Tir Gan Ean is the perfect location for touring – the Cliffs of Moher are just a few minutes south, Doolin Pier offers ferries to the Aran Islands or cruises to the Cliffs of Moher and Ballyvaughan is just 30 minutes but car.
Further down the road was Caherconnell, a round stone fort where they just excavated a burial tomb a few weeks prior (September 6, 2008) and found remains. Admission is just 5 euro for the fort however the gift shop and cafeteria are free to enter.
Back toward Lisdoonvarna we decided to skip the Matchmaking Festival after hearing about the drunken melee from the previous night. Instead we stopped at the Burren Smokehouse and were a bit disappointed at the presentation but thrilled to find caramel waffle cookies, great Irish cheeses and some crackers for what we planned to be a nice quiet evening at the hotel.
Rather than the quiet evening I suggested we head to O’Connor’s Pub near the pier to have a pint and enjoy some music but just as we arrived a bus was letting out dozens of people, locals from Lisdoonvarna and Limerick! Tourists tend to be more mellow and subdued but locals are more bold and brazen, drinking quite a bit more and being a bit louder than most. We sat at the bar drinking for about two hours, enjoy the locals and the dueling groups of musicians in two different rooms competing for attention. One more traditional and the other more progressive, with a rendition of The Rose capturing the audience after many people “Shhhhh”-ing to get the room quiet. It was fun, but not as much fun as if it were later in the night and a few more pints were finished – it was only 5pm and the buzz wasn’t strong enough to deal with the drunken melee that was going on.
Back to Tir Gan Ean for dinner, which never disappoints and off to bed – at 8:18 it was a good 12 hour day from beginning to end. Jet-lag should be gone by tomorrow when we head off to see Raymond and Florence in Bantry, County Cork.
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