River Shin


The River Shin is a river in the Scottish North West Highlands.
The river flows from the southern end of Loch Shin, next to the village of Lairg. It flows in a generally southward direction, passing by Shin Forest and over the Falls of Shin. It joins the Kyle of Sutherland at Invershin, which then flows into the Dornoch Firth at Bonar Bridge and then the North Sea. The river is part of a larger network with several tributaries, but the part which is actually called the Shin is just long. There are several bridges on this section, a number of prehistoric remains on the banks, and the ruins of a corn mill at Gruid.
The river was extensively altered in the 1950s when the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board constructed Cassley power station on the banks of Loch Shin, Lairg power station at the southern end of Loch Shin, and Shin power station at Inveran, close to the mouth of the river. A large dam was built at Lairg, to increase the storage capacity of Loch Shin, and a smaller one just below Lairg to form Little Loch Shin, from where a tunnel runs to Inveran to feed the power station. Flow down the river has been increased by capturing some of the headwaters of the River Cassley to the west and the River Brora to the east.
The river is used by anglers, because it contains populations of game fish such as trout and salmon. Fishing is managed by the riparian landowners, and the river is divided into three beats, on which the number of fishing permits issued on any one day is strictly limited. Fish lifts were built into the dams to allow migrating salmon to pass upstream into the rivers beyond Loch Shin, but survival rates for smolts which hatch in the upper reaches are small, and a catch and release policy has been implemented, to attempt to improve dwindling stocks of game fish. Habitat improvements have also been carried out, to provide spawning grounds for salmon and to increase the population of freshwater pearl mussels, which clean the water.

Route

The River Shin is fed by a number of streams and rivers which rise to the north and north-west of Lairg. Loch Dudb a' Chuail is located on the southern slopes of Meallan a' Chuail, a small mountain of. Water from it flows along the Abhain a Choire past the settlement of Corriekinloch to reach the north-west end of Loch Shin. Loch Merkland is fed by a number of streams rising in the mountains, including the Garbh Allt, which flows eastwards to reach the western bank of the loch. It covers and its surface is above Ordnance datum. The short Merkland River joins it to Loch a' Ghriama, which covers and is at AOD. A narrow channel crossed by a bridge carrying a minor road joins it to Loch Shin.
Loch Shin is around long with a maximum depth of. It covers and its surface level is AOD. The level was raised by when the dam at its southern end was built, and so its surface area is also larger than it was. A short way along the loch on its south-western shore is Cassley power station, which discharges water collected from the headwaters of the River Cassley into the loch. This supply passes under Moavally mountain through a tunnel. The River Fiag enters the loch at Fiag Bridge, which carries the A838 road over its mouth. The river flows southwards along the narrow Glen Fiag from Loch Fiag, which collects water from a number of streams. The loch covers and its surface is AOD.
As Loch Shin continues to the south-east, there is a promontary known as The Airde which is attached to the north-east bank. At its tip, near the disused Shinness Quarry, there are a number of prehistoric remains, including several hut circles. The next tributary to enter Loch Shin is the River Tirry, which rises to the south-east of Loch Fiag, and flows down the wide Strath Tirry, to the west of the A836 road. It is joined by two of its own tributaries, which rise to the east of the road. The first is the Abhainn Sgeamhaidh, which is crossed by the A836 at Rhian Bridge, near the hamlet of Rhian. The bridge has a single arch and is made of rubble. The second is the Feith Osdail, which flows from the east. Its flow has been augmented by the construction of a weir at Dalnessie on the River Brora, which diverts the headwaters of that river into the Feith Osdail. The weir and interconnecting channal were constructed as part of the Shin hydro-electric scheme. Close to its junction with the River Tirry, the river is crossed by the A838 road at Feith Osdail bridge. This is a single span rubble bridge designed by Thomas Telford and constructed around 1815, as part of his project to build the Parliamentary road from Bonar Bridge to Tongue, completed in 1819. Just before the Tirry enters Loch Shin, it is crossed by a bridge carrying the A838 road, near the settlement of Tirryside.
At the southern end of Loch Shin lie the dam and power station which were constructed in the 1950s, and which raised the level of the loch. The architecture is of a high quality with a prominent copper roof, as the structures form a focal point for the village of Lairg. Below the dam is Little Loch Shin, which is immediately to the west of Lairg. It is crossed part way down by the A839 road, and ends at the dam, from which water enters a tunnel to feed the power station at Inveran, and compensation water is released to maintain the flow on the River Shin.

