Cliffs of Moher - Sunday, June 10th. Directly after breakfast this morning we leave for a couple hour drive to the Cliffs of Moher. They were quite beautiful, but I was quite TIRED! I thought traveling with 15 year old students was a bit of a challenge. Try traveling with a group where everyone is 45 and over. Enough shopping already!
On the way to the cliffs, we stopped by one of the best known dolmen's in Ireland - Poulnabrone in Co. Clare. This picture is from the
Stones of Ireland Website. The name pulnabrone apparently means something like "hole of sorrows" or "throat of sorrows." According to our bus driver, Mike, there is not an exact translation for the name. My dad would have loved this stop. He's interested in grave yards. I don't guess he's ever been to one that is more than 4,000 years old though. I spent a bit of time on the bus wondering about the people whose remains had lain in this place. It was really morbid. I was just wondering what their life was like.
 |
Pic from architectureinitslandscape.com |
There are over a quarter of a million miles of dry stone walls in Ireland. We may have seen about a third of them in our drive!! Again, my official source was the bus drive Mike, but he indicated that the stone walls separated holdings and that making a stone fence was really the way you cleared the rocky land to make it arable.
One Web site I looked at said that many of these fences were stacked around 1840, after the famine when a new farming system was introduced. There are some great pictures and explanations about these stone walls on the
Dochara Web site. The following picture comes from
Architecture in Its Landscape blog and was representative of what we saw as we drove through the area to get to the Cliffs of Moher.
 |
Pic from Cliffs of Moher.net |
As I mentioned when I started writing this entry, the Cliffs of Moher were quite lovely. It was breezy and cold, but a walk to the top of the site brought us to a breathtaking view, accompanied by a single harpist sitting atop in the wind. There is a very well-done video on the
official Web site for the Cliffs. We had a bit of tea and a chocolate croissant in the glass walled visitor center and observed people coming and going to view the cliffs. It seemed even the oldest wanted to make the trek to the top. An elderly accordionist had stationed himself on the side of the walkway going up to the Cliffs and folks were stopping to listen for bit. He had placed himself at a strategic place -- right where most folks needed to stop and take a breather. He was probably able to gather quite a bit of change throughout the day.
 |
Pic from citypics.org |
Our last stop for the day before our hotel in Killarney was the village of
Adare We really had time only to grab a very late lunch, but I did get a few pics of a church in the village. This picture is really for my dad. Everyone of the bus thinks it's hilarious that I'm in Ireland taking pictures of cows. I think I'm going to fix my dad a "cow scrapbook." There's really something quite funny about all these cows. They lay down on their sides in the pastures! Our cows don't lay down on their sides -- they lay down on their bellies and prop on their legs. But these cows and horses are always laying on their sides. I keep thinking someone has shot them and the fields are full of dead livestock! We've seen a couple of llama in with the cows and of course we've seen tons of sheep.
After a full day of touring round the countryside, we landed in
Killarney for the night (and the next couple of days.) Our accommodations are with the
Killarney International Hotel, right across from the take-up point for the jaunty cars that take you to Muckross House. Hopefully, we will have a change to take a jaunty car ride tomorrow.