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Message
Ireland Trip
Posted on 6/24/24 at 10:09 am
Posted on 6/24/24 at 10:09 am
We are headed to a wedding in Ireland in October and looking for reqs of what to see and do. We have a week so also open to flying and visiting other places near by. Thanks
Posted on 6/24/24 at 10:35 am to Flyingtigers
Depends on what you are interested in. If you are flying to Dublin, look into the railway to get to the west and/or south coasts. Or consider some group tours which are day trip from Dublin.
Beyond the main attractions in Dublin, look into these in no particular order:
Belfast - with time to see the Giant's Causeway
Hill of Slane
Cliffs of Moher - maybe take the train to Galway and see some more of the west coast
Southwest corner - Killarney, Dingle, Listowel, Ring of Kerry
Waterford - although the crystal is no longer manufactured there you can tour a shop/museum which explains the history
Killkenny
And if you like golf, there are a ton of great options.
Beyond the main attractions in Dublin, look into these in no particular order:
Belfast - with time to see the Giant's Causeway
Hill of Slane
Cliffs of Moher - maybe take the train to Galway and see some more of the west coast
Southwest corner - Killarney, Dingle, Listowel, Ring of Kerry
Waterford - although the crystal is no longer manufactured there you can tour a shop/museum which explains the history
Killkenny
And if you like golf, there are a ton of great options.
Posted on 6/24/24 at 10:57 am to Flyingtigers
Spent 3 weeks of May touring the island.
If you are pressed for time limit the cities to Dublin (bustling big city east coast) and Galway (much smaller college town on west coast).
Pick Dublin day trips to see history... even pre-history like New Grange.
Galway is for nature trips on the majestic coast. While on a bus tour their I noticed a few signs offering tasting tours at oyster farms. LINK
I'm sorry I didn't do one.
On a practical travel note, when flying Dublin to the US you clear all US Customs, Immigration, and TSA screening there. So, back in the states you go directly from your arrival gate to your departure gate. Unfortunately, you need to be a Dublin airport 3 hrs early.
If you are flying American via DFW... good luck. Have enough clothes in your carryon to last the 3 days it takes for your luggage to arrive.
If you are pressed for time limit the cities to Dublin (bustling big city east coast) and Galway (much smaller college town on west coast).
Pick Dublin day trips to see history... even pre-history like New Grange.
Galway is for nature trips on the majestic coast. While on a bus tour their I noticed a few signs offering tasting tours at oyster farms. LINK
I'm sorry I didn't do one.
On a practical travel note, when flying Dublin to the US you clear all US Customs, Immigration, and TSA screening there. So, back in the states you go directly from your arrival gate to your departure gate. Unfortunately, you need to be a Dublin airport 3 hrs early.
If you are flying American via DFW... good luck. Have enough clothes in your carryon to last the 3 days it takes for your luggage to arrive.
Posted on 6/24/24 at 11:42 am to Flyingtigers
Are you going as a family, couple, several couples?
My family and I went in 2022. My kids were 10 & 11. We spent 8 nights in country. Flew in/out of Dublin and rented a car through Enterprise. Get the automatic transmission even if you can drive a manual. In Ireland you would be shifting with your left hand.
We drove out of Dublin the first day and went to Galway. From that base we toured Galway, Cliffs of Moher and saw a few medieval Abbey's.
Next we drove through Limerick on our way to Dingle. We had lunch in Limerick and toured King John's Castle. Dingle was our favorite stop. The seaside town is quaint and colorful. Had fresh seafood for each meal and went to Dick Mack's pub for beers and music one night. We took a Harbor Cruise around the harbor for some nice sights. Drove the Slea Head drive with amazing views. Drove up to Conor pass late one evening in the mist, and my wife was white knuckled the entire way. It was a unique Irish experience with the scenery, weather, and sheep at every turn, lol.
Then we drove along the coast and over to Killarney. Stopped at Derrynane Abbey and the Skellig's Chocolate factory. We stayed at a Bed and Breakfast in Killarney National Park. Beautiful country home with gracious Irish hosts. We visited an Abbey nearby and rode horses through the park. We took a jaunting car ride through the Gap of Dunloe, a very cool experience. Kate Kearney's cottage is at the head of the Gap, traditional Irish food and dancing in an old building.
We drove out of Killarney towards Dublin with a few stops. We kissed the Blarney stone, visited the Rock of Cashel, and spent a couple hours around the Kilkenny Castle & Gardens. Our last 2 days were in Dublin, we visited the Trinity College Library, Guinness Factory, and walked around town.
