Ireland is Beautiful part of the world and there are plenty of things to do in her, if you are planning a trip to Ireland then this is the blog for you.

Jam packed with places to visit in Ireland...................

Theres always a welcome on the mat...............a kettle on the boil........and lots of Irish charm.............
Updated daily with a behind the scene look at what Ireland has to offer and the must see attractions when you Visit Ireland

You'll find natural and man-made beauty, culture, history and great 'craic' in the six counties of the province of


A sunbeam to warm you, a moonbeam to charm you, A sheltering angel, so nothing can
harm you. ~Irish Blessing

The Mourne Mountains - Where the Mountains - o' Mourne sweep down to the sea'


The popular song has made the Mournes the best known mountains in Ireland. Distinctive and self-contained, they are tucked away in the south-east corner of Northern Ireland, with 12 shapely summits rising above 2,000 ft on the eastern side.
The barren peak of Slieve Donard, climbing steeply to 2,796 ft, dominates the mysterious blue distance of the landscape. It's an afternoon's climb from the carpark at Bloody Bridge near the holiday resort of Newcastle, Co.Down. From the top you can see the Isle of Man and the full length of Strangford Lough. To the north-west lies the pale line of Lough Neagh, a vast inland sea covering 153 square miles, famous for its eels, an Ulster delicacy. Hundreds of tons of eels are exported each yearhere.

The coast frorn Newcastle round to Greencastle hamlet was notorious for smuggling in the 18th century. Old coastguard lookout points recall the time when liquor and tobacco, tea, silk and soap were landed by boat from the Isle of Man and spirited away along the Brandy Pad and other smugglers' trails through the mountains. The two big artificial lakes in the Silent Valley that supply Belfast's water are surrounded by a huge dry stone wall over 22 miles long. At Newcastle itself there is yachting and pleasure fishing from the old harbour, golf at Royal County Down, and walks in the sand dunes of Murlough.
For a very scenic drive to Newcastle, visitors coming north on the Dublin-Belfast road should turn east at Newry on to the A2 which runs along the north shore of Carlingsford Lough between the mountains and the sea. Read more

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