May 30
2008

Planning Your Irish Honeymoon Part XIII

continued from
Planning Your Irish Honeymoon Part XII

HINTS TO MAKE THE MOST OF YOUR HONEYMOON TO IRELAND

Know before you go:
Get as much information as you can online, then once you arrive, stop in at the Bord Failte (pronounced Fall-cha), the tourist board. There is one in every city and large town that will give you details on all the local attractions and special events. You can even do a book a bed ahead on the spur of the moment if you have no fixed plans and just want to drive and see where you end up. The Bord Failte also has a guide to every county, with more detailed maps, planned out as driving routes, so you will not miss a thing. Know how many days you have, and give yourself a realistic timetable to make the most of it.

Weather-YES, it rains a lot in Ireland. Bring along appropriate rain fear and footwear. You will want to do a lot of walking and sightseeing. But there is always a pub or restaurant nearby if you get tired of both.

Weather all year round-rare snow, rarely so cold it gets below 32 degrees, which for them is zero celsius. Most of the time it is better than April in Paris! Brr. There is NOTHING romantic about April in Paris unless you are wearing thermals. Definitely bring your thermals if you have them.

Summer is great; it is so far north, especially the northern counties, that you are almost in the land of the midnight sun.
The western counties are the most rainy due to quick, sudden squalls from the Atlantic. But it is rare to have a day without sun except in the dead of winter.

Money-The Euro-About a $1.50 of our money at the moment. So you are bound to find things price-y, and remember, they add value added tax to all your purchases, so you might want to keep the receipts and claim back the money at the airport when you depart the country.
For a handy world currency calculator, visit www.xe.com

Accommodation-everything imaginable, every price range.
Clothing-see note above re weather. Dress in layers! Remember also that there is not much central heating! But there are a lot of lovely open fireplaces.

Food, awesome, especially on the sea coasts, but keep the taxes in mind and save all your receipts.
Beer/alcohol-ditto.
Shopping; great. Woolen and linen aren’t the great bargains they once were in the city center stores, but you can often find collectively run craft centers with hand made or unique gifts. Keep all your receipts so you can claim back the VAT.
Driving: right hand drive, left side of the road. Roads are generally well paved, not greatly signposted. Gas-expensive.
Sports: golf, fishing, leisure centers for swimming and a variety of sporting activities, bicycling, walking, hiking, and boating are available in and around all major cities in Ireland. Birdwatching, photography, art holidays=paradise.
Tracing your family tree?
A lot of people ask about this, but unfortunately, at the end of the Irish civil war in 1922, the rebels burned the public record office because it was a symbol to the of colonial opression. So it is not impossible (unless you are an O’Brien or Murphy, there are so many branches of the family), but the records there are have mainly been derived from parish records.
Romance: 10 out of 10-for a relaxing place to get away from it all, from city to country, Ireland is ideal. Fine dining, great hotels and B and Bs, breathtaking scenery and a wealth of shared activities, go at your own pace and do as little or as much as you like.
A country of both overwhelming natural beauty and fascinating towns and cities Ireland is a stunning honeymoon destination, suited to all budgets and interests, and one trip you will never forget. Every picture will be like a Kodak moment. Here’s wishing you plenty of rainbows when you are there, and a pot of gold at the end of every one of them!
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May 28
2008

Planning Your Irish Honeymoon Part XII

Continued from
Planning Your Irish Honeymoon Part XI
HEADING EAST FROM BELFAST
Traveling along Belfast Lough’s southern shore and down the long arm of Northern Ireland, County Down, you would get to the very tip of the peninsula, which is full of ancient abbey and castle ruins, and then catch a ferry across Strangford Lough to get back to the mainland. The short ferry trip is lovely, as is the town of Strangford, with its many small alley and lovingly preserved old Georgian homes (and some are even older!)

Once back on the mainland you would head to Carrickfergus, which has two castles from the 12th century. It is a lovely old medieval town, and is an antique hunter’s and foodies’ paradise. From there you would head south along the coast back to Dublin, where suburban sprawl hasn’t quite ruined the village type atmosphere of the north Dublin County coast.

TRAVELLING NORTH FROM DUBLIN-JUST REVERSE THIS ROUTE!
The great thing about the places I have mentioned in the north of Ireland are that they are all within easy driving distance of Dublin, simply by heading north rather than south. Leave yourself plenty of time if you are driving to stop and eat and just soak up the atmosphere. You will not regret a trip to Tara or Newgrange, I promise.

FROM DUBLIN WEST TO GALWAY
The middle of the country is very lush and fertile, though it has few towns of huge interest compared with the ones we’ve already mentioned on our circular clockwise tour of Ireland.

Planning Your Irish Honeymoon Part XIII

May 26
2008

Planning Your Irish Honeymoon Part XI

Planning Your Irish Honeymoon Part X

HEADING SOUTH FROM BELFAST
Heading south from Belfast is the relatively modern town of Portadown, where the residents can describe the coming of Cromwell’s men in the 1650s as as though it were yesterday.