This has been our favorite family trip to date, and the people of Ireland were the biggest factor. The scenery was beautiful, the greenest hills you've ever seen and the coast along the Slea Head drive is prettier than even the California coast. Dublin was our least favorite, but still very nice. We just enjoyed the countryside and every interaction with the locals was so genuine and happy.
My family and I went in 2022. My kids were 10 & 11. We spent 8 nights in country. Flew in/out of Dublin and rented a car through Enterprise. Get the automatic transmission even if you can drive a manual. In Ireland you would be shifting with your left hand.
We drove out of Dublin the first day and went to Galway. From that base we toured Galway, Cliffs of Moher and saw a few medieval Abbey's.
Next we drove through Limerick on our way to Dingle. We had lunch in Limerick and toured King John's Castle. Dingle was our favorite stop. The seaside town is quaint and colorful. Had fresh seafood for each meal and went to Dick Mack's pub for beers and music one night. We took a Harbor Cruise around the harbor for some nice sights. Drove the Slea Head drive with amazing views. Drove up to Conor pass late one evening in the mist, and my wife was white knuckled the entire way. It was a unique Irish experience with the scenery, weather, and sheep at every turn, lol.
Then we drove along the coast and over to Killarney. Stopped at Derrynane Abbey and the Skellig's Chocolate factory. We stayed at a Bed and Breakfast in Killarney National Park. Beautiful country home with gracious Irish hosts. We visited an Abbey nearby and rode horses through the park. We took a jaunting car ride through the Gap of Dunloe, a very cool experience. Kate Kearney's cottage is at the head of the Gap, traditional Irish food and dancing in an old building.
We drove out of Killarney towards Dublin with a few stops. We kissed the Blarney stone, visited the Rock of Cashel, and spent a couple hours around the Kilkenny Castle & Gardens. Our last 2 days were in Dublin, we visited the Trinity College Library, Guinness Factory, and walked around town.
This has been our favorite family trip to date, and the people of Ireland were the biggest factor. The scenery was beautiful, the greenest hills you've ever seen and the coast along the Slea Head drive is prettier than even the California coast. Dublin was our least favorite, but still very nice. We just enjoyed the countryside and every interaction with the locals was so genuine and happy.
Posted on 6/24/24 at 12:48 pm to Flyingtigers
I've probably spent around six weeks in total there, I'd stay on the island once you're there rather than losing the time travelling somewhere else.
Obviously, things I liked to see or experience, you might not care for but here's my list that'd I have told myself to see before I ever went there:
In Dublin metro
Dublin Castle
Temple Bar area
Trinity College/Book of Kells
National Museum of Ireland (Archeology & Natural History)
Kilmainham Gaol (Excellent!)
Guinness Distillery (&nearby The Brazen Head Pub)
In Ireland:
Clonmacnoise
Battle of the Boyne Site
Newgrange
Jerpoint Abbey
Cashel
I'd skip Waterford entirely
I'd skip Blarney Castle too
Beal na Blath (Collins Assassination Site)
The town of Cobh
The town of Kinsale
The Ring of Kerry
The Ring of Cork
Muckross House & Abbey
Skellig Boat Trip (only for the hardy)
Doolin
Cliffs of Moher
Aran Islands
Northern Ireland:
In Belfast:
Belfast Trouble Black Cab Tour
Titanic Museum
Rose & Crown Pub
Outside Belfast
Bushmills Distillery
Dunluce Castle
Carrick-a-Rede Bridge
Giant's Causeway
Enniskillen Castle
Obviously, things I liked to see or experience, you might not care for but here's my list that'd I have told myself to see before I ever went there:
In Dublin metro
Dublin Castle
Temple Bar area
Trinity College/Book of Kells
National Museum of Ireland (Archeology & Natural History)
Kilmainham Gaol (Excellent!)
Guinness Distillery (&nearby The Brazen Head Pub)
In Ireland:
Clonmacnoise
Battle of the Boyne Site
Newgrange
Jerpoint Abbey
Cashel
I'd skip Waterford entirely
I'd skip Blarney Castle too
Beal na Blath (Collins Assassination Site)
The town of Cobh
The town of Kinsale
The Ring of Kerry
The Ring of Cork
Muckross House & Abbey
Skellig Boat Trip (only for the hardy)
Doolin
Cliffs of Moher
Aran Islands
Northern Ireland:
In Belfast:
Belfast Trouble Black Cab Tour
Titanic Museum
Rose & Crown Pub
Outside Belfast
Bushmills Distillery
Dunluce Castle
Carrick-a-Rede Bridge
Giant's Causeway
Enniskillen Castle
Posted on 6/24/24 at 3:29 pm to Flyingtigers
I’m currently in Ireland. Will give some details on where we went and what we did for you at a later date.
