Tuesday 31 May 2011

Things we learned while in Ireland

There is one road that is smooth in Ireland.....there is good reason to fasten seat belts!
The shoulder of the road is non-existent in Ireland
There are cows in Ireland

They mow the vertical shrubs on the edge of the roads because the cars can touch them!
Weather predictions in country, based on if cattle is standing (sun) or lying down (rain)
Everything is expensive....especially food
Walking up hill......both ways - is very true in Kinsale

There is nothing "old" in the U.S.
The Druids had the first TIMEX......well, they knew the changes in the seasons!

Guiness is yucky and Murphy's Stout is good - although Phil still likes Guinness

A 2011 Honda Fit, (although it has a different name in Ireland), costs about $60,000 new!
You couldn't ask for better hosts than Mary & Dennis Maguire...

West of Kinsale

Saturday, May 21
Dennis Maguire took Fred on a short trip to see the 'Old Head' of Kinsale, just a few miles from the village.


Old Head is the location of the Lusitania Memorial (pictured above) - and a well-known, but VERY expensive golf course. (Fred couldn't even get into the pro-shop, because he was wearing jeans. Needless to say, he was not a candidate for playing golf on a course that charges $400-500 per person for 18 holes!)



Just across the road from the memorial is an old signaling tower. It had three floors, and is one of seven such towers between Kinsale and Cork. If enemy ships were spotted at Kinsale, the residents of the tower would light a fire in the fireplace. The light would be visible from the next tower - and the residents there would also light a fire. Using this method, the folks in the towers could alert the military personnel in Cork of an impending attack in much less time than it would take to deliver the message via horseback.



Friday, May 20

We began the day by heading west, and stopped in the 'microvillage' of Ballinspittle - the location of a shrine to the Virgin Mary.

 It is rumored that some locals have actually seen the statue move... (Don't forget... Guinness is brewed in Ireland.)

 Next, we drove to Timoleague - home to a huge Friary for which construction began about 1300AD.

 It was amazing to walk around in a building that is nearly 700 years old.


Next we were off to see the Drombeg ruins - left by the Druids between 2500 and 4000 years ago.

 The site above-left was used for cooking, while the photo at the right is of a 'mini-Stonehenge'. When the suns rays shine between the two upright stones in the foreground and hit the flat stone in the background - it indicates the Winter Solstice (December 21 - shortest day of the year.)

Our next stop was in the village of Glandore - for tea.
 One of Phil's buddies sails to Glandore from England, and recommended it to us. It certainly was beautiful the day we visited it. (Phil is cousin Elaine's husband.)

 After a bit of a drive - and a stop in Baltimore Village for lunch - we walked around in the town of Bantry.

 








          


Just as in Wales, all signs must be posted
in the native language and in English.




 Our last stop before returning to Kinsale was in Dunmanway.
 The statue above honors Sam Maguire - the man who recruited Michael Collins into the 'Irish Republican Brotherhood. Collins and 13 or 14 others were eventually executed in Kilmainham Jail in Dublin for promoting Ireland's independence from England.

Saturday 28 May 2011

Cobh - aka Cove - aka Queenstown

May 19

We took a day trip with Phil & Elaine (Fred's cousin) - and began the day in Cobh, the largest city in southern Ireland:




  We didn't spend a great deal of time in Cobh, but we did tour the magnificent St. Colman's Cathedral, located a very short distance from the harbor.

Back to Ireland

May 18
Up and out to Liverpool airport by taxi - then off to Cork - rented a car and drove to Kinsale, a beautiful seaside village in the south of Ireland. (TheTitanic left Kinsale in 1912 on it's last leg of that fateful journey, and the Lusitania was sunk by a German submarine just off the coast.).

Kinsale is a small, picturesque village - with NARROW streets. (The cars on the right are parked!)

We stayed with friends who have a B&B - with a beautiful view of the village.

 The harbor is stunning - depending on the tide, and the yellow house in the foreground is (or was) owned by Sting - and there's a recording studio in the lower level.) The roof on the right covers a home built about 1600.

The Village Town Hall and garden is in the foreground, and the B&B is the yellow house behind and to the left.

Tuesday 17 May 2011

Canal Boat


We saw several canal boats in England and Wales - usually from a distance. During our trip to Liverpool we saw one of them next to the bridge we were standing by. Phil, (our host), 'reckoned' this one is about 50' long. It's like a floating travel trailer - equipped with a couple of bedrooms, kitchen, full bath, and a sitting area.



The bridge pictured above was built in the 1800's, and is actually an aquaduct which transports canal boats across the River Dee near the Welsh town of Llangollen. I think the bridge is over 1000' long..

Monday 16 May 2011

Liverpool

We've made several journeys to Liverpool since arriving, but most of them to meet with relatives. (Much too boring for most readers!)
We did see a couple of interesting sites... and we'll share a few of them here.

This is the same Strawberry Field which was the subject of the famous song by the Beatles. We learned that the gates had been stolen after the song became a hit - but they were later recovered and returned.

This is the Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King. It's a magnificent structure, and seats about 2, 000. This picture was taken from Hope Street, and the Anglican Cathedral is at the opposite end of this street.


This is the Liver Building, (located adjacent to the River Mersey). The fictional bird perched atop each tower, (the Liver Bird), is the 'critter' after which Liverpool was named.

St. Nicholas' Church, located near the Liver Building is not a Roman Catholic Church, but Mass is celebrated there once a month. There is a statue directly in front of the church which honors those Liverpool residents who lost their lives during the Blitz. (Roughly 4,000 people died - including Fred's maternal grandparents and three aunts.)

Friday 13 May 2011

Things we learned about traveling in the UK

1. There are no straight roads in Wales

2. There are no pronounceable towns in Wales (i.e. Pwllheli or Ystradgynlais
3. Wales lifts the spirit, and calls one to just stop and take in the rolling hills, deep green fields separated by shrubs/fences and spotted with sheep
4. There are no cattle in Wales
5. When parking in Wales, or other small villages in England,  remember to push in your side mirror!
6. Try not to travel with 5 adults in one car for very long trips!