Showing posts with label connemara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label connemara. Show all posts

Tuesday 10 October 2023

1993 Western Ireland

2.7.93 Dublin

Bewley’s, just by where The Colony used to be, and where some rather tacky joint has appeared.  Multi-floor, £10 for two, full of youth – and typical university youth – good buzz amongst the steamy heat (though it’s fresh outside).  Parked by St. Stephen’s Green, jam-jar picked up at the airport after multiply-delayed flight, almost (well, ish) half caught after driving down from Great Glen, caught in the horrendous M25 roadworks.  But we made it, and found our Anglesey House guesthouse with the quadrant-shaped bath in the bedroom.

3.7.93 Galway

Across the breadth of Ireland to here.  Through a land green, under a dull sky, drizzle falling, roads all but empty, drivers as insane as ever, churches, garden centres, cows, old men on bikes, small, low villages, rolling countryside – to here, one of my favourite cities in Ireland – if partly because it is a city.

Driving around the square trying to find a place to park, a Gay Pride march...brave people here. Then in to the centre for snack lunch.  Of necessity: breakfast was splendid.  Orange juice, yogurt, fresh fruit, stewed fruit, strawberries and cream – not aut/aut, but all.  Then a wonderful home-baked cereal, rather like apple crumble.  Poached fish (plaice?) for one of us, bacon and eggs for the other.  Then toast, fresh bread, and about three types of cakes, tea, marmalade – ye gods.  Great and included in the old Anglesey House price.  Nice to know we’re going back there.

On now to Connemara, my favourite part of Ireland.  So many young people around – reminds of the experiment tagging frogs in Lake Titicaca to count them – brilliant scheme.  To Cleggan, Harbour View House (£25 a night).  Now in Oliver’s Seafood Bar – six oysters dispatched, waiting for salmon.  Fine view of the harbour, the Queen of Aran waiting to leave.  We may take it ourselves to Inishbofin.  Salmon has arrived, along with seafood platter.

4.7.93 Cleggan

It is pouring with rain (hi, Ireland weather), so it is not entirely clear what to do today.  Four Italians (from Genova) to my left at breakfast.

On the Queen of Aran, equipped with fine sweaters, one peacock green, the other royal purple – necessary in this chillsome weather.  Off to Inishbofin – well, it had to be done.  After drizzle to start, the sky lightening, some bit of sun.  Gawd.  Roughish sea (what a surprise).  An hour after departure we arrive at Inishbofin, are dumped on the quay, abandoned.

Strange feeling: being abandoned on an island at the end of the world, with nowhere to go.  Not knowing what is here, where it is, how big the island is etc.  Then we buy a map: immediately things begin to fall into place – the hotel, the pier, the extremities of the island.  As we approach the eastern hotel – Day’s – we have a sense of real arrival.

Sitting now by the dour grey church, silver angels on its gates.  Intermittent sun, warm when it shines.  By us, two cars without number plates, both battered, one literally held together with string.  Is Inishbofin the car’s graveyard?

The bar and hotel lively and elegant respectively.  The bar in particular full of picture book faces – old, gaunt men in cloth caps, young men with monstrous sideburns and glasses of Guinness.  Outside a fine view of the harbour.  A lovely beach opposite, but no quick way to reach it.

It looks like the rest of the island will remain unknown to me this time, but that’s no terrible thing.  Now that I have started re-visiting out-of-the-way places I suppose I need to exercise a little restraint.  Flying over on Friday, it occurred to me that such coming backs will be the next wave of tourism/travel writing.  The second visit gives you the dimension of time (and of photography) while the third visit lets you see whether the second was an aberration.  And the fourth…

[To our right, two flagstaffs without flags have ropes clattering against their metal poles.  I think of Sanur for some reason….]

To Day’s again for scone and tea, the sun quite scorching now (ozone depletion?).  The surrounding hills really emerald (and Lake Hunt begins today….).  Amazing number of BMWs here – for the usual reason.  Still rather incongruous.  The water in the harbour sparkles.

