Showing posts with label Sligo Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sligo Ireland. Show all posts

Friday, April 14, 2023

Raining today - Ireland comes to mind!


It's a very wet morning here and I'm taking a breather from the garden.
  I didn't have anything ready to post, however looking through my drafts, 
I came across this one from a 2019 trip to Ireland which I never completed
 or posted. It feels right for a rainy day such as this.

The county of Sligo can enchant you.
It's steeped in history and mythology, with a creative tradition that lives 
in the music, art, poetry and expression of its people.
We took a bus from Derry/Londonderry to Sligo as there was no train
 service to transport us from Northern Ireland to the Republic of Ireland. 
It was a wet but picturesque journey on the way to Galway.



Quaint small towns and villages were just visible through the streaming bus
windows as we traveled along the Wild Atlantic Way. The countryside 
appeared as miles of green and yellow carpeting rolled out across the
 hills of Donegal and Sligo counties. Now and then the sun would peep
 out from those clouds, and several rainbows brightened up the views.



The town of Sligo, pop. 20,000, straddles the Garavogue River where it meets 
Sligo Bay. It’s known for its literary heritage and rugged countryside. 
Ruined medieval Sligo Abbey has carved tombs and a 15th-century altar. 
Sligo County Museum displays memorabilia of local poet W.B. Yeats, paintings 
and Stone Age artifacts. The Model is a contemporary arts centre featuring
works by 20th-century Irish artists. 


I do recall acquiring a thirst on the bus while the rain continued to
soak everything in sight. Of course in Ireland one doesn't have to stay
 thirsty for long! Perhaps that was why we found warmth, comfort, 
interesting talk with locals, and had such a fun time at this 
interesting historic pub. We even returned later for live music!


Though we've seen almost all of Ireland we want to return. It truly is
one of the most beautiful islands in the world, and it's history is
 amazing. Bob still wants to do more searching into his family history, 
his father's side coming from Castleisland, County Kerry. 

I definitely want to see the West coast again, listen to music in
 Galway City; walk again on the Cliffs of Moher; go back to the
 Dingle Peninsula to look out at Great Blasket Island (whose history
 fascinates me); eat some of the world's best seafood chowder at
 Quinlan's in Killarney; then head south and raise a glass with the
 locals on the waterfront down in Kinsale on a sunny day as we
 enjoyed last time. Then of course back to Dublin, that great city
one can never tire of wandering through.

Have you visited Ireland - or better still, do you happen to live there?
Perhaps you have some Irish stories to share with us.