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  1. #1
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    The Dingle Penn. - Ireland

    Just in case you weren't jonesing enough to visit Ireland (or anywhere on the other side of the pond) Rick Steves has a great write up about th eDingle Penninsula. Enjoy

    http://www.cnn.com/2009/TRAVEL/getaw...and/index.html

    (Tribune Media Services) -- Be forewarned, Ireland is seductive. Traditions are strong and stress is a foreign word. I fell in love with the friendliest land this side of Sicily. It all happened in a Gaeltacht.
    As you explore the lush Dingle Peninsula, you'll see how the Emerald Isle got its name.









    Gaeltachts are national parks for the traditional culture, where the government protects the old Irish ways. Shaded green on many maps, these regions brighten the west coast of the Emerald Isle. Gaeltacht means a place where Gaelic (or Irish) is spoken. But the Irish culture is more than just the language. You'll find it tilling the rocky fields, singing in the pubs, and lingering in the pride of the small-town preschool that brags "All Gaelic."
    The Dingle Peninsula -- green, rugged, and untouched -- is my favorite Gaeltacht. While the big tour buses clog the neighboring Ring of Kerry before heading east to kiss the Blarney Stone, in Dingle it still feels like the fish and the farm actually matter.
    Fishing boats still sail from Dingle, and a nostalgic whiff of peat scents its nighttime air, offering visitors an escape into pure Ireland. For 30 years my Irish dreams have been set here, on this sparse but lush peninsula where locals are fond of saying, "The next parish is Boston."
    Of the peninsula's 10,000 residents, 1,500 live in Dingle Town. Its few streets, lined with ramshackle but gaily painted shops and pubs, run up from a rain-stung harbor, home to a friendly dolphin. You'll see teenagers -- already working on ruddy beer-glow cheeks -- roll kegs up the streets and into the pubs in preparation for another night of music and craic (fun conversation and atmosphere).
    The Dingle Peninsula is worth exploring by bike or car. It's 10 miles wide and runs 40 miles from Tralee to Slea Head. The top of its mountainous spine is Mount Brandon, at 3,130 feet, the second-tallest mountain in Ireland. While only tiny villages lie west of Dingle Town, the peninsula is home to 500,000 sheep. The weather on this distant tip of Ireland is often misty, foggy, and rainy. But don't complain -- as locals will explain, there is no bad weather ... only inappropriate clothing.


    Leaving Dingle Town by car or bike, it becomes clear that the peninsula is an open-air museum. It's littered with monuments reminding visitors that the town has been the choice of Bronze Age settlers, Dark Age monks, English landlords, and Hollywood directors ("Ryan's Daughter," and "Far and Away"). The Milestone B&B decorates its front yard not with a pink flamingo, but with an ancient pillar stone -- one of more than 2,000 stony pieces in the puzzle of prehistoric life here.
    Near the red, two-room schoolhouse, a street sign warns Taisteal go Mall -- Slow Down. Near the playground, students hide out in circular remains of a late Stone Age ring fort. In 500 B.C. it was a petty Celtic chieftain's headquarters, a stone-and-earth stockade filled with little stone houses. Many of these ring forts survived the centuries because of superstitious beliefs that they were "fairy forts."
    The wet sod of Dingle is soaked with medieval history. In the darkest depths of the Dark Ages, when literate life almost died in Europe, peace-loving, bookwormish monks fled the chaos of barbarian raids on the continent. They sailed to this drizzly fringe of the known world and lived their monastic lives in lonely stone igloos or "beehive huts," which you'll see dotting the landscape.
    Several groups of these mysterious huts, called clochans, line the road. Built without mortar by seventh-century monks, these huts take you back. Climb into one. You're all alone, surrounded by dank mist and the realization that it was these monks who kept literacy alive in Europe. To give you an idea of their importance, Charlemagne, who ruled much of Europe in the year 800, imported Irish monks to be his scribes.
    Rounding Slea Head, the point in Europe closest to America, the rugged coastline offers smashing views of deadly black-rock cliffs and the distant Blasket Islands. The crashing surf races in like white horses, while longhaired sheep graze peacefully on the green hillside.
    Study the highest fields, untouched since the planting of 1845, when the potatoes never matured and rotted in the ground.
    The great famine of that year, through starvation or emigration, nearly halved Ireland's population. Because its endearing people have endured so much, Ireland is called "The Terrible Beauty."
    Take your time at the Gallaras Oratory, circa A.D. 800, the sightseeing highlight of your peninsula tour. One of Ireland's best-preserved early Christian churches, its shape is reminiscent of an upturned boat. Its watertight dry-stone walls have sheltered travelers and pilgrims for 1,200 years.
    From the Oratory, continue up the rugged one-lane road to the crest of the hill and then coast back to Dingle Town -- hungry, thirsty, and ready for a pint.

  2. #2
    The Kilted Reverend is offline Oops, it seems this member needs to update their email address
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    I love listening to Rick Steves' Podcasts about the Celtic and Brittish Lands.
    Lots of Info. for anyone going on holiday give Rick a listen. I learned a great deal about traveling from him, like how in the Highlands you can catch a ride with post man to get around.
    Slainte,
    TKR

  3. #3
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    Spent a few days there on my honeymoon in 1986. Well worth the trip- the beauty of the place is outstanding.

  4. #4
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    Was there 4 years ago---take a look at that road as it is a two lane road, and when you meet an oncoming tour bus your left mirror will be up against the stone wall while your right mirror will be scraping the bus as it passes. Supposed to be a great place to cycle, as long as you are wary of the other traffic on the road.

  5. #5
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    We're going to spend two days in Ireland on our way to Scotland this summer. Unfortunately, we won't have enough time to see much.

    Ironically, we were watching Rick's shows on Dublin and the south of Ireland (on DVD) last night.

  6. #6
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    I love Dingle!!! We spent 3-4 days there last time we were in Ireland. 1500 people and 56 pubs (those were the numbers in '99). It's such a great little community full of life and surrounded by some of the most beautiful scenery in Ireland.

    If anyone makes it there I highly suggest a pint of Guinness at Dick Mack's pub (half pub/half leather shop) and than have a chip butty on the way back to your accommodations.

    I think more people try and see the Ring of Kerry, but this beats it in my mind. The people are incredible, and the town itself is very postcard-ish. The coach tours along the peninsula are breath taking.

    I highly recommend Dingle to anyone visiting Ireland. Cut short a day or two in the bigger cities and enjoy some real Irish culture and fun.

  7. #7
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    Two recommendations about Dingle town and the peninsula. If you are looking for a good B&B in town so you can walk to pubs etc, then you must try to stay with Eileen and Tadgh Collins (email collinskierry at eircom dot net). If your interest is archeology, try to get Tadgh to tour you around the peninsula- he will chage a fee, but it is well worth it.

  8. #8
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    Also, get on the road early and you will be ahead of any of the day busses. Skip the first sign that you see for beehive houses. He charges $$, he was filthy, and the barnyard was exceptionally stinky. Take it from a veterinarian who knows what stinks, and what does not. Good manure does not stink.

  9. #9
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    I'll be there this summer!

  10. #10
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    I've done the trip in a mini van and it was wonderful. I will see if I can post some pics in a few days.

    Rob
    [B]IrishRob[/B]
    MacSithigh of Ireland--Southern Donald of Scotland

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