On the ferry, into the strait.  Glorious sun, the Twelve Pins hazy but lordly.  To starboard, clearly etched cliffs of two small islands.  But the Pins…  Totally clear sky above us, slight ring of cloud.  And in a sense today has been right: a day ending in brief sunshine, spent in gentle indolence around the focus of the island’s main bar, Day’s.
  
The end of the day after another fine meal in Oliver’s.  (But no oysters…)  9.30pm, but still so light, and the Twelve Pins still strangely lit up by a light that seems to come from within.  From our front room the view is stunning: the harbour, the inlet, the mountains; how can I not stare at it till the fading of days?

Looking at the Ireland guides, I begin to feel that I am grasping the country.  Connemara is at once like the Lake District, Scotland, the Orkneys, and yet also unique.  The hills huddle like monsters, gathering for an attack, their humps showing behind a rise in the land.  The water silvery blue, high tide.  And still the sun shines.  This is indeed a faery land.  And Inishbofin, another crossing to an isle of youth (so many young people, dressed in t-shirts and jeans, their poverty showing, but irrelevant).

5.7.93 Oughterard

Not, alas, at the flash house in Lough Corrib – only a rather modern twin left there at £80.  Meal £7.50 sounded rather fine, though.  Instead a B&B just outside the town on the same road.  Very modern and clean.  Charming landlady (young, blonde, smiling).

Rose early – too early – and then went riding at Cleggan Stables.  On horses, too, not ponies.  Went along the road to a beach just above the B&B here (thousands of dead jellyfish). Fine curve of beach, where I cantered.  Then straight [I have just noticed a place on the map called Shanaglish] along the N59.  Wonderful scenery, of course, and relatively few buildings to disturb it.  Or to eat in.  Eventually found pub full of unemployed (?), smoking, drinking, playing darts, swearing. Sad.  Then to here, tired and very burnt.  Yesterday, in five hours of sun, we are both very burnt on the face.  Very strange (Ozone hole?)

6.7.93 Athlone

A pleasant city.  Small, with fine grey granite castle matching the cloud for our drive back.  Road empty as ever.  Feels very 18th century here – perhaps this is why I hope to visit Castletown today – I need some Georgian architecture.  And so to Celbridge – to Conolly’s for lunch (alas, café closed in house), and then to Castletown.  The irony: Aztec food being the bonus and bane of Irish life…

Dublin.  Room 14 of 
Anglesey House – grand, at the front, and with a brass bed.  In to the city for a quick walk at 5pm – full of people, lovely sunshine.  Then to Oisin’s.  Door looked shut when we arrive.  We knock and are admitted – even though the place is clearly very Irish – menu in Irish/Irish script.  Green everywhere.  Excellent menu, but £35 for set choices.  We take one and add a starter.

Venison sausages and Dublin coddle; spinach soup; beef soaked in herbs; seaweed cream.  And two glasses of excellent fruity Irish wine.  Pity they cost £4 each.  Meal overall £64 – a lot, but probably the nearest thing to “real” Irish cooking.

7.7.93  Trinity College Dublin

In the Long Room of the library.  Glorious sense of words piled up, of their precariousness and fragility.  Perhaps nowhere else can you grasp the 18th century sense of knowledge.  Kells no longer here: new strong room below.  Harder to see, but more sensible.


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Wednesday 22 September 2021

1990 Western Ireland

5.5.90  Claddaghduff, County Galway

5.15pm, the sun beginning to sink over the Atlantic.  Utterly idyllic, I'm afraid.  Crunchy seaweed like a Chinese meal; the smell of Cornwall; hard, flat beach, a causeway across to an island; low tide, worm casts; impossible turquoise  and jet-black-blue waters.  No one but me and Sister Anne around.  The sea a distant murmur.  The wind keen, refreshing.  Was I really in London 12 hours ago?

Everything like the last reel of a sad but profound film.  My little white Fiesta tucked away by the sand's margin.

Now in Renvyle House Hotel. Backtracking… Up at 4am, to Heathrow – huge red globe of the sun like a fruit.  Hour flight to Shannon – surprisingly big airport.  Met Sister Anne (who stayed nearby overnight), picked up car, onto N18, to Galway.

