Travelling south we tried to
keep away from the main thoroughfares and drive the back roads towards our
destination of Dungarvan. Views of the countryside are patchy as the roads are
all sunken into the earth and there are hedgerows either side. Occasionally
there is a gap and we see down to the ocean across paddocks edged by stone
fences. The sky is grey most days and threatening rain, unless it is already
raining! At Dungarvan we hired bikes for the day, electric bikes for the first
time. These are the way forward no doubt. The little electric motor flattens
out the hills and sends you flying past all the others who are pedalling hard
against the wind. No wind on the e-bike, it cuts a path with ease. The bike
trail is the longest uninterrupted in Ireland and we had a great day out.
From Dungarvan we headed for
the County Kerry, a chunk of land that has fingers poking into the North
Atlantic Ocean. Each finger (only 4 of them) (Oliver Cromwell probably chopped
off the other one!) has well promoted drives around the coast of each. We
started in the south and circled clockwise as instructed around the Beara Peninsula.
The coastal road was very narrow in places with little villages dotted along it
and seemed a very relaxed place on a good day. “Good days” if referring to the
weather are few and far between. While in NZ we can expect 4 seasons in one day
sometimes, it occurs here every day from our experience. In saying that, it isn’t
cold and we haven’t been caught in a down pour as yet. We walked some short
loop tracks, through farmers paddocks and along coastal trails. We saw numerous
smashed castles, I think Cromwell is to blame for most of the damage. We came
across one church yard with a small building (St. Declans Oratory) that had
been renovated in 1716!. It was reroofed at that time and I have a feeling that
the long run iron that we will replace on our roof when we get home isn’t going
to last quite as long.
On to the Ring of Kerry, the
main attraction in this corner of Ireland. We toured anticlockwise as
instructed and saw great views from some precipitous angles. We drove through
little towns where front doors open almost directly onto the carriageway.
Interesting too that they have no car sheds, I guess that the houses were built
prior to vehicular transport. They are very bold with their house paint as
well, seemingly one trying to outdo the other. Far more flamboyant than us
kiwis for sure.
We walked high up a mountain (called a hill in NZ) to find a
ring of stones placed here in the olden days. The “olden days” here are
anything beyond 2000 years ago. Bit spooky to think humans were wandering about
up here then, no merino icebreaker on and no central heating when they got
home! Must have been hardy souls. We walked to a very southern point where the
Kerry Cliffs fell away 300 metres to the Ocean. We drove past small paddocks
fenced with stone fences, no doubt several hundred years old. There are
numerous farm houses as many of these farms are under 100 acres and survive
through subsidies. There is serious concern that Brexit is going to have a
major effect on Irish exports as London is the gateway to the EU for Ireland.
Should that gate be closed, and according to Boris it will be, then the Irish
are going to face difficulties and taxes, getting their goods to Europe. They
are not keen to be at the behest of England nor to have to strike deals or
negotiate with them.
Our last day in the south
corner we spent on the Dingle Peninsula, another worthwhile circumnavigation of
a finger. One attraction on this drive was Cashel Murphy, an iron age settlement
consisting of five houses, all adjoined and within a ringed fence (of stone).
It looks most striking from the air but we didn’t have a drone to see it from
that angle. Murphy is the most common name in Ireland and this could be perhaps
one of the first settlements of Murphys in Ireland. Inside the wee settlement
there was an underground tunnel and room. Presumably to store food and also to
shelter from enemies. I had no need for food nor was I avoiding enemies but
decided that I would adventure into the cavity. Easier said than done. While it
was dark, damp and very small I was reasonably relaxed. However, being hunched
over, developing cramps in a dark damp small space I decided to evacuate.
Again, easier said than done. I was a tad anxious as I squeezed my self out the
inlet. I won’t look to do that again in a hurry.
After 3 nights in Killarney on
the shores of Lake Leane we headed northwards back toward Dublin. Not though
before we had visited Muckross House. This is a well maintained Victorian style
mansion built for the Herbert family and completed in 1843. In 1861, with the
imminent visit by Queen Victoria and her Prince Albert, old man Herbert spent 3
years upgrading, renovating and installing all sorts of lavish furniture and
fixings to impress the Queen. Hopeful he was of earning a knighthood, no
expense was spared. Unfortunately for him he overspent his budget and his
estate began to fall into financial ruin while he had to suck the bitter pill of
no knighthood as well. I think old Victoria could smell a social climber before
she saw him, poor old Henry Herbert didn’t impress. We drove north with no
particular place to go looking for a bed. While it’s a long way to Tipperary we
passed within 20 kms but still didn’t get there so it shall remain “…a long way
to Tipperary…”. We camped at Limerick, the first place we found that had a bed
for us, and planned our last few days in Ireland.