Ireland’s Ancient East - Cork Ireland
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We drove from Waterford to Cork on a rainy day with a stop in between at a country restaurant. I actually went without a jacket a little bit on our last day in Waterford, but the wind and the rain meant it was again a chilly day when we left for Cork. If the weather had been nice, we were going to stop along the coast, but dropped that idea and just enjoyed our lunch at Ballymaloe.
Ballymaloe
Is a country house hotel, restaurant and has an impressive cooking school or as they say here a cookery school. We had first learned of the farm from the Feed Phil show. He had a tour of the farm that is part of the estate and ate breakfast with the owner and daughter. We had lunch in the restaurant of the hotel. As I said it was cold and rainy so we both opted for warm things like soup and chowder then we had dessert which featured local strawberries - all quite nice. It was a little bit of an adventure getting here since it is in the country we got to have Irish small country roads, but Jeff did well getting here and then on to Cork itself. The real challenge would be finding the hotel's parking garage in a city!
patio and entrance to Ballymaloe |
English Market
This was our full day in Cork; we knew Cork is known as a foodie town and that its English Market (farmers market) was supposed to be wonderful - even the Queen visited it when she came to Cork. We headed off walking the very walkable city with little side trips popping up on our way - ooh a fabric shop, oh can I look at that shoe store. We did eventually make it to the market. We did not buy anything even though I was sorely tempted to buy some strawberries, but we enjoyed checking out all the different variations on vegetables we thought we knew and ones we had eaten recently wondering what they were! The meat and fish markets were also enticing.
English Market |
Elizabeth Fort
While eating breakfast our hostess had suggested that after the English Market we head to the nearby fort and cathedral. We had the cathedral on our list of to-dos but not the fort. Glad she told us to visit it. The fort itself is an old star shaped fort from the 1600s and it was used until after WWII. During that time barracks were built in it and had many uses including depot for convicts who were being sent to Australia. Current day the old walls are still there so you can walk them some and have great views of the city and the river that runs through it. During WWII which was called the "emergency" in Ireland they built a bomb shelter in it and then newer barracks which were used by Ireland's Garda and were used until 2013. Side note. WWII was an emergency and not a war to Ireland because they were neutral during it. Kind of makes sense - new country so money was limited, and they probably did not feel too endangered by Germany. The building that had housed the Garda is now an exhibition spot and had one called Women Water and Walls. It talked about the women who were housed there before they were shipped to Australia as part of a criminal sentence. One thing that caught my eye was how much better these women were treated than the people emigrating on the famine ships a couple of centuries later. The government made sure the women had warm and cool weather clothing for the trip and that they were properly fed and cared for on their way to Australia which would take something like 160 days at sea. The reason they treated them so well was that once they arrived in Australia, they were being put to work in a factory, so they needed to arrive healthy and capable of working. Of course, they were also a source of brides for the men already in Australia since it was 10 men to 1 woman at the time.
walls of the fort |
St Fin Barre's Cathedral
From the fort it was a short walk to St Fin Barre's Cathedral which while it was built in much of the French Gothic style it was built in the 1860s (like the ones in Waterford which felt much newer). It is the 3rd cathedral on the site and before that there was a monastery as early as the 7th century. We arrived at the church during a special service so had to wait a few minutes. We read a placard out from describing some of the carvings on the cathedral (there are a lot). We saw that around the front center doors on the sides were the wise and fallen maidens, we started investigating them trying to tell the difference and why one group was wise, and one was fallen. While we were looking, one of the docents came over to talk with us. He gave us quite a lesson on cathedral styles and hidden meanings. The picture below has the wise maidens on the left and the fallen are on the right. The wise are holding their lights up high and the fallen have theirs in all sorts of positions and they are looking downward. Even what each maiden is standing on has meaning. I also noticed that the placard said the gargoyles were cleansing the church. Guess what else the docent taught us about. Each gargoyle's talons were holding something that was a negative vice or belief. Additionally, gargoyles are often downspouts for a church - who new. Finally, the lefthand doorway had reliefs of different common occupations and the right doorway had common female roles. Turns out it was encouraging the commoners/average people to continue to lead good lives. Oh yeah, the inside of the church was impressive too.center entrance to cathedral with the maidens |
rear of cathedral |
There are 70 stained glass windows telling 150 stories from both the old and New Testament and are considered to be the best stained glass in Ireland. We also were surprised to as to where we saw some of the organ pipes - on the floor surrounded by temporary wood but with holes allowing one to peak in at them. It might also be because an organ gallery was planned but never built. I know this because there was a very pretty door with inlaid silver in it and a plaque said the room had never been built but the doorway had. Hmm wonder if anything is hidden behind the door?
UCC Campus (University College Cork)
Our final stop for the day was to walk around the UCC campus. We had looked at top things to do in Cork and walking the campus and enjoying some of its outdoor artwork was listed. We walked around the campus, which is nice, but never saw sculptures - a campus on each side of the river so maybe we were at the wrong campus. Oh Cork has a tidal river running through it (River Lee).
Kinsale
The next day we decided to drive out to the coastal town of Kinsale. For once it was a beautiful day, I even wandered around in shirt sleeves a little bit. Now some of the locals took it even further and went to the local beach. Reality check here it was in the low 70s. We got to town and started exploring. Jeff had a nice, simple harbor boat cruise in mind then we saw that there was a new boat option - a sea safari. It would be in a rib boat and the lady assured me the water was smooth outside of the harbor so we signed up. First we needed a little food in us so we went off in search of a snack or meal. Good old Phil had been here too, but it seemed like more food than I wanted before I hopped in this small boat so we found a popular outdoor cafe and shared a sandwich. Then off to get dressed for our boat. They had jackets and pants for us to keep us warm and of course life jackets. We were a group of five plus captain and we had to walk a little ways to the boat. I'm sure we were an interesting site to some of the cars passing us by.
downtown Kinsale |
outdoor cafe for lunch |
another view of town |
beach goers in upper left corner, well named boat on upper right, bottom is the area where locals like to hang out and watch the boats go by |
top left a close up of the golfers, hang gliders on top right |
first cave |
looking through the second cave (Powerful zoom lens) |
racing sailboat |
bird pictures - look closely at right photo the rock is totally covered in birds |
Blarney castle |
upper photo is the fern garden as in very tall tree ferns that are in a valley bottom is a tree that grows that way naturally |
forgot to mention all the sculptures that were interspersed with plantings in the garden, many were very lifelike in their pose and location |
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