Overcast (London was totally clear), coldish.  Anne is optimistic; but I am not.  Stop off in Galway for morning elevenses.  Pleasant – bustling market town – looks like something out of the 1930s.

The coast road (R336) to Costelloe.  Weather beginning to clear.  The sea to our left, all very like Kerry of two years ago.  A detour to Cornamona, then up to Gortmore.  We see the 12 Pins (Bens) in the distance.  Beautiful as we come into Cashel.  Sun brilliant, a few fluffy clouds.  Lunch (a rip-off) in Cashel, then up to the T71, through the Kylemore Pass – very Lake District.

We stop off at the Victorian Kylemore Abbey.  A school for girls with a stunning view of the hills and Kylemore Lough.  A case full of podgy blotchy hockey teams.  The stars and their Cantab PhD.  Tea and tea-cake (like Xmas cake) in their tea shop, then to Letterfrack (great name), up to Cleggan.  Wind very strong now, the bay a huge ruffled turquoise pool, the 12 Pins behind, a hill opposite.  We sit on straw bales – the smell of tortoises.  Then round to the amazing, beautiful  Claddaghduff, and its low tide causeway to Omey Island.  Driving down to the N59/T71, the sea full of island – you can see why Irish mythology is full of Land of Youth and such-like – it's all obviously true.

Back to Letterfrack and then to here.  £30 each for a decent room and brekkies.  Fair number of sports facilities – including boating, which obviously Anne wanted to try.  But the wind by now very strong – waves rising.  We/I can't get the boat out.  I sulk, we flounder – then I/we give up.  Hmph.  Anne going to mass soon.  Earlier, we saw in the distance the amazing cliffs of Achill Island, where we hope to go tomorrow.  Today – despite my deeply mature tantrum etc. - has been glorious.  Who could believe that three weeks ago I was in Sonoma?

After dropping Anne off, down to Renvyle Point.  To my left, the ruined tower and the slightly dusky sun falling towards it; in front, the bay, and the distant mountains gradually receding into the mist.  Sheep graze, the wind roars and thunders – but quietly.  The sea is a pewter pool, and looks infinite.  Kelp lies in huge bundles like old rope.  Hobbled sheep.  A yearling lamb.  A ram like a ball of wool. The lambs are eating the seaweed (and why not?).  A ewe's bloated udder bounces between her legs.  The beach a huge swatch of babbled, starry cloth, pebbles gleaming, pools white.  Apart from the wind, such silence…  A shepherd appears, timeless.  Sicilian, weather-beaten, garbed in trousers and a cap.  

Memories of other Irelands…  Although unintentional and non-systematic, Anne's and my journeys in Eire are pretty comprehensive.  A gibbous moon.  The driftwood piece I gave as a gift.  I could sit here for centuries (the Land of Youth again…).  A cloud rests on a smooth peak like a disembodied gloved hand resting on a bronzed breast.  A curtain of cloud rolling in from the West; and tomorrow…?

6.5.90 Renvyle House

Up late after superb dinner (6.45am).  Overcast, but hope for sun.  I sit on my bed, looking at the 12 Pins.  Through a chasm in the clouds an extraordinary sight: a falling of white light like a silver shower.  Very physical.  Reading Peig Sayers' "An Old Woman's Reflections" – very strong sense of the ancient heroic age and its passing.

Last night, I gave Anne her various prezzies – Holy oil and tapes and a book from St Makarias – and "Glanglish".  I was struck by the pleasure I gained watching her read a few essays – her expressions, her concurrence.  I can see how this might prove addictive…

Along to Achill Island, to Keel – one of the most westerly points in Europe.  Then the beach at the end of the road.  Brilliant white beach, feathered with black.  A stream to the sea, ox-bowing before our eyes.  Anne is drawing the gothic arched bridge over the stream.

Lunch in Keel – oysters, lobsters – with what consequences…?  Interesting restaurant – à la Man and Calf: long, aqueous, like a ship's saloon.  Pop and rap incongruously fill the air.  Food good, place nearly deserted.  Achill Seafood Restaurant - £40.

After a stupendous meal, along to the Cathedral Rocks.  Drive to the east end of Keel's beautiful beach.  Looking back West, the headland with its implicit cliffs, the Lake District hills.  The sun breaking through now and again.  Strong smell of wet seaweed – and of Cornwall, 30 years ago.

