Sunday 21 May 2017

The Green Isle....Part 2 Western Ireland.....the Wild Atlantic Way....and, who knew the Cork County Rural Transport Bus could be so much fun...

                    ............An Old Irish Proverb.......

                          
                                    - Annie Mays
                             …........... .........................

                                        Prologue

..... conversations heard on the Cork Co rural bus....
#1...
"So, Mary. How's your hip?" says the driver.
"I'm off to see the doctor about my surgery." says Mary.
"Have you got a date for surgery?" says Pauline, another passenger.
"Soon, I hope?" replies Mary.
"Ah, that would be grand!" says the driver.

#2....
Yvonne talks about a suitable 1st Communion gift to give a niece of a friend we'll be visiting.....
"Oh, don't give too much money!" says one lady.
Mary adds her two quid worth..."No mobile phones for the child. She doesn't need it."
"Just get a card and put $20 euros in it! No need to spoil the child." pipes up Frank from the back......and on it goes...

The rural bus system is a wonderful, at times wacky way to see the back roads of rural Ireland. Drivers are helpful, know everything about everyone on their routes and have a regular, weekly clientele going off to shop, visit or make appointments​.
                           .................................................

                     ......On to Cork and the the Wild Atlantic Way.....

                                         

We bus south (see map above)..to the city of Cork.... uneventful, direct...our arrival is easy...

Tourist info next to our roadside bus station suggests the Kinlay House Hostel as a place to stay. It's a great suggestion.
$60 euros/night gets us a private room w bathroom...safe n clean and close to pubs and city center.


With weather brightening up, we make a pilgrimage to kiss the Blarney Stone. Hey...we know that it's a pretty touristy thing to do....but, a whole bunch of people wanted us to get there...


Of course, we pick the day when the castle grounds are open to the Spring Garden tour.....so, hundreds of people are wandering around and buses there and back to Cork are jammed full!


The long and winding staircase to the Blarney Stone.


Ain't no stairway to heaven in this tower



Yvonne plants a kiss on the magical stone....we now speak in tongues! Was it worth the €15 or $20?  Hhmm?


Back in Cork


We come across a tiny pub..and hop out of the rain.....here trad (traditional) Irish music is playing. These trad sessions, just see musicians show up, play for free and play the night away. Tonight, 9 musicians jam for hours, all crammed in one corner of this great, old pub.


Pull up to the bar and you'll always meet a friendly face and quaff a few pints while you talk the night away.



COBH (Pronounced Cove)
With weather turning a tad wet, we head out to Cobh for the day. The 30 minute train ride takes us out to this coastal town with a rich history and much sadness.


Cobh was the last port of call for the Titanic before the sinking. The lucky ones got off here, while others boarded the ship for the ill-fated journey to America.

The Dock of Tears

Cobh, as the most south-western deep water port in Ireland, was also the jumping off for Irish fleeing the famine years in the mid 1800's. Millions past through here hoping to survive a dangerous crossing to new lands and an uncertain future. 

Cobh was also the place were so called Irish lawbreakers were imprisoned on Spike Island (known as Ireland's Alcatraz) before being shipped off to Australia. The overcrowded prison also used derelict ships to house prisoners.

Most were thrown in jail over political beliefs, or simple petty theft....such as stealing food. Some simply committed a crime so they'd have a chance to eat.

Actually, it's a perfect place to be on a wet, windy and gloomy day!


Cobh's massive cathedral overlooks the harbour and dominates the town below.



The Wild Atlantic Way... 

We leave Cobh in sun and head for Schull (pron. Skull) several hours southwest on the coast.


The countryside is gorgeous and green.


SCHULL 

This town is our jumping off point to the Mizen Head Peninsula.  Busy during the day, quiet at night, Schull is a boater's paradise and summer destination for many.





The Mizen Head road (Wild Atlantic Way)

We arrange a car hire with a local cab driver for the day and head out to the most south-western point of Ireland..... it's a fabulous, sunny and clear day. Views are magnificent.  Our driver's stories and info are priceless. 


 Altar Wedge Tomb......erected near the end of the Stone                                          Age as a ritual site.



Barleycove Beach, a favourite place to go in the summer months with gorgeous sand dunes framing the bay.


Narrow roads that are never really crowded​.


Mizen Head Peninsula 


The Mizen Head Signal Station was built in 1909 to warn ships off the rocks and is accessible by a 45 metre high bridge that connects the mainland to this island.  The Fastnet Lighthouse now does the job once this station was decommissioned. 



What's to say... except gorgeous? The rugged coast was a dangerous place for shoddy seamanship. 



An old boat launch near Three Castle Head


The green, green fields of home.


The best little bar this far south at Crookhaven.  In its heyday, Crookhaven collected mail from America.  More recently, parts of Star Wars was filmed in the area.  Huh!



What a great crew....the local Schull tourist office and film festival organizers....and where else, would you be offered beer and wine for just stopping in.

Probably didn't hurt that we were one of the few tourists to stop by...as most just motor on through many of these small towns in their rental car, following their guide book. And, really, that's the dilemma facing drivers ..they stay in BnB's, mainly far out of the town center. And, miss the night life and music in the local pubs.


Schull firefighters cleaning streets and building facades in preparation for the upcoming film festival which sees up to 6000 people arrive.


