the Lower Bann remains open today, although a restoration plan for the Ulster Canal is currently in progress. Lough Neagh Rescue provides a search and rescue service 24 hours a day and has three stations, situated around the lough. These are at Antrim, Ardboe and Kinnego Marinas, Kinnego being its headquarters and founding station. It is a voluntary service funded by the district councils bordering the Lough. Its members are highly trained and are a declared facility for the
Maritime and Coastguard Agency which co-ordinates rescues on Lough Neagh.
Bird watching Lough Neagh attracts
birdwatchers from many nations due to the number and variety of birds which winter and summer in the
boglands and shores around the lough.
Flora The flora of the north-east of Northern Ireland includes the
algae:
Chara aspera,
Chara globularis var.
globularis,
Chara globularis var.
virgate,
Chara vulgaris var.
vulgaris,
Chara vulgaris var.
papillata,
Tolypella nidifica var.
glomerata. Records of
Angiospermae include:
Ranunculus flammula var.
pseudoreptans,
Ranunculus auricomus,
Ranunculus sceleratus,
Ranunculus circinatus,
Ranunculus peltatus,
Thalictrum flavum,
Thalictrum minus subsp.
minus,
Nymphaea alba,
Ceratophyllum demersum,
Subularia aquatica,
Erophila verna sub.
verna,
Cardamine pratensis,
Cardamine impatiens,
Cardamine flexuosa,
Rorippa palustris,
Rorippa amphibia,
Reseda luteola,
Viola odorata,
Viola reichenbachiana,
Viola tricolor ssp.
curtissi,
Hypericum androsaemum,
Hypericum maculatum,
Elatine hydropiper,
Silene vulgaris,
Silene dioica,
Saponaria officinalis,
Cerastium arvense,
Cerastium semidecandrum,
Cerastium diffusum,
Sagina nodosa,
Spergularia rubra,
Spergularia rupicola,
Chenopodium bonus-henricus,
Chenopodium polyspermum.
Nobel laureate Seamus Heaney produced a collection of poems
A Lough Neagh Sequence celebrating the eel-fishermen's traditional techniques and the natural history of their catch. Other fish species in the lake include
dollaghan —a variety of brown trout native to the lake, salmon, trout, perch and
pollan; bream,
gudgeon, pike and
rudd are also found, but are less common. ==Human history==