Connemara – Dublin 2019 https://dublin2019.com An Irish Worldcon Mon, 17 Jun 2019 22:30:57 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://dublin2019.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/cropped-harp_logo_sm-e1502041914202-59x59.png Connemara – Dublin 2019 https://dublin2019.com 32 32 Touring Tuesdays: A Visit to Inishbofin Island https://dublin2019.com/touring-tuesdays-a-visit-to-inishbofin-island/ Tue, 18 Jun 2019 11:00:22 +0000 https://dublin2019.com/?p=8323 This week Carolina Gomez Lagerlöf takes us walking around Inishbofin Island in Connemara. Hiking is one of the best ways to experience a new country. This time I wanted to see more of Ireland than just Dublin. I did it the easy and comfortable way, by booking a self-guided hiking tour from one hiking tour […]

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This week Carolina Gomez Lagerlöf takes us walking around Inishbofin Island in Connemara.

Photo of Inishboffin

Hiking is one of the best ways to experience a new country.

This time I wanted to see more of Ireland than just Dublin. I did it the easy and comfortable way, by booking a self-guided hiking tour from one hiking tour company. There are several of these around Europe and these kinds of holidays are getting more and more popular. You choose a tour, they book the accommodation, provide maps and walking descriptions, book transfers and also transfer the luggage for you. The only thing you need to worry about is the day pack.

Photo of Inishboffin

So I booked a five day trip to Connemara.

One of the hikes was a visit to Inishbofin Island. To get to Inishbofin Island. I took the ferry from the little town of Cleggan. It was easy to buy the tickets for the ferry online. Inishbofin Island is a well-known tourist destination, so I was not the only tourist on the ferry.

Photo of the Inishboffin Ferry

I had my walking description with me which I followed, but there are three walking loops that start from the harbour. They are marked with different colours and you just choose one to follow.

Photo of Inishboffin

I started from the ferry pier and headed east on the tarmac lane. I followed the Cloonamore walking loop, so it was easy to find the way. Just follow the red marks. The lane passed a graveyard and when I reached Duamch beach I took a left towards Cloonamore.

Map of Cloonamore Loop Map of Middlequarter Loop

The trail continued and after climbing over a green metal stile I was on a moorlike part of the island. The path was still easy to follow. After a loop on the Cloonamore (Cluana Mór) I was back on the road again. I followed the road and then left the red marks to follow the Inishbofin Middlequater Loop with blue marks instead.

Photo of Inishboffin

Just before the ferry pier I could stop and have a cup of tea at a hotel before I took the ferry back again.

It was a beautiful walk about 11 km long. It was an easy walk but I was a little muddy on the moor.

Photo of Inishboffin


Photo of Carolina Gomez LagerlöfCarolina Gómez Lagerlöf is a Swedish fan who lives in Stockholm. She likes to attend Science fiction conventions all over the world and tries to combine the conventions with hiking or biking tours. She is currently the chair of the European Science Fiction Society and also the chair of TitanCon, Eurocon 2019.

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Touring Tuesdays: Round Renvyle with Nigel Quinlan https://dublin2019.com/touring-tuesdays-round-renvyle-nigel-quinlan/ Tue, 03 Jul 2018 11:00:15 +0000 https://dublin2019.com/?p=5535 This week Nigel Quinlan takes us into the wilds of Connemara… Drive vaguely and meanderingly northwest out of Galway city, following signs for Connemara or Clifden or Sheep On The Road or Invasive Species Do Not Eat. Through Oughterard with its pleasant riverside park on the far side, Maam Cross with a rather musty replica […]

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This week Nigel Quinlan takes us into the wilds of Connemara…

Drive vaguely and meanderingly northwest out of Galway city, following signs for Connemara or Clifden or Sheep On The Road or Invasive Species Do Not Eat. Through Oughterard with its pleasant riverside park on the far side, Maam Cross with a rather musty replica of the cottage from John Ford’s The Quiet Man and the film itself on repeat in the bar at the hotel, turning right down the genuinely spectacular Inagh Valley where your attention will be divided between the splendid bleak majesties of the open boglands, the rocky glories of the mountains and watching out for the sodding sheep that are ON THE ROAD.

Having survived the sheep of the Valley, turn left and brace yourself as you cross the top of the lake for the ridiculously and irresistibly picturesque sight of Kylemore Abbey. You’ll want to pop in there at some point to wander the house, visit the beautiful little church and soak up the colours of the gardens.

Beyond Kylemore is Letterfrack with its life-enriching furniture college on the location of what was once a dark and terrible orphanage. Diamond Hill shines down when the sun is out, and Connemara National Park surrounds it with a lovely visitor’s centre, a playground, a bog walk, a longer bog walk, and a bloody hell I hope your knees need a workout climb up Diamond itself. As a walk it is easy, clear, well-laid out and reasonably busy. As a climb it can be managed in two to three hours and an afternoon of basically sitting and waiting for the feeling to come back into your legs.

Picture of trail up Diamond Hill

On a clear day at the top, though, all such earthly mortal concerns fall away, carried into the sky by the tangy sea breeze as you slowly survey the glories of the Twelve Bens.

Picture of the view from Diamond Hill

Go right at Letterfrack, the sea on the left, drive out onto the Renvyle Peninsula to Tully Cross where old-fashioned, well-maintained, friendly-looking but cool-in-the-evenings cottages can be rented as a base for various adventurings.

Picture of traditional cottage

In one direction is Glassillaun beach and its nearby scuba-diving school. A solid A for sandcastles and F for Freezing Water, then again it is the flippin’ Atlantic and takes some acclimatisation or teflon skin or something.

Picture of sandcastle up against rocks

Beyond Glassilaun is Killary Fjord where you can wind your way past the sheep to the hostel where Wittgenstein spent a few wild years fishing for crabs with the locals (presumably – those German philosophers were off the hook), and take a boat ride round the fjord itself.

Assorted other diversions await back on Renvyle, including a glass-bottomed boat for ogling the sealife and the crabs lucky enough to survive Wittgenstein’s depradations. A castle belonging to legendary pirate queen and actual historical figure Granuaile can be viewed in much the same way most of her enemies viewed it – from a safe distance. White Strand Beach is gorgeous and gets an A+ for castle-building.

Picture of Star Shaped Castle

Out the road to the bustling town of Clifden, and the Sky Road, just the Road for visitors who have developed a dangerous addiction to spectacle and beauty and swerving around road-sheep. Deserted mock-gothic ruin Clifden House is a short walk off the road and affords the opportunity to lord it over the remnants of the glory days of the Irish landed gentry.

Picture from Bottom of Roofless Tower

If you still need more, the boat to Inishbofin departs and returns daily, with bikes or canoes for rent on the island.

Picture of ruin at entrance to Inisbofin Harbour

The beaches are lovely and calm and seabirds abound, but only a B at best for sandcastles.

Picture of Spriral Sandcastle

Exhausted and replete, watched by the curious road-sheep, one may now drive carefully back to Galway.

Nigel Quinlan lives in Tipperary but likes to holiday with his family in the wilds of Connemara. He is the author of the children’s fantasy novels The Cloak Of Feathers and The Maloneys’ Magical Weatherbox. Follow or avoid him @Nigellicus That’s him in the blue hat.

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