Achany Glen

The River Shin properly starts at the weir or dam at the lower end of Little Loch Shin. A short distance below the dam, a prehistoric stone circle stands on the right bank. The river continues to the south and is crossed by a pedestrian suspension bridge. Soon the river flows over a weir, which runs diagonally across the river. There is an island near the right bank, formed by the leat running to the west of it which formerly supplied Gruids Mill, parts of which are still in situ. Close to the point at which the leat rejoins the river, early maps show a corn mill and a saw mill. Further downstream is the Falls of Shin, a waterfall which has a major impact on fish migration.
There is a poorly preserved prehistoric hut circle on the right bank of the river. The hut is around in diameter, but there is no obvious evidence of associated land use. Shortly afterwards, the Grudie Burn joins on the right bank, after it has passed through the single-arched Achany Bridge, which carries the B864 road. This section of the Shin valley is known as the Achany Glen. At Inveran, the river is crossed by two bridges, the oldest dating from around 1830. It has three arches, with the centre arch being taller than the outside arches. It was bypassed by a newer bridge when the A837 road was realigned. On the right bank is Inveran power station, supplied with water by a tunnel from Little Loch Shin. It has a copper roof, sculpted panels showing mythical Celtic beasts, and a panel showing "Shin Power Station". The outfall from the station is a little further downstream, where there is a dam which prevents migrating fish from entering the station. The Shin then joins the Kyle of Sutherland. Near the junction on the left bank is Invershin farm and salmon station. The buildings date from the early 19th century, and include a boiling house and two ice houses. Salmon were par-boiled and despatched to market initially by sea and later by railway.

Hydro-electric development

The Shin hydro-electric scheme was implemented by the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board. After the board was created in 1943, they produced a list of 102 projects which they thought could be built, from small ones to huge ones involving several neighbouring glens, including that for the Shin. The scheme has a catchment area of around in an area where the average yearly rainfall is and the total head is around. These figures are considerably smaller than for many of the Board's other schemes, but the local population was fairly small and scattered, and so the capacity of the system was consequently lower. Plans to implement the scheme were published in 1951, and it became the 32nd constructional scheme promoted by the Board. Parliamentary approval to proceed was received in the summer of 1953, after lengthy negotiations, and George Wimpey & Co began work on the contract in 1954.
The scheme was the most northerly on the Scottish mainland of those implemented by the Board. It involved constructing a concrete gravity and earthfill dam across the river at the southern end of Loch Shin, which raised the level of the loch by. The dam is long and high. It required of concrete and of earth to complete it. The consulting engineers for the construction were Sir Murdoch MacDonald and Partners. The dam is used to release compensation water to maintain flows in the river below, and that water is fed through a 3.5MW vertical Kaplan turbine which is built into the dam. The water first passes into Little Loch Shin, a small reservoir immediately below the dam. Its level is controlled by a weir at the downstream end, but much of the water passes into a long tunnel, which carries it to the Shin power station at Inveran, located on the west bank of the River Shin close to its junction with the Kyle of Sutherland. Additional water enters the tunnel from the Grudie Burn, and the tunnel feeds water to two horizontal Francis turbines, each of which was connected to a 12MW generator. On exit from the power station, the water passes back into the Shin.
The Lairg dam has a fixed spillway in the centre, with higher parapet walls to either side. There is a lower spillway at the north-east end of the dam, with gates to control its operation. The power station building is a two-storey design, integrated into the dam wall, and faced with random rubble. The architect for the design was James Shearer, and architectural details include carved panels and armorials. In common with many of their projects, the engineers were responsible for the functional form of the buildings, but the architect decided on their appearance and style. This led to a style which was called vernacular modernism, and reflected the attempt to ensure that the buildings harmonised with the landscape.
To ensure that migrating salmon could still reach their spawning grounds on the upper river, a fish screen at Inveran stops them from entering the tail race of the power station. Borland fish lifts are installed at the Little Loch Shin weir and the Lairg dam. The flow in the river is maintained by releasing compensation water from the weir, but even this is used to generate electricity, as the water passes through a small turbine built into the weir. It was one of the first uses of a "compensation set" in the country. This part of the scheme was completed in 1959, although the dam and weir were ready for impounding of water to begin in January 1956.
The scheme included another power station on the banks of Loch Shin. Cassley power station is fed by water collected from the headwaters of the River Cassley, which runs parallel to Loch Shin, but further to the west. of new road were required to access the site, because of its remoteness. A pipeline to the west of the river collects water from the Allt a' Chnaip Ghiubhais and the Allt Loch Carn nan Conbhairean, while one to the east collects water from the Allt Moavally. The pipes feed into a headpond, created by building Duchally weir. From there, the water passes through two small turbines to enter a tunnel which carries it beneath Moavally, a hill of, to the western shore of Loch Shin. Cassley power station has two turbines, capable of generating a total of 10MW, and was used to feed the area around Durness in the far north west of Scotland. The power station was completed in July 1960. There is also a single turbine at Duchally weir, which operates automatically controlled by the water level. The feed from the turbine rises upwards, and then descends again into the water. Only when the water level is high enough to pass over the invert does water reach the turbine.
The flow into Loch Shin is augmented by some of the headwaters of the River Brora, to the east of Loch Shin. A weir near the Dalnessie Estate diverts water into an aqueduct, which discharges into the upper reaches of the Feith Osdail, a tributary of the River Tirry, which flows into Loch Shin. Another aqueduct captures some of the flow in the upper tributaries of the River Vagastie to the west of Vagastie Bridge on the A836 road, and diverts the water into the Allt an Locha Ghaineamhaich, close to Loch Gaineamhach. This is also a tributary of the River Tirry.