Tuesday 17 April 2007

The Luck of the Irish...and the Coopers




Since we'll be leaving England soon, we thought it would be a great shame not to make it to Ireland before we left. Many Brits that we've talked to have never been, which is no surprise when you find out they've never even been to London! But like most visitors we make a point to see the sights. Who know's when we'll pass this way again - especially since the exchange rate is now over $2.00 to the pound. I think we'll be limiting our holiday travel to the States for a while. (It's funny how we've started thinking in dollars again even before we move back.)

Ireland is just a short hour flight away, so we thought it would be a cheap weekend getaway. But once you add in rental car, hotel stays, food, attraction admissions - all in Euros which at least gives us a little break, I don't think there is such a thing as a cheap break.

We flew into Shannon, and drove along the scenic West Coast to see the Cliffs of Moher - a very popular photo op and to get a glimpse of the Burren - thousands of acres of limestone that resemble the surface of the moon, except for the fact that in the summer wildflowers bloom in the cracks. It was too early for flowers in April. Thanks to the White's suggestion, we stayed that night in a Hotel on Lake Derg, outside of Limerick. It had a pool and two story spiral water slide to help Brendan work off some energy after being stuck in a car all day long.

The next day, we drove South to Cork, where I thought we'd go see Blarney Castle and kiss the Blarney Stone. But, I guess Bill doesn't want me to have the gift of gab, because he and Brendan poo-pooed all over that idea. Instead, we went to a pretty harbor village called Cobh, which has a great Heritage Museum and tells the history of the Irish potato famine, emigration and the last days of the Titanic and Lusitania. (It was the last port of call on both their voyages.) I got some great material for a few articles I hope to write for a children's magazine which happens to be featuring Ireland in a issue next year. The article have to be in next month. I was struck by the stong connection between Ireland and America. So many people came to escape starvation and looking for a better life. The first person registered at Ellis Island, was a young girl named Annie Moore, who sailed from Cobh.

We finished the day on the south coast in a village called Tramore. We just drove til we got tired and found a hotel for the night. In our younger days, we traveled around Europe without making reservations, and found places to stay along the way. We're not used to winging it like that anymore, and thankfully things turned out okay. The beach stretched out to the Irish sea and was only a short walk away. The water was cold and the tide went way out, so we strolled along the sand picking up stones tumbled smooth by the waves and skipping them back in to the ocean. They had a fair operating that night, but Bill and Brendan were drawn in by the arcade. Bill won about £45 playing the slot machines!

We stayed right outside of Waterford, so the next morning we followed our noses to the Waterford Crystal factory and took a tour. They turn out beautiful, hand made crystal that I would love to own. Seeing the process from start to finish makes you appreciate the final product even more. Brendan was really impressed by the sculptural nature of working with glass. It takes 4 years as an apprentice to learn to blow the glass, another two to etch and four more to learn to carve it like stone. Wow! We didn't buy any since we'll be moving soon, but I've got their website!

After Waterford, we drove to New Ross to see an exact replica of a famine ship that brought emigrants to America called the Dunbrody. It was built and paid for by the Kennedy foundation. JFK is a hero around these parts. His great granfather sailed for America from New Ross and in about 110 years, the family went from emigrants to President. Its quite a success story.

Then we hightailed it to Dublin, as much as you can behind tractors and on single-lane roads with no shoulders. Even the N roads, which were just below Motorway status were iffy at best. The scenery was outstanding. Green pastures full of sheep and dairy cows. Rapeseed in full bloom. In the west, they use a lot of rock in building their walls, but they also have tidy hedgerows just like in England. Their mountains weren't much more than hills like those in the Texas Hillcountry, but whose complaining? With a little encouragement from Brendan and me, Bill mastered the tempermental standard transmission and touchy brakes. We didn't lose our way too many times and arrived safely on the east coast outside Dublin at the Portmarnock Hotel and golf links. (Golf is EVERYWHERE.) This hotel didn't have a pool, but who needs one when you have miles of beachline, tidepools and jagged rocks to explore and a small harbour village with lots of restaurants up the road? We had to pull Brendan away to tour Dublin.

Dublin is much smaller than we expected. We inadvertantly parked in Temple Bar, notorious for rowdy nightlife and promised ourselves to be out before sunset. BTW - temple bar comes from the Vikings who conquered the area. When they took a town, they put up a huge stone pillar (a temple bar) to let those coming after that they were there and it was safe.

We boarded the sightseeing bus to take the circuit around town, hear the commentary and get our bearings. But we couldn't understand a thing the guide was saying! We got off at the Guiness Storehouse (can you imagine Bill at a beer factory?) and took the tour through the seven-story building that told the history of the Guiness family, who the beer is made, and an exhibit of the advertising through the years. The best tidbit we learned is that the Guiness Book of World Records stems from an arguement that an employee was having at a bar with his friends (no doubt over a pint of Guiness) about which was the fastest hunting fowl. The decided that every bar should have a book of records so they keeper could settle such disputes.

At the very top, the Gravity Bar gave a 360 degree view of Dublin and a free glass of Guiness to every visitor over eighteen. I tried a tiny bit in the tasting room downstairs and opted for the soda with Bill and Brendan. The barley is roasted, so it has something like a coffee taste and the hops gives it a bitter aftertaste that stays with you far too long. (They taught us all about this in the tasting room.) They say it's an acquired taste, and I believe it.

Of all the other things to do, the Dublin Gaol, St Mechlin's church with mummies in the crypt, Dublinia - the viking exhibit, the only thing I could get the guys to agree to was a stop at the National Museum of Archeology to see the largest Viking exhibit outside of Scandinavia. When we arrived, we found out it was closed! So... we walked around the museum looking at well-preserved bog mummies and rested before walking back to the car. After terrorizing shrimp in the tidepools til the sun went down, we had Chinese takout in the hotel and watched Lost! What a way to end the trip.

It's always fun to spend time in the car with your family. It reminded me of the months we spend traveling the US - except its much easier to navigate in the States. Bill and I talked about our impending move, and all the little details we couldn't forget. Brendan studied his music book that came with the tin flute he bought as a sourvenier. Bill had told him that he wanted bagpipes and flutes to play at his funeral, and Brendan vowed to learn a tune that he would play for him.

All in all - a little stressful, but a fun adventure - one of our last in the EU, and I think we can cross Ireland off of our list.