GRAND HOTEL, MALAHIDE I think our luggage was the last off the plane! Made it to the hotel at 10am but couldn’t check in until 1pm. We got coffee (4-1/2 euros each!) and did some wandering. The front of our hotel. This place was VERY nice! The staircase. This reminded us of "Titanic". Someone here has a green thumb! Wandered along the beach enjoying the excellent weather. Dinner was excellent. Gord tried a Rockshore Irish Lager (too light). He and I shared bruschetta and a chicken tarragon puff for starters, with grilled hake and chicken fennel for our mains. I had a pavlova and he had the apple tart for dessert. STUFFED! Ready to set out tomorrow.
KEE'S HOTEL, DONEGAL Up and away again this morning. Our first stop was at Glenariff Forest Park. Nine rivers have carved deep valleys through the Antrim Mountains to the sea. Celebrated in song and verse, the Glens of Antrim used to be the wildest and most remote part of Ulster. This region was not “planted” with English and Scots settlers in the 17th century and was the last place in Northern Ireland where Irish was spoken. Today the Antrim coast road brings all the glens within easy reach of any visitor. Glenariff Forest Park contains some of the most spectacular scenery. The main scenic path runs through thick woodland and wildflower meadows and round the sheer sides of a gorge, past three waterfalls. There are also optional trails to distant mountain viewpoints. William Makepeace Thackeray, the 19th-century English novelist, called the landscape “Switzerland in miniature”. In this photo you can see the Mull of Kintyre in the distance. O...
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