This is the home of the Lough family who now live from one end of Canada to the other.  
Hope you enjoy a little insight into our lives.
 
Lough
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A view across
Lough Derg in Munster
A lough is a body of water and either:
    •    a lake
    •    a sea lough, which may be a fjord, estuary, bay or sea inlet.
It can also be used as a surname, with various pronunciations: law, loch, low, lowe.

Lough is an Irish-English form of the
Old Irish word loch, which means lake, or bay. The form Loch is also used in Irish English and Scottish English. Lough is also used for some bodies of water in the far north of England.
Except when individually named loughs are often referred to as lakes, fjords, estuaries and sea inlets. Thus lake district and estuary bed may be used in preference to lough district and lough bed. (This practice is not followed to anything like the same degree in English use of loch).
 
Irish loughs
Glendalough translates to "The glen of the two lakes"
Almost all lakes in the Ireland are named as "loughs" in their anglicised form. Lough Neagh in Ulster is the largest lake in Ireland and is bigger than any lake in Great Britain. The three on the River Shannon are Lough Allen, Lough Ree and Lough Derg. Upper and Lower Lough Erne are two consecutive lakes in Fermanagh, an area often referred to as "Ireland's lake district". For other loughs in Ireland, see List of Irish lochs and loughs.
Sea loughs include Lough Swilly and Lough Foyle.
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