What did we think of it?
Ireland is a beautiful and interesting country to visit. They have 10 million visitors a year and make it easy to be a tourist. The Irish are very obliging, they drive on the same side of the road as us, and they sort of speak the same language. Except deep in the southwest where they also speak Irish Gaelic. The green countryside seems like home and the culture, slang and humour are all familiar. I guess because our own culture has so many influences from Ireland.
I had vaguely thought I would like to go to Ireland and see where my ancestors came from but it wasn’t really near the top of my ‘must do’ list. It was a brief visit there in 2015 by Barbara that focused our attention on the Emerald Isle.
Our intention was never to “do” Ireland in four days in a rental car, or ten days on a coach. Our plan was to spend a week in Dublin and five weeks walking a small part of the southwest where three peninsulas jut out into the Atlantic Ocean.
Our accommodation was mainly in B & Bs and a few times in small hotels. Accommodation was generally excellent. We could nitpick about minor things, but in reality these were trivial. Hospitality was great, everyone was very obliging and helpful. On request they made us packed lunches, drove us to the trail etc.
The food suited us very well. Much better than in Spain last year – although no vino tinto included in evening meals. We weren’t looking forward to ‘Full Irish Breakfast’ but in reality everywhere had other options. Every grocery and supermarket had a deli where they would make you fresh sandwiches, rolls etc with a large variety of fillings. Fresh fruit, drinks and all the usual stuff available in every village. Irish pubs have great meals, often breakfast and then meals from about noon until 9.00pm (then the live music starts). Unlike Spain where they have the afternoon siesta and don’t start evening meals until about 9.00pm. Soup and starters €5, mains €14, desserts €6, and you don’t have to drink. Unlike Spain there are no drinking fountains along the way and often no villages all day so you have to prepare and take food and drink with you for the day.
We thought we were reasonably fit when we left NZ but found some of the walking quite difficult. We hadn’t done enough training on the hills. A lot of the walking was on steep rugged hillsides with no trail, just following sheep tracks from sign post to sign post. We also hadn’t practiced tip toeing through rivers of cow muck or climbing over dozens of stiles each day. However we were accident, injury and illness free, except we each had a minor stomach upset early on. After 2 or 3 days we were up to speed and felt fit and strong. 20km days we did comfortably, 25kms you knew you had been for a hard walk, and the 36km day was way too much.
Overall we loved the walking and each morning couldn’t wait to get going. There were always many unexpected and interesting things we came across and a great variety of landscape from open fields, mountain passes, sandy beaches, rocky headlands, oak forests, tarmac minor roads to hedge lined farm roads. Ireland has thousands of ancient archeological sites so we often came across stone forts, standing stones, wedge tombs, stone circles, etc.
The weather was kinder to us than we thought it might have been. Just one day when it rained heavily for about four hours and a few others with occasional light showers. A few too many days with thick mist that obliterated any views and a few days when it was very humid – 98%. Mostly mild, cloudy days with little wind. Only one walking day of 25°C when we thought this is just getting too hot.
So where to next?
When you are walking quietly for hours on end you spend a lot of time thinking about and discussing where you would like to go next.
Of course a lot of the time you think, when today finishes I’m never walking another fricking inch in my life!!! Coach tours and cruises sound really, really good.
But in the cool of the morning when you are fresh and full of enthusiasm you do run through the list of walks you have heard about.
Trish and Al, the two Australians we met on the Dingle Way, walked the England Coast to Coast last year. This is 300 km from St Bee on the west coast to Robin Hood Bay on the east coast. They enjoyed it but said, and we already knew, it is a bit difficult and some navigation skills are needed as there is no sign posting. They walked the Camino Frances in 2015 and on the Dingle Way we were about the same ability as them. So that is one walk we are seriously considering.
We are still keen to go back to the Camino and one option is to cut out about 300 km in the middle over the Meseta (by getting the bus), and redoing the more interesting bits at the beginning and end. We would also do it in Autumn rather than spring to see some different colours.
There is the Great Ocean Walk in Victoria Australia. We have cycled this from Port Fairy to Anglesea (275km) and want to go back and walk it from Apollo Bay to the Twelve Apostles (100km in the reverse direction).
The Mont Blanc Circuit, Cinque Terre, The Amalfi Coast, etc. The list goes on and on but our legs probably only have two or three more years of long distance walking in them.