About Bystry Canal
The Bystry Canal is a feeder canal for the Augustow Canal which changed into constructed for the duration of the 19th century inside the gift-day Podlaskie Voivodeship of northeastern Poland. It was constructed within the years 1834–1835. The primary reason changed into the draining of extra water from the Augustow Canal. The Bystry Canal is attached with the Netta River weir with a most glide of water: 95 m³ per second. The canal flows into the north side of the Sajno Lake. The canal is used as a path for canoeing, and is from time to time frequented with the aid of anglers.
On the banks are several species of aquatic birds like swans, geese, grebes. The canal is a fairly lively flow channel at the beginning. Just underneath the weir, and the bridge carrying 29 Listopada Street over the canal, it's far a sequence of shoals and rocks with a width of about 40 m. A street named after Ludwik Warynski, an activist and theoretician of the socialist motion in Poland, runs alongside the right bank of the canal. There are a number of houses along the threshold of the water with some of small non-public docks for boats and for fishing.
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