Wednesday, September 11, 2024

IRELAND, DAY 4: THE KERRY CLIFFS

 July 7, 2024

After leaving the Daniel O'Connell Memorial Church, our goal for the day was to complete the Ring of Kerry Scenic Drive

We started by driving our car onto the Valentia Island Ferry, which took us across the strait to Valentia Island, a five-minute ride. 

From there we drove down most of the length of the island before crossing back to the mainland on a bridge to Portmagee.  Supposedly this cuts the road trip time down by 30 minutes.

The Maurice O'Neill Bridge, photo from here.

There is a "sub" ring that is part of the Ring of Kerry called the Skellig Ring. That's were we headed first. Just a couple of miles away from Portmagee in that ring is The Kerry Cliffs, one of the most breathtaking places we visited in Ireland and our first stop. 

The map below shows our drive from Cahershiveen (where we began our day at the Daniel O'Connell Memorial Church) through the end of the day in Killarney.  The black star marks the approximate location of the Kerry Cliffs.

We parked the car and started on a long uphill path to the overlook, passing a field where a Shetland pony was grazing . . .

. . . and where Bob tried to have a conversation with a donkey.

Sunday, September 8, 2024

IRELAND, DAY 4: DANIEL O'CONNELL MEMORIAL CHURCH

 July 7, 2024

On our way to the scenic Ring of Kerry Drive, we passed through Cahersiveen, population 1,300. When we saw the Daniel O'Connell Memorial Church looming over the village, we decided to take a look. We parked across the street and just happened to notice a ceramic Statue of Liberty through the window of a second-hand store. Crazy.

It looks like the church is 2/3 of the way to their fund-raising goal for renovating the building.


Built between 1888 and 1902, this is the only church in Ireland named for a layperson. Daniel O'Connell was an important Irish nationalist leader in the early 1800s who called for the repeal of the Act of Union of 1800 and for the restoration of the Kingdom of Ireland. He served as a member of Parliament and as the Lord Mayor of Dublin. He also played a role in the abolition of slavery in Ireland in 1833. He was born just outside of Cahersiveen, and the village is proud to claim him as their own, as they should be.

The marble block cornerstone of this granite church was a gift from Pope Leo XIII and was sourced from Rome's catacombs.


Wednesday, September 4, 2024

IRELAND, DAY 3: MINARD CASTLE, THE DINGLE PENINSULA, AND SLEA HEAD DRIVE

 July 6, 2024

Our plan had been to start the day at Blarney Castle, but when we tried to get tickets online, they were sold out. That's okay--we didn't feel a great need to kiss the Blarney Stone and taking one thing off the schedule made for a more relaxed day.

We left the B&B at about 9:30 or 10:00 and headed west towards the Dingle Peninsula.

Our first stop on the Dingle Peninsula was Minard Castle.

To get there from the main road, we drove down a very narrow single-lane road. Every now and then there was a turnout so two cars could pass, but in most spots even our tiny car seemed to hug both sides of the road, and if two cars meet in an area like this, they both have to pull over into the weeds in order to pass.

Eventually, we came upon a windswept hill crowned by a lonely mid-16th century monolithic three-story ruin . . .

. . . that looks over a desolate bay of the cold Irish Sea.

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

IRELAND, DAY 2: CORK

 July 5, 2024

Our next destination was Cork, located in (what else) County Cork, the largest and southernmost county of Ireland.

With a population of about 225,000, Cork is the second largest city in Ireland. That's a small population for the second largest city of a country! But then, the largest, Dublin, has fewer than 550,000 people.

My first impression of the city came from this fantastic mural, which I have since learned is entitled What Is Home? The artist, a guy named Asbestos, explains, "I painted this figure wearing a cardboard box on its head to start a conversation with the public about what home means to them. As a country we are currently in an existential crisis over housing and our need to put a roof over our heads. There's a fear and uncertainty about finding a safe space, and the system seems to be stacked in favour of the landlords." The mural, painted in 2021, is part of a street art project started during the 2020 lockdown.

It was mid-afternoon and we were hungry. We hadn't eaten much since breakfast. Bob had scoped out a restaurant weeks before the trip located in Cork's English Market--Farm Gate CafĂ©. 

We both ordered lamb stew and were a little disappointed. It was only average.

Saturday, August 24, 2024

IRELAND, DAY 2: ROCK OF CASHEL AND HORE ABBEY

 July 5, 2024

We were hitting jet lag on the afternoon of our first full day in Ireland, so I picked up a Coke Zero at the gas station. I was intrigued by the ingenuity of the attached cap. That's a great way to keep the cap with the bottle for recycling.


Not long after entering County Tipperary, we came across a blocked off right-of-way for a herd of milk cows. Now that's something you don't see everyday (or any day) in California.

Eventually we made it to Cashel, a little town of about 4,400 people with a BIG tourist draw, St. Patrick's Rock, more commonly known as the Rock of Cashel. The word "cashel" means "fort" or "castle" in Irish.

We had to park at the base of the rock and trudge up the hill, but the view looking up was quite impressive.

Sunday, August 18, 2024

IRELAND, DAYS 1-2: TRAVEL, ARRIVAL, AND EXPLORING KILKENNY

 July 3-4, 2024

We left home at about 3:00 PM and made it through downtown LA and to our parking garage in about two hours.  Not bad.


We had an uneventful check-in for a non-stop flight to Dublin on Aer Lingus, a new airline for us. We were seated on the 3rd or 4th to the last row in the center section of a 2-4-2 configuration, but the last five rows or so only had three middle seats, making the aisles wider in the back near the bathrooms. Genius. Anyway, we both had aisle seats with an empty seat between us. Miraculous! And another miracle--I slept for a good part of the 9 1/2 hour flight, a rarity for me. We did have two meals. Dinner was tortellini with tomato sauce, salad, a roll, and chocolate mousse that was pretty good. Breakfast was a hot bagel with melted cheese and a sausage patty--not so good.  I watched one movie, Disenchanted with Amy Adams, sequel to Enchanted. Worst move I've seen in a long time. You can't win them all.

