Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts

Saturday, May 24, 2025

The Dublin Layover: Malahide Sights

Friday, May 23

We stayed in town today, the idea being to rest our feet from the last couple of days.

It was only a 16,800 steps/6.92 miles day.  So much for resting!

Anyways, we wandered over to the Malahide Castle grounds and park.  Quite a large area for folks to enjoy grassy fields, cricket pitches, and just simply open spaces.

Traffic was a heavy, with long backups.

There are several wood carvings along the path to the castle:












Malahide Abbey

Martha took the castle tour and I returned to the hotel after a walk along parts of Malahide Beach.

Friday lunch:


Saturday, May 24

Martha, still having some energy, went into Dublin once again.  She took the Rick Steves Walking Tour I believe.  She got in 20,000 steps/8.3 miles!  

I'm peopled out and my feet hurt so I stayed back at the hotel.  I only did 3500 steps.

We had a late lunch around 2:30 p.m. at Gibney's Pub.  Burgers and Fries.

We rested the rest of the day away, preparing for the long flight back to Denver tomorrow.

Here's the sunset Ireland gave us on our last day of our Dublin Layover.

Per Martha's Fitbit, we walked close to 250 miles in the 52 days we spent traveling.  This includes the walking we did aboard the cruise ship.

We drove 4352 kilometers or 2611 miles with the rental car.

We're both quite ready to go home.

Friday, May 23, 2025

The Dublin Layover: Guiness Storehouse Tour and the National Museum of Ireland

Thursday, May 22

Only, 17,100 steps (7.14 miles) today.  Our feet are mad at us.

We rode the tram into Dublin again, then transferred by bus to the stop nearest the Guinness Storehouse.

Some frustration caused by confusing instructions from Google maps had to be resolved.  It also didn't help that Holafly hot spot failed Martha.   Holafly sucks.

Anyways, we made it to the entrance and found that reservations or not, you get to go in.  We had reservations for Noon but got in at 11.

Turns out they let in groups of about 50+ every 15 minutes or so.  The venue is oversold leading to very crowded conditions with brief intervals when areas are not too badly crowded.

Even Martha was displeased.  Still, while some of the exhibits were "meh", others were good.  The architectural bits were nice and the Guinness pints on the 7th floor hit the spot.

Martha and I recommend that if you do this tour, immediately race upstairs to get your free pint.  Then, pint in hand, slowly make your way down to view the exhibits.  It's what we should have done!






Views from 7th floor bar area.  Too bad Dublin's skyline isn't much.





The center of the building is open so you look up/down into neighboring floors in an Escher-like manner:



My question is, why not show the whole kangaroo?






tasting room



After the tour, and not wanting to do the public transport commute the next day, we opted to do the National Museum of Ireland today instead of tomorrow.

First, we had lunch nearby then walked to the museum, which is located in former military barracks.

It had two sections: Decorative Arts and Irish History via military history.

Some of the things that caught my jaded eye:




Pikeman 







In case you've ever wondered, the British equivalent to the US Congressional Medal of Honor is the Victoria Cross:

It's the all red cloth medal


Part of the Easter Rising exhibits: a way to carry a gun, concealed.


Bullet Proof Vest


We decided to forego the Decorative Arts portion of the museum.

Instead we checked out the Asgard exhibit of a famous gun runner yacht.




Info on this historic vessel here:  LINK

It was around 3:20 p.m. at this point so we went to try and beat rush hour (4-7 p.m.).

The more modern LUAS tram was packed already but we only needed to ride it a short while to the DART station on Tara Street.

We caught the DART tram to Malahide with 6 minutes to spare thanks to a kind local who saw we were confused once again by google maps while at the Connolly Station.

We managed to snag seats in the almost full tram car and stayed seated the whole 30 minutes or so back to Malahide.

We picked up some snacks on our way back to the hotel and felt our feet ached, ending the day just resting them.




Thursday, May 22, 2025

Dublin Layover: Emigration and Prison Museums.

 March 21

20,256 steps (8.58 miles) day today. 

After a great Full Irish Breakfast:

We purchased couple of LEAP public transport cards, put 15€ into each and took the Tram into Dublin. (About 10 miles south of Malahide)

Our first stop was the Irish Emigration Museum.  It's also known as the EPIC.  Built to showcase the influence of the Irish migrations worldwide.

The exhibits were "ok", I felt about 90% of the material could just be on a website.  To me, it wasn't EPIC.  Apparently though, part of the purpose of building it was to help revitalize a rundown part of Dublin.

A bit disappointed, especially given the entrance fee's, we walked to the nearby replica of a Famine Ship.  



The Harp Bridge, formally known as the Samuel Beckett Bridge


Next, a bit of a walk to the area known as Temple Bar.  Bar being an old world for dock/wharf area.

Martha led me to one of the more famous pubs: The Temple Bar, apparently the holder of largest collection of Irish Whiskeys and featured on the cover of Rick Steves book about Dublin.


The prices of the drinks reflected the "fame" of the place, still, it was time for me to start day drinking. 



Lunch was at a nearby bistro, just a couple of yummy sandwiches with crisps....and another beer.

Next was a bus ride to the Kilmainham Gaol or Prison.  The most famous prisoners having been the leaders of the Easter Rebellion, a failed attempt to establish Irish independence during the first world war.

The rebellion, one of several over time, was crushed by the British.  The leaders of the rebellion killed by firing squad as they were judged under Army Court Martials.



We were a bit early, so we killed time touring the grounds of IMMA, Irish Museum of Modern Art.





Finally, it was time to go in.  We were part of a group of perhaps 25-30 tourists.  Manageable numbers and our guide Adam did an excellent job herding us through the jail while giving forth on interesting information.

Prison's Catholic Chapel, where one of the Easter Rebellion leaders got married then led off to his cell, and soon after, shot.


Did you notice the door behind the altar? It leads to a covered walkway to the main prison shown below.  The chapel is on the right.

We first toured the rather dilapidated "old" section of the prison:

Peephole for guards to check 
On prisoners.

Note the lower placed hole, it was to monitor children prisoners!  Yep, they considered children who committed "crimes" as fit to share same cell as adults.

Women, children and men all shared same cells.



The grillworks allowed guards to monitor more than one level of cells.


Later construction was "better" we were told, though of course hardly inviting.





Remember the chapel earlier?  Well, the bride ended up in this section of the prison for her political cartoons against the British.



We were then led outside to the area just behind the front of the prison.

The wall next to the large door was where one of the rebellion leaders, who'd been in hospital recovering from wounds, was brought.  He wasn't fully recovered, so they tied him to a chair and then shot him.  Nice huh.


This wall, lined with sand bags to absorb ricochets, was where the remaining leaders were shot:



Exiting the prison near it's old front door, we had a close look at the five serpents which comprise the Kilmainham Gaol's "logo".

Oh, the public hangings, of which there were many, were carried out here.


The declaration of the Easter Rebellion.


One of the leaders of the rebellion, she wasn't shot because the British worried about the "bad optics" of their executing a woman.

COUNTESS MARKIEVICZ (1868-1927), who commanded members of the Citizen Army in the Stephen's Green area during the Rising; sentenced to be executed on 9 May, she was reprieved because she was a woman.

The prison is a good tour if you're in Dublin.

We managed to catch the "rush hour" as we returned to Malahide.  Bothe the bus and the tram were packed!  It was a long hour of standing room only travel.

Another beer at Gibney's pub helped us recover, along with a bite to eat.