
Castlewellan: Triathlon entries postponed over blue-green algae in lake
Blue-green algae could disrupt an annual triathlon for the second consecutive year, the director of the race has said.Chris Campbell said entries for the 2025 Mourne Sprint Triathlon in Castlewellan Forest Park in County Down had been postponed over fears the water quality posed a safety hazard for swimmers.The 2024 race had to be adapted at the last minute to a run-bike-run duathlon due to similar health concerns.Exposure to high levels of any blue-green algae blooms - whether by contact with water blooms, swallowing that water or inhaling airborne droplets - can cause health effects in people and animals.
'I'm not confident'
Race director Chris Campbell said significant blue-green algal blooms had appeared in Castlewellan lake over the past few weeks.He said it seemed unlikely the water quality would be up to standard by the day of the race on 30 August."I'm not confident it will go ahead at all this year," he said."We would need a lot of rain to clear it."Newry Mourne and Down District Council said it was continuing to monitor the lake.A spokesperson said people should not enter the water, drink the water, catch or eat fish from the lake and should keep animals away from the lake.The Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs has been asked for comment.
Olympian Triathlon Belfast said it would re-examine the situation on 1 June and make a final decision on whether to let the race go ahead or to call it off.Mr Campbell said it was very disappointing that the group seemed to be in the same position for a second year running.In 2024 the swimming leg was cancelled after it was confirmed blue-green algae was present in Castlewellan Lake.Mr Campbell said they were told "at the very last minute", by Newry, Mourne and Down District Council, that blue-green algae meant it would not be safe to enter the water.The group had already received 400 entries for the race so decided to adapt the event rather than cancel it.
Stephen Chisholm from Belfast was due to take part in the 2024 race but decided not to compete in the duathlon."Taking the swim element out for me was removing a huge part of the challenge", he said."Triathlon is unique in that it's three sports one after the other and it's not often that someone can do all three back to back or even in a single day."He said it was disappointing to miss out on the event."This was to be my final official race of the year and one last chance to see the results of my training throughout the year", he said."I love open water swimming and Castlewellan is a stunningly beautiful location so it was a real shame to miss this."He said he planned his own Olympic distance triathlon on the day of the race instead, with the swimming leg at Helen's Bay near Crawfordsburn.
Organisers Olympian Triathlon Belfast said the blue-green algae appeared to be worse in recent weeks than it was in 2024.It added that the advisory notice placed at the water's edge by Newry, Mourne and Down District Council instructing people not to bathe in the lake had remained in place since last August."With warm weather and sunshine forecast, it's likely more and more algae will bloom," Mr Campbell said."Many people ignore the council's notice and continue to paddleboard and fish in the lake."But as event organisers we can't take that risk. We can't have 400 swimmers and 200 of them getting sick."
Olympian Triathlon Belfast said it was looking into alternative venues for the event."The fear is, blue-green algae could be a problem at any bathing site in Northern Ireland," Mr Campbell said."It doesn't seem to us that much is being done about this."
Blue-green algae in Northern Ireland
Blue-green algae, technically known as cyanobacteria, is a collection of microscopic organisms that are naturally present in lakes and streams.Under certain conditions, blue-green algae can become abundant in warm, shallow, undisturbed, nutrient-rich surface waters that receive a lot of sunlight.When this occurs, the algae can form blooms that discolour the water or produce floating mats or scums on the water's surface.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Belfast Telegraph
40 minutes ago
- Belfast Telegraph
Trai Hume: Northern Ireland have to learn lessons from Denmark loss for World Cup bid
The Sunderland defender was proud to wear the armband in Copenhagen and is set to skipper the side again in Belfast on Tuesday when Michael O'Neill's young guns will aim to hit back from a 2-1 friendly loss at Parken. Hume looked to be leading the side to a half-time lead at the weekend after Pierre-Emile Højbjerg's early own goal, only for Gustav Isaksen to equalise in injury time with a classy finish and, with Northern Ireland loose in possession after the break, the Danes worked up a head of steam in the second period, grabbing a winner through Christian Eriksen. Former Linfield ace Hume said: 'In the first half, I thought we were very strong. We started the game very bright, obviously getting the goal and, you know, I thought we were very strong out of possession and we did come in at half-time disappointed that they scored just on the brink of half-time. 'In the second half, they probably had a lot more chances than we would have wanted, but I think that's probably based off their quality and probably us giving the ball away quite easily in the breaks, so that's whenever we were open and stretched and that's whenever they did get their chances. 'That's something we can look back on and learn from.' With Denmark dominant in possession for most of the contest, on the rare occasions Northern Ireland had the ball they needed to hold on to it much better than they did, especially in the second half. Hume admitted: 'In the first half, like I said, we were very organised whenever we did get the ball, we held on to it and kept it well. 'The second half we were probably a wee bit loose on it and gave it away. 'It's probably us trying to break and trying to get forward and being a wee bit loose on the ball and not looking after it, not taking care of the ball really. 'That's whenever they got their chances and had their chances to break whenever we weren't ready and set and they had more space. 'That might come down to the substitutions as well, it might come down to tiredness – many of the boys had three, four weeks off (after their seasons finished), so maybe it's a wee bit of that too. 'But we'll look back on it throughout the next couple of days and learn from it, and obviously that's the kind of risk and reward of the way we play. We want to counter, we want to try and score. If we do give the ball away, that's when you're open. We don't want to make excuses so it's something we can analyse and learn from.' That's the thing… all the friendly matches in the build up to the World Cup qualifiers are about Northern Ireland getting it right for the trips to Luxembourg and Germany in September. Take, for example, four points from that crucial double header and the loss in Denmark and the 5-1 hammering in Sweden in March will have been deemed as excellent exercises for O'Neill's young side. Hume, who gave a typically committed display in Copenhagen, added: 'Yes, I think it's about learning from it. We're going to have to go away to tough teams and probably suffer a bit without the ball the way we did against Denmark, so we have to try our best to be organised and disciplined. 'We had a very young team out there at the weekend especially when the subs came on. I don't know what the average age was but whenever I looked around they were very young.' The final friendly before Northern Ireland's September showdowns is on Tuesday evening versus Iceland, who have not played at Windsor Park since 2006. While away form has been patchy in the last year for O'Neill's new era side, in Belfast they have been brilliant, winning all three Nations League fixtures in 2024 at the national stadium without conceding a goal and drawing 1-1 three months ago when a strong Switzerland side came to town. There is a confidence about Northern Ireland on home turf with the players feeling they can take anyone on. Hume is intent that continues on Tuesday in front of the home supporters, who will want to send the players off on a high before the World Cup group begins. By then Hume will be playing in the Premier League with Sunderland having been an inspirational figure in their promotion from the Championship. 'Our home record's been very good of late, and we don't want to lose that, we don't want to change that on Tuesday,' said the defender. 'Iceland's going to be a tough test, it'll be another tough game but we've got to be ready for it.'


