I forgot one important happening while we were in Dublin. While at the Guinness Storehouse, we, like all the other tourists purchased many Guinness items. These plus a 500ml can of Guinnes for a friend back home where put in a Guinness shopping bag...big mistake. Walking around Dublin later the bottom fell out of the bag and that can got dented. As this was for a friends collection of beer cans I felt I needed to find a good one which I did later in the trip just before leaving. I'll tell you what happened to both cans in my last post about the trip.
Great start to your report! I am looking forward to more. If you read my Packing page before departure you would have known to take washcloths to Ireland (in my book too). Some places have them, others don't. Mostly don't.
We left the Radisson Blu St. Helen ( I think it was originally an old folks home) and headed south towards Glendalough. At least now I wasn't bouncing off so many curbs and curb projections at round abouts. I think Ireland has more round abouts per capita than any other nations but I could be wrong.
Glendalough was interesting but a bit disapointing in comparison to the pictures in some of the tour books that showed it complete as if restored. Far from it but still well worth the visit. I did eat some wild black berrys there and they were good.
From Glendalough we headed west over the Wicklow Mountains. The mountains were fantastic and covered with heather. Saw quite a bit of strip logging though. We went to Hollywood (Ireland) and turned south to Carlow and finally Kilkenny. I was to meet up with a friend from an internet connection on a model rail roading forum.
On entering County Kilkenny we started to notice black and gold checkered flags. The closer when got to Kilkenny the more we saw of them until entering the town we shocked to see it totally decorated in black and gold banners. Asking a local "what's up?" We found that Kilkenny was in the National Hurling Finals against Tipperary and would play them on Sunday. Seems Kilkenny had won the last four years and if they won this time they would set a national mark as no one has ever one five years in a row before.
We wandered the streets in Kilkenny and headed up to the castle and the Parade. There are daily vendor booths there and Neil and his Girlfriend Naomi were running a candy booth for a friend. We met up with them, talked and made plans to meet later that evening. So off to tour Kilkenny Castle. While there we bought Heritage Cards which proved to be a good buy during our 15 days in Ireland. At the castle we climbed and walked what seemed like miles but found it all real interesting. Unfortunately there are parts of the castle you can't get into for one reason or another.
That evening we met up with Neil and Naomi and settled at one bar for drinks. From there we headed out for supper and closed that place. We stilled wanted to visit but found all the bars were closing so that was the night for us. Only bars open were full of Kilkenny Hurling fans and we didn't think we could survive the screaming going on!
We stayed the night at the Mena House which was a rather old B&B with a shower in our room that a Hobbit would have found rather cramped. In the morning we head for Cashel.
Walt
-- Edited by Rusty Stumps on Friday 24th of September 2010 05:32:19 PM
-- Edited by Rusty Stumps on Friday 24th of September 2010 05:33:03 PM
-- Edited by Rusty Stumps on Saturday 25th of September 2010 09:25:42 AM
I call those little showers "coffin showers" because they are about the same size as a coffin and have as much wiggle room. If you drop the soap you have to open the door to have enough room to bend down and pick it up. I once refused a room because of a coffin shower and was shown to a much bigger one.
One thing about Ireland you'll discover is that nearly every 10th place has a ruin of some kind on it's land be it a castle or monistetic site. Most you can't get to but a few are close to the road so you can stop and take pictures which is what we did.
What we found on the way to Cashel was Clomantagh Castle which was on private property so we had no way to see it. But there was a church ruin near the road with a cemetery so I took some pictures of that.
It was sunny with no rain making for a nice day of travel.
Cashel is in Tipperary County so the flag colors changed to blue and gold. Like most all Irish towns Cashel is a medival town with narrow streets. Most streets in the town centers are barely two cars wide and that includes the curb or "on sidewalk" parking.
We parked at the base of The Rock of Cashel and made the climb. By now our legs were starting to stiffen up from all the climbing and walking we had been doing, but, it would get worse! St. Patricks Cathedral on the Rock is under renovation so there is a lot of scaffolding in the Nave portion and you can't enter there. The rest of the ruin is real interesting though an well worth the treck up the hill. The view from on high is also grand and you can see the ruin of a nunnery or friary off to one side in the valley. It was lightly raining that day and with a bit of a wind so it was real cool on the top.
We stayed the night at the Palm Grove House which was out a bit from town. I passed by it and needed to turn around. I made the mistake of backing into a drive opening which was protected by a stone wall. I was clear of the high, 10', wall but not the low 2' portion which caught my rear bumper and dented it and broke the tail light. Yep, now I had an issue to deal with with Hertz on retuning the car.
There wasn't much else to see in Cashel so we went to the B&B and took a nap before trying to find a place to eat. By this time all the hiking and climbing were getting to our old bones. Tomorrow it's off to Kinsale.
Walt
-- Edited by Rusty Stumps on Saturday 25th of September 2010 10:31:25 AM
Day started out in rain as we left Cashel heading south on the M8. We stopped in Caher to tour the Castle, lots of stairs and much climbing. Legs aren't going to make it much more. At least the highway is a four lane divided and not the 1-1/2 lane we have been driving.
Next stop was the Swiss Cottage and well worth the visit. Also we were treated to a antique car tour in the parking lot. There were close to 40 antique cars pulling in as we were. They lined them up in the parking lot so I got lots of good pictures. Not much in pictures at the Swiss Cottage though as a OPW Heritage site you are not allowed to take pictures inside. This happened at a number of venues.
The cottage is really interesting and shows how the gentry played at being pesants for a day. Gosh, they should lower themselves like that! They never spent a night in these cottages, which were almost as big as a small house, but they dressed as pesants and had the servants hide after delivering their food.
This proved to be a busy day. After arriving in Kinsale we took a tour around town and found the Kinsale Crystal shop which was our main reason for visiting Kinsale. We didn't want to do the typical tour of Waterford and were glad we hadn't.
Next it was out to Charles Fort which is the largest fort built in Ireland. It was in great shape up until the Irish Civil War. When one faction was marching on those holding the fort they filled all the buildings with hay and pariffin and lit it on fire. It burned for three days it's said. Still a lot to see and fantastic scenery from the top of the walls.
We stayed at the Valley-View B&B which was pleasant enough except the hostess. Tomorrow it's off to Kilarney.
Yes those stairs will definitley give you a workout in Ireland. Lots of walking through gardens and other places too. It is good to be fit for all the activity.
The scafolding on the Rock of Cashel (covering Cormac's Chapel) is an eyesore but it needed to be done before it crumbled into antiquity and disappeared. I heard an estimate of 4 years for the restoration. Not as photogenic as usual but you can always buy a postcard.
I enjoyed the Swiss Cottage too. Not bad being a peasant there! I took photos through the windows of the interior. It is a unique stop.
Sorry to hear your hostess in Kinsale was not the best.