Shortly after our drive around the Ring of Beara, I started talking about our upcoming trip to the Ring of Kerry. “What?” asked Marcus. “We’ve already done one ring. Why do we need to do another?” I knew where this was coming from: the nerve-wracking driving was beginning to take its toll. If we are going to see what this Ring of Kerry is all about, I’d better keep it short and sweet. I’ll pick a few sights that most appeal to us, and I’ll let the driver pick the roads.
There were a couple of Bronze-Age stone forts I wanted to see, and I thought Marcus would appreciated the design and construction. There was an arts centre I wanted to check out, and Marcus picked out a short hike with a view of the Skelligs (two islands ten miles off the coast of Kerry). The cliffs of Kerry, the Bridge Bar in Portmagee for lunch. Then across the bridge to Valentia Island for the views. (I had a sneaking suspicion Valentia was going to be the hit of the day, but perhaps that was just my views-from-the-edge-of-anywhere obsession.) Then the ferry back to the mainland and back home. It was only half the Ring, and perhaps a quarter of the sights, but sometimes less is more. Marcus approved the roads and driving time. Done.
We chose to travel the ring clockwise because the tour buses travel anti-clockwise, as they say here. (If a tour bus leaves Killarney at 10:00 traveling west on the Ring of Kerry at 80 mph, and a car leaves Kenmare, 20 miles to the south of Killarney, at 11:00 traveling at 10 mph…. Sounds like one of those annoying math word problem, doesn’t it?) My devious plan worked though: not getting stuck behind buses in traffic reduced our travel time, and encountering only a few oncoming buses on those narrow roads drastically reduced our collective stress level.
To sum up our experience: the stone forts were cool, the arts centre closed, the trailhead too difficult to find, the cliffs crawling with tourists, the Bridge Bar fantastic, and I was right about Valentia Island. If you only do one thing on the Ring of Kerry, drive straight to the island, drive up Geokaun Mountain, and walk the loop trail for 360° views from the edge of Ireland. And Mother Nature gave us an additional treat: From our vantage point 600 feet above sea level, we watched the most impressive curtain of rain sweeping in from the North Atlantic, dousing the Skelligs, and marching across Valentia Island.
Beara may have been beautiful in its quiet, endearing way, but Kerry is unabashedly breathtaking! Something I have to keep reminding myself: Travel is not about bragging rights to accomplishing a destination; it’s about choosing what’s important to you and allowing yourself time to savor it.
I agree about Valencia Island. I spent a week oil painting in the area. Stayed in a great B&B right over the Bridge from Port Magee. The stars a night seemed to completely surround you. Glad you found this gem.
We were fortunate to get to Skellig Michael on a clear spectacular day. Fear of heights and no guard rails prevented me from going to the Monastic Site but I managed to walk the path to where the stone steps start.
Maureen (Curtis’s cousin, right?), you’re the second person to mention painting on Valentia Island. It must be quite the thing. Wish we had been able to experience the island at night. Next time…. Skellig Michael wasn’t in my stars for the reasons you mentioned and because there are no restrooms on the island. That’s asking a little much of me. So glad you got to experience it. Thanks for checking in to my website. Welcome!
Oh love the bridge bar, everyone welcome, like droids? Cool people in capes? This area looks like a birders’ paradise.
What a fabulous post! I was noticing the absence of other people in your photos, so I figured you were all alone out there. I was surprised to hear about the tour buses, but I applaud your tact in going clockwise instead of anti-clockwise. What gorgeous view of Valentia! I love to see storms coming in over the water. Sounds like a great day, worthy of some great beer afterwards!
We did a good job avoiding the tour buses, didn’t we? Marcus likes to wait until other people leave the scene before he snaps a photo. At this time of year, he can do it. In the summer it would be impossible.
Did you know that Skellig Michael is where the last Star Wars was filmed (Luke’s abode)? Valentina Island is where my watercolor instructor goes yearly (except this year when we go to France!) to paint. Make sure you go to the Grange.
Yes. It’s a big deal around here. The Bridge Bar, where we had lunch just before Valentia, is where Mark Hamill learned to “pull” Guinness. Oh, and BTW, May the 4th be with you! Big festival in County Kerry today and every May 4th, I guess. 😄