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Top ten best wild places in Ireland - PHOTOS

Some of the best destinations for adventures in rugged Ireland


Nephin beg mountain range Co Mayo
Photo by Mike Bourke

In his comprehensive guide book ‘Britain and Ireland’s Best Wild Places: 500 Essential Journeys’, Christopher Somerville traces the best wild areas around Britain and Ireland. Here, we’ve selected our essential top ten, with the first eight being Somerville’s selections from Ireland for his top 50 best wild places in Ireland and Britain:

1. Umbra Dunes, Co Derry
Home to plentiful supplies of rare flowers, Umbra Dunes is reached by following a natural trail through wooded areas out to the Dunes. The backdrop to the Dunes is a stunning scenery of purple cliffs.

2. Beaghmore Stone Circles, Co Tyrone
Seven circles of stone, ten rows and a dozen or so round cairns were positioned here in low lying bog land in Tyrone during the mid Bronze Age. They were first discovered by bog-cutters in the 1930s and now are visible, though many more structures could still be beneath layers of bog. The stone circles are believed to correlate with the summer solstice as well as the cycles of the sun and moon.

3. Sperrin Hills, Co Tyrone
A perfect spot for a nature enthusiast’s walk in Tyrone. With no roads and the aging shepherds paths fading back into the ground, the walk over the Hills is truly a naturally led one. The Hills form a natural barrier overlooking the lush Glenelly Valley.

4. Nephin Beg Mountains, Co Mayo
Author Christopher Somerville proclaims “You will never, ever forget the Bangor Trail if you decide to tackle it.” The 30 mile rugged trail through the Nephin Beg Mountains is “the loneliest hill track through the widest extent of blanket bog and the remotest mountain range in Ireland.”

5. Caher Island, Co Mayo
The “lonely and alluring” small slip 6 miles off the coast of Mayo holds “the simple beauty of a tiny, ancient church in ruins” with seemingly untouched markers and offerings around it. The difficult to access Caher Island is the stuff of myths - “feathers and fresh flowers lie in offerings, though you have seen no other boat.” Local people believe that the “sea itself” guards the tiny island and “will rise up against anyone foolish enough to take anything away.”

6. Aran Islands, Co Galway
Geographically an extension of Co Clare’s Burren district, the Aran Islands are “Irish-speaking islands, remote in the mouth of the bay.” Though the Islands are both physically forboding and beautiful, the natives of the Islands are welcoming but not forthcoming with strangers. History and nature collide on this chain of three islands off the coast of Galway.

7. The Burren, Co Clare
“The Burren is without question the most magical place in County Clare,” writes Somerville. This old seabed that hoisted to the air and then scraped by icebergs comprises 500 square miles “of rounded grey hills and rocky coast on the southern shores of Galway Bay.” The area boasts floral rarities that attract botanists from around the world.

8. Great and Little Skellig, Co Kerry
Described as “an unforgettable experience,” Skelling Michael is 9 miles off of the Iveragh Peninsula in Co Kerry. Here, you’ll find an “emotional moment” at the summit of Skellig Michael where a monastery sustained itself for 500 years off of rainwater and fish caught in from the sea. The remains of 1,500 year old crosses can be found still standing near the remains of the huts and churches the monks built before moving ashore.

9. Glenariff, Co Antrim
Described as “the most  breathtaking piece of coastal scenery in Ireland” by Somerville, Glenariff offers a striking display of beautifully colored cliffs. The Glenariff Forest Park offers four walking tours, with the most dramatic being the Waterfall Trail. Somerville recommends going either early or late in the day to avoid distracting crowds and, if possible, after it rains when “there is a magic in the woods.”

10. Old Kenmare Road, Co Kerry
An 11 mile trail that takes you through some of the most untouched and scenic pieces in Co Kerry, the path originates near the south shore of Muckross Lake and brings you to an overlook to Peakeen Mountain and Knockanaguish. The trail brings you to encounter everything from glens, to waterfalls, to ruins of old settlements.

Order your copy of the book here.
 


Nster.com


11 Comments

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This is definitely a to do list for 'Advanced Irelanders'. I can only claim two and I live here with a will to get out and about. Good to see Ulster well represented. Tomorrow the Titanic building is opening in Belfast and as with anything in Belfast that should be fairly wild.
Bytheway! You must have missed my recent post, or chose to ignore it. You're exhibiting a marked degree of geographical dyslexia. Northern[ised] Ireland rather conspicuously is a geographical part of the island of Ireland currently co-administered equally by both the British and Irish Government's pending national reunification.
I hiked the Old Kenmare Road with my cousin. The peace and beauty were extraordinary. But I felt by the spirits of those who took refuge there during the Cromwellian times. Eventually, the Cromwellian troops found the settlers even in this remote region and wiped them out. It was eerie and spiritual and achingly beautiful all at once.
Tomorrow I leave for my first trip ever to Ireland. I can't wait. Am renting a house for 3 weeks in Glandore, County Cork. Leaving Maine to Boston to Ireland.
Aran Islands: "the natives of the Islands are welcoming" is downright wrong. The main-landers are considered "welcoming". The sociology of the Big Island is very complicated. The islanders openly receive all the benefits bestowed on them, including no tax on car fuel, but they do not want people. Hard to comprehend but if you speak with some who do business there, but are not natives, they will educate you on the natives. The natives prevented a policeman who had several years of service on the island from getting planning permission for a home for his family. Welcoming! But why worry since the Ireland has so many beautiful places populated by persons who are innately friendly and see value in having visitors. The Burren, Slea Head in Kerry West of Dingle, Muckross State Park in Killarney, West coast of Cork, Wicklow, Giant's Causeway; just keep on driving, stop and chat with locals, enjoy the full Irish in the B&B's and the music in the pubs at night. Ireland is worth more than a visit and the more the merrier!
Ireland is very beautiful, and he sense of being close to nature perists, even with the presence of all the people. That said the island is also the most domesticated place, not in a negative way, that I have ever visited.
Why must these books be written? These places do not need hordes trampling over them. Let the wild be wild and left alone.
I miss the Harp and Violin buskers at the cliffs of Moher.
Glenariff Forest Park is absolutely one of my favorite places in Ireland. The Waterfall Trial is not strenuous and could probably be done in less than an hour, but allow yourself another hour or two to take in the beauty and let it speak to your soul. As the article says, do it first thing in the morning or late afternoon so that you are not bothered by crowds. Fabulous!
carrickcourt, I think the Cliffs may be considered too touristy now. Did you see the puffins from the cliff? I've seen them on a boat ride in Maine, but it doesn't go very close, and you see them if they happen to fly or swim by. We did see a few that were close enough to recognize as puffins.I definitely want to visit several of these places, especially the dunes. The Burren is the only one I have seen, and I go there every time I'm in Ireland.
Looks like I have a list of natural places to visit the next time I am in Ireland. The only one I have visited is the Burren. Funny how the Cliffs of Moher did not make this list. For bird watchers ('birders') this is great place to visit with colonies of birds nesting in the cliffs here. Saw Atlantic puffins (called just Puffin in Ireland) here, a bird that also breeds in North America. There is a reintroduced population of Atlantic puffins on islands off of the coast of Maine, USA.
 




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