Tully Stream | |
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Native name | An Tulach |
Country | Ireland |
Basin features | |
Main source | Tully West, County Kildare 84 m (276 ft) |
River mouth |
Celtic Sea at Waterford Harbour via Finnery River and River Barrow 53°04′18″N 6°59′55″W / 53.07176°N 6.99864°WCoordinates: 53°04′18″N 6°59′55″W / 53.07176°N 6.99864°W |
Basin size | 49.3 km2 (19.0 sq mi) |
Physical characteristics | |
Length | 13 km (8.1 mi) |
Discharge |
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Tully Stream (Irish: An Tulach) is a stream in County Kildare, Ireland.
Tully Stream takes its name from the Tully civil parish in which it rises, which in turn gets its name from tulaigh, the Irish for "hillock."
Tully Stream rises south of the Irish National Stud near Kildare Town. It flows south parallel to the R415 road, passing through Brallistown, an area where the stream is associated with Saint Brigit. It passes under the Soomeragh Bridge and Walterstown Bridge before turning westward and flowing through Nurney, County Kildare, flowing under the R415 at Nurney Bridge. The Tully Stream flows on through Harristown, where there is an EPA monitoring station. It then turns southwest, meeting a tributary stream at Lenagorra, flowing through Cherrymills and draining into the Finnery River at Boherbaun Lower
Tully Stream has an ancient association with Brigit of Kildare. The well at Tully is dedicated to her Brallistown, also called "The Greallachs" (Irish greallach, meaning puddle/mire) is said to have been the site where Brigit kept her cow, prayed, and made butter by Tully Stream. St. Brigid's Shoes are two stones through which the stream flows.
Brown trout (Salmo trutta), three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus), common dace (Leuciscus leuciscus) and nine-spined stickleback (Pungitius pungitius) are all found in Tully Stream.