                                        BANTRY

The rural bus drops us off in Bantry after a rambling route through the back country roads from Schull to Skibbereen and on to Bantry. We take a room based on the advice of a local on our rural bus. Great place, close to the center and above the craft store.....all for €55 euros.


Behind the bar and pulling a pint at the Ma Murphy's in Bantry.



The rural Transport Bus... kind of like the Cheers Bar....where everyone knows your name and your business!



Down this road? for 20 minutes to drop someone off.





The Craft Shop accommodation 

That's it for now!



Cheers from Shayne & Yvonne 




Additional Random Photos...



















               

Sunday 14 May 2017

Ireland...Part 1.....leaving on a Westjet flight.... there's only one way to pour a beer.....off we go to the Green Isle and the beginning of our Celtic love affair!

                                      Prologue...

          ...some sound Irish advice.....
"The most important things to do in the world are........
....to get........something to eat......something to drink..... and somebody to love you.” Irish author..Brendan Behan

                          .............................................

                        The Green Isle... Part 1

Lord.......the Irish love....their drink, their music.....and to dance.....

We've landed in Dublin, after a fairly painless flight from Vancouver, BC to London, Gatwick then onto Ireland with Ryanair.

....yep on the road again....starting with Ireland for several weeks, or possibly, several months to explore the cities, small towns, quiet landscape and along the way....drink enough Guinness to fill one of the water tight holds on the Titanic, sit back in a few pubs and just take in the Irish​ way.

                                
Dublin....located in middle right side of map.

Leaving London...


We spend several days in Dublin wandering streets, visiting sites and shaking off jet lag. All in glorious sun. Even managed to spot a local with sunburned calves! 



We attended service at the Cathedral to beers...... The Guinness Storehouse Brewery.  Here we graduate 1st in pints from our beer pouring academy. Ale-a-lou-ya!  Ah, yes, you must first have a tulip shaped pint to allow the nitogen to flow down the side, then pour at a 45 degree angle until 3/4 full and let it settle for at least 90 seconds. The bubbles flow down the sides and back up the middle creating the creamy head.  At this stage you top it off creating a domed effect across the glass.  And so you have a perfect pint!  Give it a try!


Not to be rushed and well worth the wait.
We've taken a fondness to this nectar of the gods.


The view of Dublin is endless from the sky high Guinness Gravity Bar!



Dublin city scapes





The music is magnificent. Loud, passionate, full of life and played from the heart.


Check out menu item #16.  And, just outside the pub, a horse taxi waiting for its next customer 


Heading south from Dublin to Kilkenny 


We depart Dublin in the rain. Welcome to the Irish mist as we head south to Kilkenny (see map) in County Kilkenny. An easy 90 minute bus ride from Dublin takes us to the medieval town set alongside the picturesque River Nore.



A beautiful old-walled city filled with churches, forts and even a true 'Hole in the Wall' pub. Pubs seem to be placed at just the right spots for a quick duck out of the rain and a chance to refresh with a pint or two.


This particular pub had a 1000 year old rustic oak bar and seated less than a dozen patrons.



Kilkenny Castle and grounds




The Black Abby Cathedral.  
(Cathedral actually means 'chair'.)
 Not your lawn chair variety, but one more regal and wielding great power. Huh!







That's it for now....from Kilkenny.
 We're just getting started. So pull up a seat , pour a beer, taste some fine whiskey....'cause, you know at heart.....we're all Irish!

Cheers from Yvonne & Shayne 

PS......Hmmm? Beer, pub food, Irish music, great people.... what's not to like? Until next time!


.....................................

It’s a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step onto the road, and if you don’t keep your feet, there’s no knowing where you might be swept off to.” – JRR Tolkien

Additional Random Photos 

Looking at the text box...











Monday 1 May 2017

A New Look....Same Fun.....Come along as we get ready to head off....

                                                          Robert Louis Stevenson writes...
....I travel not to go anywhere, but to go.....
I travel for travel's sake...The great affair is to move....

.............................
  
                                        Welcome back.....to our Tales from the Road...

Hola, to all......

We've made some slight changes to our blog layout and added some more emails to our fan base.
Hope you continue to travel with us....wherever that takes us...it will be real soon...

And, to get you in the spirit.........
We leave you with some of our favourite quotes from past trips.....


Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one's lifetime.” - Mark Twain

                                          


"My confession is I fall in love with so many places...
I'm always half-broken hearted by good byes....

And, I don't believe in non-attachment. 
There's no passion inside of that.

 I believe in burning and longing.
 And, I believe........we leave......
 tiny pieces of ourselves in every place we've lived."

- Victoria Ericsson


"If you limit your choices only to what seems reasonable or possible.....
 you disconnect yourself from what you truly want.....
 and all that is left is compromise" Anais Nin


.... Travelling....it leaves you speechless....
... then turns you into a story teller....
......Ibn Baltuta


....from the roads we travel....

......Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed.........
....... by the things you didn't do than by the things you did.......
......So throw off the bowlines......
....Sail away from the safe harbor.......
......Catch the trade winds in your sails.....
Explore....Dream.... Discover
- Mark Twain



                                                          "If you reject the food.....
                                                        ......ignore the customs.....
                                                          .....fear the religions......
                                                        ...and avoid the people.......
                                                    ...you might better stay at home"
                                                           - James A Michener.....

                                                                 Adios for now!
                                                                Shayne y Yvonne



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