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Rasmus Hojlund breaks silence on talk of Man United exit after Inter Milan make further contact about a permanent move for struggling striker
Rasmus Hojlund has given an update on his future amid talk of a possible summer transfer to Inter Milan. The Italian giants have made further contact with Red Devils about a permanent move for the misfiring striker. The 22-year-old is under contract with United until June 2028 but his future at Old Trafford appears uncertain. Hojlund cost United £64million plus a further £8m in potential add-ons when he arrived from Atalanta in August 2023. However, he has struggled to live up to that price-tag with just four goals in 32 Premier League appearances last season. Speaking after playing in Denmark's 2-1 win over Northern Ireland on Saturday night, he told TV 2 Sport: 'I have a contract until 2030, so I expect to play for Manchester United. 'I'm looking forward to going on a summer vacation, and then I'm fully dedicated to the project that's underway. 'I know I can't get much out of reading things. I know what the facts are, and that is that I have a contract with Manchester United until 2030. 'I expect to play there, so I'm just getting ready for some summer vacation and then hopefully a good pre-season.'


BBC News
3 hours ago
- BBC News
Improvement on the ball next step for O'Neill's NI
Northern Ireland manager Michael O'Neill wants to see his side enjoy more of the ball in Tuesday night's friendly against Iceland in defended resolutely for long periods of Saturday's 2-1 defeat by Denmark in Copenhagen but ultimately were undone by Christian Eriksen's 67th-minute own goal from Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg had given the visitors the lead after only five minutes, but Denmark equalised through their first shot on target when Gustav Isaksen curled in a fine effort in first-half stoppage Northern Ireland have had some strong results without the majority of the ball during O'Neill's second spell in charge, the former Stoke manager believes doing more in possession will be the next step for his side."We were never going to be a dominant possession-based team against any of these teams," said O'Neill after Denmark had more than 70% possession on Saturday."We're asking players who play their football at a League One or Championship level to go out against players who play their football in the top five leagues in Europe. There is a difference in terms of the level that the players play their football."I thought the way we have to try and close that gap is to be what we are, a team that's well organised, well structured, difficult to beat, can frustrate the opposition, but obviously carry a threat as well." Despite taking an early lead, Northern Ireland failed to register a shot on target throughout the game.O'Neill added: "In terms of where we need to get to as a team, we need to be able to retain the ball a little bit better then we get when we win it back, maybe find a little bit more in terms of our level of possession as well and that will help us carry a bigger threat."Knowing they will face Germany in World Cup qualifying in September, O'Neill has consciously taken friendlies against a higher level of opposition than his side faced when earning promotion from the third tier of the Nations reverse was just their fourth in the past 14 games, a run that started with a 2-0 win over Denmark in Belfast in November 2023,In losses to Spain 12 months ago and against Sweden in March, Northern Ireland shipped five goals but, despite their largely stout defending representing a sign of progress in Copenhagen, the game against Iceland will pose a different visitors, however, arrive in Belfast buoyed by a victory over Scotland on Friday night."We need to be better with the ball. So how we set ourselves out as a team will be slightly different," O'Neill said."The teams are more of a similar level, let's be honest, so that in itself will help us, although they had a very good result against Scotland at Hampden Park and played very well."So it will be a tough test, but it's just a different game for us. It's a game where we will expect to have more of the ball and the responsibility and the onus is on us to obviously take the initiative in the game." While replacing goalkeeper Conor Hazard at half-time was the only Northern Ireland change forced through injury at Parken Stadium, O'Neill said he had made other substitutions to "protect" those carrying knocks after long club Iceland, such concerns will play into team selection but the manager said there will not be wholesale changes for what is their last game before 2026 World Cup qualifying begins away to Luxembourg in September."We'll have to make one or two changes but it's important that we have to use the game wisely as well."We're not here just to give people minutes for the sake of doing it, they have to earn it as well, so I think we look at how we come through [against Denmark], we'll make I think one or two changes but it won't be massive."