Rocks like blasted trees, dendrochronology gone mad.  Soft ferns draped like antimacassars – fairy lands again.  The drip of water.  Only the Garden of Fand beyond.  That sound of lapping water – I'm a born Englishman, sea in my veins.  The strand lit by the sun – a slivver crescent of light.  Anne sketching, echoing in images these words.  Software cropped grass – fairy lawnmowers… The sun comes out, hot and beneficent [A fly gets behind my Ray-bans…].   I could eat this seaweed – were I not stuffed.  The cliffs rear up like Balinese rice fields, stepped, luxuriantly green. And yet the Cathedral's themselves are small and unspectacular – nothing compared to Étretat…  The more I see all these places, the more I long to live here for a few months, writing, thinking.  Will I…?

I sit facing the fabulous (fables, indeed) Cliffs of Moher.  It is 8pm, and the curving sun has slipped below the broken cloud cloth, heading towards the burnished sea.  The cliffs stretch away to the right, classic sheer drops, with deep arches – real "Famous Five" stuff.  The polyphonic gulls' cries filter through the air.  Down below they look like swarms of gnats.  The striated cliff walls have green splashes – like stains in baths.  Ink-blue black sea froths at the cliffs' foot.  A tower is behind me, the sun at 45 degrees to my right.  Most of the tourists have gone, leaving me with this majesty.  Anne too has gone.  Moody is alone (ah…).  But a glorious end to a glorious day – and weekend.

This reminds me of Tintagel, and of the dragon watching the sun from his cave.  The long, long shadows lie on the deep green grass.  Behind the cliffs – which form a spur, the coast further south west – nothing for 3000 miles.  The End of Europe.  This place is very different.  On the radio here, a programme about the latest news in Irish folk music.

Moving round north, the Aran Isles bask like happy whales.  Beyond them Galway, Connemara and the 12 Pins.  The cliff to my right like the curtain wall behind Queen Hatshepsut's Temple – sheer and incised.  Then a wall at right angles to it, closing it off, making a kind of proscenium stage and arch.  The rock layers very straight and horizontal – as if laid in courses.  The sun growing golden.  My body really quite chilled – but pleasantly.

Back in Ennis, the Queen's Hotel – not bad.  No din-dins after such a lunch (and alas – I can't remember what I had for dinner last night – which was excellent: mushrooms stuffed with ham and mustard, carrot and ginger soup; but then what?  With the Côte de Beaune?)

So, from Renvyle to Westport, then to Achill – very like Skye.  So many beautiful vistas.  And finishing with Keel.  Lunch: oysters – crisp; lobster; then apple pie.  All excellent and in such an atmospheric café.  The hurtling back for Anne's bus to Cork.  From Leenane to Maum, along Lough Corrib to Headford – then a long, straight road to Galway.  We stop off at Gort to see WB Yeats' shack – idyllic, creeper up one side, fast trout stream with stepping stones.  Then to Ennis.

Me out to Cliffs of Moher.  As I return the sun stains the clouds amazing hues.  A quick turn around the town – very pleasant, quite unspoilt and reminding me very much of Wexford.  And so to bed (soon).  What a day/life…

7.5.90 London at 1000 feet

About 10am – I have just seen my flat, flying over it – the air is so clear, and London laid out like a map.

Well, here's a turn-up for the books: Moody in Chiswick Gardens, just north of the villa.  I have been along to Hogarth's House – finally, having passed it for so many years.  But I never even knew these gardens existed.

The House – though much restored, and filled mostly with prints – is charming.  A mulberry tree in the garden.  The place looked after by a late middle-aged chap – typically friendly.  Told me about Church Street – an idyllic street of Georgian and Elizabethan houses – and only steps from the A4.  Down to the river – the smell of mud, the tiny crepitation of low tide. 

Back to Chiswick.  Past the greenhouse – reminds me of Powerscourt – a broken urn like something out of Greenaway.  Café closed, alas.  Round to the Rotonda (so to speak).  Planes roar overhead, echoes of myself.

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