Going further south from Belfast about 40 miles, Armagh is an ancient cathedral town, with fascinating museums and ruins. It dates from around the 6th century and has a very special, almost mystical atmosphere. It has a local interpretive center now very like the one at Dublin, Dubliana, and wonderful winding streets, and a great terraced effect to the town as you have to climb to get up to the Cathedral.

There is a great legend associated with Armagh, and it is said that St. Patrick founded the college here, as he moved from east to west from the down of Downpatrick.

HEADING SOUTH FROM ARMAGH
As you are heading back south toward Dublin you could also vist the site of Newgrange, the huge monolithic tomb experts think is even older than Stonehenge, and built in alignment so the sunshine from the winter solstice on the shortest day of the year comes straight up the long passage to illuminate the burial chamber within. Experts estimate that it was built in 7000 BC.

Nearby are similar excavated burial mounds Howth and Knowth, and in fact the whole area, known as the Boyne valley, is an achaeologist’s dream, it is so full of artefacts. All three places are pretty unforgetable, and like nothing you will ever see in America, or even most of Europe.
Planning Your Irish Honeymoon Part XII


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May 24
2008

Planning Your Irish Honeymoon Part X

Continued from Planning Your Irish Honeymoon Part IX
BELFAST

Heading south once more down the great glens of Antrim, you will reach Belfast, rich in history and museums. In Belfast near the University is the Ulster Museum, which has a wonderful collection of artefacts and art, and an excellent if small restaurant which overlooks an intriguing little ancient graveyard.

The folk museum at Cultra, about 7 miles away, is also well worth visiting, and the adorable town of Crawfordsburn with its sandy beaches, windmill and waterfall.

Also worth visiting in Belfast are the zoo, Cavehill, and Queen’s University, Belfast and the Belfast City Hall.

You can also walk along the great River Lagan, to visit quaint villages and ancient monuments just a stone’s throw away from the city center.

Once again, for so large a city, pretty much everything is in walking distance, or a short bus or cab ride away.

Belfast has water on the east side, the Belfast lough, and mountains to the west. On the lough are the Harland and Wolff shipyards, where the great Titanic and its two other ill-fated sister ships were built. It has a museum and is located very near the small but busy Belfast City Airport. (The international airport is about 20 miles away to the west near the town of Antrim).

Belfast also has many fine Georgian buildings in the city center, and the Crown Saloon, an old pub which still retains its Victorian charm. There is also a opera house, fine theatres and dining, a good city center for shopping, and a very sophisticated area around the university.

Every autumn there is a fine arts festival which features top ballet, opera, and the Royal Shakespeare Company, as well as classical musical ensembles from all over the world.

Planning Your Irish Honeymoon Part XI


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May 20
2008

Planning Your Irish Honeymoon Part IX

continued from
Planning Your Irish Honeymoon Part VIII
HEADING EAST FROM THE GIANT’S CAUSEWAY
Going east around the coast of Northern Ireland to the town of Ballycastle, you will see some of the astounding scenery of County Antrim. The glens of Antrim are known for their spectacular beauty, particularly around Cushendall, Cushendun, and Glenarm.

From the charming town of Ballycastle on the coast, you can take a short boat trip out to Rathlin Island, a rare place of wild beauty and of extraordinary ecological value and historical interest.

This island lies 6 miles off the coast of Northeastern Ireland, and only 16 miles from the Mull of Kintyre in Scotland. It’s eight miles long and less than one mile wide, and shaped like a boot. It is comprised of layers of basalt on limestone on the higher parts. It is surrounded by limestone and basalt sea cliffs reaching 470 ft in places.

Three lighthouses stand as monument to its wild coast, where over 40 recorded shipwrecks lie in the depths nearby. There are underwater cliffs, caves and a marine botanical paradise here.

Robert the Bruce, who won Scotland’s freedom from England in the early 12th century, (the Robert who betrays William Wallace in Braveheart, then changes his mind at the end of the movie and offers battle instead of a truce), spent some time in exile in the caves on Rathlin.

When Robert saw how a spider in the cave with him kept weaving its web over and over again every day no matter how many times Robert destroyed it, Robert decided if the spider could do it, so could he!

Rathlin Island is also a paradise for birds all year round, but becomes a haven for puffins, guillemots and kittiwakes every summer from about May to July when these migratory birds come down from the Arctic to feed, mate, nest, rear their young, teach them to fly, and then head off on their travels.

The male puffin’s beak is only highly colored when he is looking for a girlfriend. They use the beak to burrow into the cliff face to form their nest, where they reat their chicks. A Royal Society for the Preservation of Birds warden is usually on hand to give you a great view of a nest through his high powered telescope at this time of the year.

Planning Your Irish Honeymoon Part X


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