Cliffs of Moher
Cliffs of Moher
Cliffs of Moher
Cliffs of Moher
On the west coast of Claire, just north of Lahinch, you can stand on top of Europe's highest cliffs and feel really small and retiring as you watch the open Atlantic deep below. Truly majestic scenery with boats looking like toys on the waves below. You can easily get a feeling you are standing at the end of the world. The cliffs where once the site for watch towers looking out for invading Vikings. Tips! Stop and listen to the girl, who plays the beautiful Irish harp, on the steps up to the look out tower.
2. Killarney
Visit the lagoon Hotel in Killarney, County Kerry, and have a dinner watching the stunning view of the Killarney Mountains and its lake system. Must be one of the most romantic settings in the world. Here you can also take a horse and carriage tour. Then take a trip to the Victorian Muckross House situated at the middle lake, visited by Queen Victoria in 1861. More than a century after her visit, much remains the same in this fine Victorian mansion, set in the spectacular outlook of Killarney National Park.
3. Giant's Causeway
Thousands of perpendicular polygonal basalt columns, hexagonal in shape, tightly filled together in form of a giant pathway disappear out in the sea. At a first glance this remarkable geological formation appears to
be man made. It is not hard to understand the birth of the myth, saying it was the giant Finn McCool, who started building this pathway, to cross the sea to deal with a rival giant called Fingal in Scotland
5. Skellig Islands
Skellig islands wound up like two black pyramids circled by birds in the Atlantic Ocean. These islands are the blue print for all magic mystical islands, the place you would imagine home for pirates, but in fact a monastic outpost of the Early Christian period. The archaeological value of the islands is as well known as it is well-preserved. To reach them is a one and a half hour boat trip leaving from Valentia during April to late September. The islands are also home for many varying birds species.
8. Garnish Island
Garnish Island is Located in the protected harbour of Glengarriff in Bantry Bay, in Southwest Ireland. The island enjoys a warming oceanic influence of the Gulf Stream the climate is in some respect almost subtropical. The island is open to visitors each day from 1st March to 31st October and only accessible by boat through a small archipelago occupied by sunbathing seals. On the Island resides the garden of Ilnacullin which is a fairytale postcard with the Kerry Mountains as a backdrop.
9. Croagh Patrick
Challenge the Peak of Croagh Patrick 764 metres over the sea exterior Westport in County Mayo. Croagh Patrick has been a site of pilgrimage, since Saint Patrick reputedly fasted on the summit of Croagh Patrick for forty days in the fifth century and built a church there. The walk to the summit might seem easy but be prepared for a two hour climb. On the top you can enjoy a magnificent view over the Clew bay, with its many islands, where John Lennon reputedly once was rumoured to settle down to live a hippie lifestyle away from the hectic music industry.