Posted on 6/24/24 at 3:47 pm to slinger1317
Wow! Thanks everyone! These are great, detailed reqs! It’s just couples, no kids on this trip.
Posted on 6/24/24 at 3:48 pm to Flyingtigers
Don't spend too much time in Dublin. As others have already alluded to, the real gems of Ireland are found elsewhere. I haven't traveled there as extensively as others have, but Galway and the Cliffs of Moher are fantastic. If you make it to Belfast, Northern Ireland, The Titanic Museum is probably the best museum I've ever been to. Just fascinating and incredibly comprehensive.
Posted on 6/24/24 at 3:58 pm to BRPelican45
quote:
Galway and the Cliffs of Moher are fantastic
Just left Galway this morning and did the Cliffs of Moher yesterday. Can confirm.
quote:
And if you like golf, there are a ton of great options.
Can also confirm this. Played Tralee Golf Club today and it’s the nicest course I’ve ever played. Challenging as all hell though.
This post was edited on 6/24/24 at 5:06 pm
Posted on 6/24/24 at 7:39 pm to AbitaFan08
quote:Stayed in Tralee at the Ballyseede Castle Hotel, nice little town.
Played Tralee Golf Club today and it’s the nicest course I’ve ever played.
They have an annual beauty pageant there that attracts young women as contestants from all around Ireland and daughters of the Irish diaspora from worldwide locales, including (sometimes) NOLA.
The winner is called “The Rose of Tralee”.
Posted on 6/24/24 at 11:00 pm to Flyingtigers
Get the smallest car you can. Consider flying into Shannon instead of Dublin.
I barely made it through some roadways in a Nissan Micra. You will get socked in by weather at least once, so assume there is going to be at least one day at a pub with people asking about where you're from, etc. Smell the peat fire and talk to locals at the pub.
Cliffs of Moher are tablestakes, Kylemore Abbey is high on the list (watch out for sheep on the drive), and to me, the Rock of Cashel is non-negotiable. Just spend time talking to people. There are Roman ruins and medieval fortifications in rando places. The beauty of the Irish is the conversations you get into. Sounds corny, but true.
I barely made it through some roadways in a Nissan Micra. You will get socked in by weather at least once, so assume there is going to be at least one day at a pub with people asking about where you're from, etc. Smell the peat fire and talk to locals at the pub.
Cliffs of Moher are tablestakes, Kylemore Abbey is high on the list (watch out for sheep on the drive), and to me, the Rock of Cashel is non-negotiable. Just spend time talking to people. There are Roman ruins and medieval fortifications in rando places. The beauty of the Irish is the conversations you get into. Sounds corny, but true.
Posted on 6/25/24 at 2:42 am to soccerfüt
quote:
Stayed in Tralee at the Ballyseede Castle Hotel, nice little town.
We ate lunch there before golf! Absolutely beautiful property.
Currently in Dingle.
This post was edited on 6/25/24 at 2:56 am
Posted on 6/25/24 at 6:19 am to Flyingtigers
Definitely check out Dublin for its lively vibe and historical sites like Trinity College and Guinness Storehouse. If you have time, a drive along the Wild Atlantic Way or a visit to the Cliffs of Moher is breathtaking.
Posted on 6/25/24 at 6:48 am to AbitaFan08
quote:
Currently in Dingle.
Jealous! We had some great meals in Dingle.
James Long at the Marina, and then one evening got take out from the Fish Box, grabbed a pint from Dick Macks and sat at a patio table talking to a few locals.
And don't forget Murphy's Ice Cream!
This post was edited on 6/25/24 at 6:49 am
Posted on 6/25/24 at 7:39 am to slinger1317
quote:
one evening got take out from the Fish Box, grabbed a pint from Dick Macks and sat at a patio table talking to a few locals. And don't forget Murphy's Ice Cream!
This is word for word what we did last night when we got in.
Posted on 6/25/24 at 7:54 am to AbitaFan08
quote:
This is word for word what we did last night when we got in
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