About
Craft distillery and brewery in Sligo, in the heart of Yeats Country on the Wild Atlantic Way. Named after the lake immortalized in W.B. Yeats' poetry. Produces Athrú single malt whiskey alongside craft beer. Leverages brewing expertise for fermentation innovation.
Production Details
The Lough Gill Tale
In the shadow of Benbulben's limestone cliffs, where Yeats once walked and dreamed, the youngest distillery in Connacht draws its first breath from Sligo's ancient springs. Here, where the Wild Atlantic Way curves inland toward Lough Gill's placid waters, a craft operation born in 2019 carries forward Ireland's oldest tradition on ground thick with literary memory.
The distillery takes its name from the lake that Yeats immortalized in verse—"I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree"—but its roots run deeper than poetry into the bedrock itself. Local spring water, filtered through millennia of Sligo limestone, flows into copper vessels where barley begins its transformation into uisce beatha, the water of life that Irish monks first distilled when the world was younger.
What sets Lough Gill apart in Ireland's remarkable renaissance isn't just geography, but craft. This is both distillery and brewery, where brewing expertise informs every stage of fermentation. The knowledge gained from years of coaxing flavor from grain in the beer halls now guides the whiskey's creation, each batch of Athrú single malt a testament to understanding yeast, temperature, and time.
The stillhouse hums with quiet purpose, copper gleaming under Connacht's changeable light. Here, the ancient Irish art of triple distillation unfolds—that gentle, patient process that separates Irish whiskey from its Scottish cousins, creating spirit of exceptional smoothness. Each run through the stills strips away harshness while preserving character, the way Atlantic storms polish sea glass.
Standing among the fermentation vessels, you feel the weight of continuity. This is the same process that once made Ireland the world's whiskey capital, before politics and economics nearly drove the tradition to extinction. Now, in this corner of Yeats Country, where every hill holds a story and every stream carries history, new makers honor old ways.
The distillery's youth means its whiskey still sleeps in oak, gathering complexity with each passing season. But already, Lough Gill represents something vital in Irish whiskey's ongoing revival—the marriage of deep tradition with innovative spirit, rooted in place, reaching toward tomorrow.