Waterford- this was about all that we saw of the city. We went specifically to see the crystal factory, when we got there they told us it was closed and had been for 6 weeks. It sounds like they are closing the factory for good, no longer making money, sad. We were interviewed by the Irish news wanting to know how we felt about the closing and what Waterford Crystal meant in America. My mom said exactly what they wanted to hear, and I'm sure we made it on TV... And this tower- Reginald's Tower- "is the oldest part of the oldest town in Ireland" built by the Vikings in A.D 914. It was closed. Waterford did not want us to be there.
Charles Fort- built and run by the British until 1922.
(I learned a lot of history while I was in Ireland)
The Rock of Cashel: built in A.D. 300. St. Patrick baptized King Aengus in A.D. 450. Originally used as the seat of the Kings of Munster (I wonder if we have them to thank for the delicious cheese?), it was fought over by clans for hundreds of years. Finally they turned it over to the church to stop the bickering. So- it's castle turned cathedral, eventually attacked by Cromwell (who wreaked all kind of havoc on Ireland) in 1647.
Driving in Ireland. Not only did we have to get used to driving on the wrong side of the road in the wrong side of the car, we had to try to decifer these directions. (Thanks to Richard, Joie's husband, for chauffering us around the country).
The Burren or "rocky place" a 10 sq. ft lime stone plateau.
"a savage land, yeilding neither water enough to drown a man, nor a tree to hang him, nor soil enough to bury him."
Bru na Boinne or Newgrange
dating 3200 B.C. (older than the pyramids in Egypt)
Thought to be a sacred spot for Sun Rituals. Winter Solstice at dawn the sun shines through the window above our heads and lights the pathway and the floor of the chamber at the end.
Bunratty Castle.
It was the first castle we saw after landing in IReland. I thought it looked like a "tourist trap"
It wasn't so bad, I think it was the only castle we saw that was intact and that we could walk through.