August 11, 2017 – Killarney to Galway, Cliffs of Moher, The Burren



We know the routine, up, stretch, down to breakfast, up for our luggage, and one last time down to this beautiful and charming lobby to meet our new driver.  There is a distinguished-looking man in a white dress shirt and white hair who is going to Galway eventually and we decide to ride with him.  Okay, he really is our new driver;  but I might have gone with him anyway!

He loads our luggage into his shiny silver BMW (see what I mean?) and we’re all laughing before we even get in the car.  Connie sits in the front and I spread out in the back seat with my backpack for ready access.  Noel, who was born on Christmas Eve, just the day before Connie, our Christmas baby, tells us that the weather will be bright spots with intermittent showers.  There is already a bit of mist on the windshield, so shooting from the moving car with spotty windows will probably not yield much! 



On the way out of Killarney we notice that they have a regional airport called the  Kerry Airport (we’re in County Kerry) and there’s a Ryanair plane at the ready.

We’re moving right along when we run into a big bus that will be going to slow for Noel’s taste, so he decided to show us the town of Rathkeale.  It’s interesting in part because he has relatives there but mostly because half the town is owned by Travelers/Tinkers.  They don’t mix with the local inhabitants and build huge houses in their own part of town.  Then they erect fences with strong gates, put shutters or screening on all their windows, and take off in their caravans for months at a time.  When they’re home you can see one or even two big RVs or camper vans in each yard or on the street.  When Connie asks how they make their money, Noel responds, “illegally” and proceeds to describe the asphalt-driveway scam.




On to and through another little town and like every one we’ve seen, it is colorful both because of all the flowers and the delightful choice of paint colors!   





We stop for a bit in Adare where we check out the historical display, the visitors’ center shops and then drive past the old thatched-roof cottages from the town’s earliest days.  It’s amazing how the thatching lasts for so many decades.  No wonder the thatcher’s cottage in the Bog Village was larger than the rest.  He was the craftsman everyone depended on!

chain mail

interesting way to construct the display!




Noel shows us Limerick, a port city and the third-largest city in Ireland.  They have just built a new rugby stadium, but we stop to take pictures of the old castle and the new art work!

That's the tallest hotel in Ireland!

Ancient walls








new rugby stadium
There is a little town, Lisdoonvarna, whose major claim to fame is that they host an annual, month-long match making festival every September.  Noel told us that one year he was at the airport when an entire plane load of Russian women arrived!  Some were quite beautiful and some where the size of elephants!







Statues in the town square commemorating the dances during the festival.
On, now, to the Cliffs of Moher but the closer we get, the less promising the weather.  When we reach the car park the fog is so thick we can’t see which way to go and finally ask another tourist.  It doesn’t look like I remember it and I never see the display that Stu, Marilyn, and I studied.  Then, again, I think we probably were on a path that wasn’t quite supposed to be in use!  When Connie and I get to the actual view-point walk, there isn’t much to see.  After a short bit I keep climbing and Connie stops.  She says a prayer of thanksgiving, and when she looks up, the fog is lifting!  It never becomes one of those tourist-ad blue sky moments;  but at least we can see the cliffs and it isn’t raining!


Even official documents put the Irish language first!

Yea, we couldn't see much of anything!

Even the vegetation was wet, although it hadn't actually rained!  100% humidity today!

Is that a cliff?

Maybe?  I can see waves!

Brian's tower.  Glad we hadn't paid to see the view from there!







Poor dear in the damp.  Can't be good for the instrument!

Getting better!



People come anyway.  If this is your day, this is your day!



Okay, I couldn't decide which one I liked best!
 As we decide we’ve seen about all there will be to see, the fog comes rolling back in!  We stop at the visitors’ center again to look at the displays – and the gift shop- and go back to the car park, where Noel has had a sandwich and a little snooze. 







On, now, to Galway, to the Harbour Hotel, so Noel can start his hour and a half trip back home.  Poor guy, he will be stuck in the Friday afternoon rush hour traffic!

Not many people going our way!

We check in, receive a coupon for a dinner for two with a glass of Prosecco each, and go upstairs to decide if we have the strength to make it to a pub for a trad session that won’t even start until 9:30.  We think about it a bit, decide to use our coupon, and after a huge, huge meal, the answer is plain.  Tomorrow is another day!  I don’t even have the oompf to write tonight.  It will wait for the morning.

I can’t let dinner pass, though.  We each have a different appetizer.  Mine is sweet potato and coconut soup!!  Connie has a Killeen farmhouse cheese and leek tartlet with spiced tomato sauce.  I’d marry it!!  Her entre is baked fillet of salmon with baby potatoes, red onions, olives, green beans and lemongrass sauce.  I have slow-cooked pork belly with carrot puree, roasted butternut squash and a balsamic glaze.  The only thing that could have made it better would have been for the portions to be SMALLER!  These people must eat like the giant from the Giant’s Causeway!  And there was dessert!  Bailey’s and white chocolate cheesecake!  With coffee or tea! I really wanted to order the Dillisk Potted Plant!  What a cool name, hunh? It was vanilla panna cotta Connamara seaweed crumb;  but the seaweed kinda put me off.  They also put seaweed in their Guinness bread at the beginning of the meal.  I loved it (too much) but Connie could smell the sea when she picked it up.

tartlet

pork belly

salmon

OMG cheesecake!

Up we go to see if we can catch up a little on our sleep.  One thing about a short trip like this, is that you don’t ever get a down day.  Boy, those get to be more and more important!  I can’t get by with four hours’ sleep like I used to!  J

And because my phone finally sent these, a couple from the night before!

The world's best goat cheese salad

What a lovely combination!
 

Comments

  1. Oh my gosh! What a day. I love the troll looking mounds, the murals, and the face on its side. The fog was not wanted, but you still took amazing photos. The food looks scrumptious and absolutely divine. You truly know how to live life to the fullest. Bravo!

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    Replies
    1. Thank you! Thanks you! You, too, know how important it is to live NOW!!

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