For a relatively small airport, we had a long walk between getting off the plane and passport control, but by then our suitcases were waiting for us. We walked to the car rental area to get our car from Budget and discovered why our rental (and every other rental we looked at) had been so cheap. They REQUIRE customers to buy insurance, which added $400, plus we had to put down a $2,000 security deposit. They must have lots of problems with people who can't drive on the left side of the road and with a steering wheel on the right. We had a very small Renault Clio with a manual transmission, but Bob, fortunately, is an absolute pro at shifting with his left hand and driving on the left side of the road.  
Our plan was to immediately leave Dublin and drive to Kilkenny, a distance of about 80 miles, which we thought might take an hour and a half. However, traffic was very heavy leaving Dublin, and not long after leaving the car rental place, the car began beeping at irregular intervals. Then the tire light came on, so we figured the low tire pressure caused the beeping. We got off the freeway, found a gas station, filled the tires, then figured out how to turn off the tire warning light. Sixty seconds into our drive, the beeping came back. Ultimately, I figured out that it was a sensor for lane control. Every time Bob began to drift towards a line in the road without signally, it beeped--and that was often. I found the instructions for how to disable that feature, and we continued our drive in peace.

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

IRELAND: HISTORY, MOVIES, BOOKS

I have long wanted to travel to Ireland, but it never rose to the top of my husband's list. This year we had trips scheduled in March and December, with nothing planned for the summer. Bob just couldn't imagine a summer without travel, so Ireland rose to the top as a carrot to convince me to add one more big trip to the year. It worked.

In preparation for the trip, we started watching every movie set in or about Ireland that we could find, and we read a few books as well. Very quickly we discovered that we knew embarrassingly little about Irish history. Here are just a few key things we learned.


• The island of Ireland has two parts. 
    - Five-sixths of it is the Republic of Ireland (all the colorful sections in the map above), also officially known as Ireland. It is an independent country with 5.1 million people. When we Americans say "Ireland," this is what we mean.
    - The remaining one-sixth is Northern Ireland (the gray section in the map), which is part of Great Britain and has a population of 1.9 million.

• Between 1916 and 1921, Irish republicans (or the Irish Republican Army - IRA) fought for independence from Great Britain, but Irish Ulster loyalists and British forces fought to keep Ireland as part of Great Britain. The first main revolt was the Easter Rising of 1916, but it was put down in a week. Ireland's breakaway government declared Irish independence in January 1919. Tensions escalated over the next few years, with  much of the conflict occurring in County Cork, Dublin, and Belfast. A treaty signed in December 1921 ended British rule of most of Ireland, but Northern Ireland remained within the United Kingdom and under British control. In spite of the treaty, fighting continued through 1922.

• "The Troubles" is a euphemistic term for the period of conflict in Northern Ireland that lasted from the late 1960s to 1998. When I think of conflict in Ireland, this is what I think of. I always thought it was a war between the Catholics and Protestants, but that's not entirely true. It really was about whether Northern Ireland should be British or Irish. It so happened that the Unionists, or those who favored remaining with Great Britain, were mostly Protestants (as is true of most British subjects), and the Irish nationalists or republicans were mostly Catholics. The conflict began as a campaign to end discrimination against the Catholic-nationalist minority in Northern Ireland, and it spiraled out of control from there. The IRA that had been active in the Irish fight for independence 50+ years earlier was also active in this conflict, and that's where I became familiar with it.

Once we arrived in Ireland, we learned a few more things.

• We never saw corned beef and cabbage on any menu in Ireland. Apparently, that's an Irish-American thing. Their main ethnic food seems to be beef stew. There is a lot of meat in their diet--sausage, bacon, and some lamb and chicken. They eat a lot of potatoes--no surprise there.

• We saw references to leprechauns only in tourists shops. Shocking. One Irish guide blamed the movie Darby O'Gill and the Little People for the popularity of leprechauns among tourists. I would add that Lucky Charms has also done its part.

• Northern Ireland has its very own Protestant church, the Church of Ireland. 

• The Irish had their own language, Irish Gaelic, that was Ireland's primary language until the 19th century, when English gradually took over. However, all the signage on the island is in both English and Irish, and Irish is still taught in the schools.

• Guinness dominates the drink market. Everything seems somehow to be related to the brewery. It was impossible to walk down a shopping street or go into a restaurant without seeing the Guinness trademark. Guinness stout must be served in Guinness pint glasses, and there is a specific temperature and pouring method that is strongly recommended. There is even a Guinness Zero, the "zero" referring to the amount of alcohol. We tried it and found it awful.

We learned a lot more as we traveled, but I'll get into that in future posts. For now, if you want to have some fun preparing for a trip to Ireland, here is a list of movies that we watched either on Netflix or Amazon Prime,

These four historical dramas were fantastic. I heartily recommend them all for anyone traveling to Ireland.



There are many well-done movies that draw on the culture of Ireland:




Of course, we watched several cheesy romances:


I'm not sure what to say about this one, other than that I liked it when I was about nine years old and Sean Connery is the leading man. Other than that, there isn't much to recommend it. I think Bob made it about a third of the way through.

This 1952 movie was a little better, and seeing John Wayne in something other than a Western was kind of fun.

And finally, we tried and failed to get into this Netflix series. We watched one or two episodes and decided to skip the rest.

Armed with our vast knowledge gained mostly from movies (how American of us), we were ready to head to Ireland!