My wife and I are looking at spending a week in both locations. I don't feel like driving so will probably do a tour in both locations.
My wants are stunning landscapes, castles, seashore, pubs and small villages.
Do you know of any tour companies that take most of that in?
Time frame is the last two weeks of September.
Thanks
My wife and I are looking at spending a week in both locations. I don't feel like driving so will probably do a tour in both locations.
My wants are stunning landscapes, castles, seashore, pubs and small villages.
Do you know of any tour companies that take most of that in?
Time frame is the last two weeks of September.
Thanks
I’m in England, so I’m as much a tourist in Scotland or Ireland as you will be. Hence I can’t offer any help on tour companies. What I would advise is that travel takes far longer than you might imagine. Even if you are not driving, you will be dependent on road travel to see the things you list. Google Maps or Apple Maps are your friends in this respect: pick a couple of places you fancy seeing as an example and get an estimate of the travel time between them. I bet you will be shocked!
Moving around quickly in Scotland and Ireland as we do in the US is not possible. The roads are for getting around, not traveling at 60 mph or 100kmph. 8 inches on a map, takes longer to travel.
when I visited (~1997 with just a Nikkormat FTn and a 50mm f2 lens) driving the roads was the most fun. It really isn't that hard, until you get to a roundabout or intersection. There were "highways" where traffic maintained reasonable speeds, but once you got off those, it fairly quickly turned into one lane roads with pull-offs to let opposing traffic get past. When we picked up the rental car, every car in the parking lot had a cracked driver side mirror. I came to realize that it probably came from opposing traffic whacking mirrors as they pass each other. (fortunately that never happened to me, but that was because I was very careful to fold the mirror in on tight passes.
I lived on the south side, so I favor places like Sandymount, Blackrock, Dun Laoghaire and Dalkey--all easily accessible from the DART. If you jump off at Dalkey, you can hike up Killiney Hill for one of the best views of Dublin to the north and Bray Head to the south.
...
I've done a few bus tours and sworn off them. I always found myself lagging behind or straying away to shoot a photo of something interesting (like, without the heads of tourists in the frame) and being scolded by some tour guide for holding up our progress to the tacky gift shops. Never again. So my advice is to dispense with the tours and buy some reputable guide books and design your own tour, do it at your own speed and be ready to split off from it when something interesting catches your eye. Public transit is very good in the east of Ireland, less reliable as you go out into the countryside. There's good rail service to Galway and Cork and up to Belfast; less so to the more remote places. Cars are problematic for some of us because of the need to drive on the left, but the more difficult problem is that Irish drivers, as in much of Europe, are accustomed to smaller cars and have a much more acute sense of space that permits them to squeeze through tighter situations that others might think were impossible. You might well find that driving on the left is less frightening than you thought it would be. Just remember that turning right on a red light could be fatal.
Just my two eurocents' worth.
Too right! I was just over in October (covid was the reason for the 5-year hiatus) and first thing I did when I got home was to start planning the next trip.I lived in Dalkey as a graduate student at Trinity — on the Coliemore Road, just past the convent. (And tended bar at the Dalkey Island Pub, ages ago.) It was a sweet place. Also nearby is a pleasant walk around Bray Head to Greystones. You could do worse.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?