Archive for October, 2010

Ireland Trip Report: Part II

30
October
2010

Part I can be found here

~Day 3: Connemara~

I will admit, one of the main reasons I was excited to be staying in the Connemara region was that we had booked two nights at this place, Ballynahinch:

Ballynahinch and Mountain!
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Ireland Trip Report: Part I

24
October
2010

~The Prep~
My husband Bob and I decide earlier this year that to celebrate his birthday and our twelfth anniversary we would take another “big” vacation: to Ireland! I had never been, and the last time he was there was thirty years ago. We decided to stick to the West coast since we only had a week, and we planned to rent a car since it would afford us more freedom to see the sites we wanted to see, at our own pace. After researching prices online, we took our plans to an agent at AAA, and she found an independent tour option through CIE tours that was cheaper than what we could do on our own (it covered flights, car rental, and lodging). Working with AAA was a smooth process and I would recommend it to anyone who either doesn’t feel comfortable doing things on their own, or who feels it is a better deal. That said, I think in the future we will make arrangements on our own, for two reasons. One is that we will probably want to find a rental property and base ourselves from one or two locations if we return. The other is that we had a bad experience with Hertz rental cars at Shannon airport and would not use them again.

But onward to the good stuff!
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Back from Ireland

18
October
2010

I have returned from the Emerald Isle after a week of gorgeous scenery, lovely lodgings, ancient stones, and foot-tapping music. Also, really REALLY narrow roads and some high-stress driving. And lots and lots and lots of tea.

I’ll post a real trip report (I scribbled down the previous day’s events in my special Moleskine travel journal each morning since I regularly wake about two hours earlier than Bob) but for now here are a few literary highlights:

Quite often we felt as if we had stepped into the landscape of the Lord of the Rings. Apparently Tolkien did spend some time in Ireland teaching and there are some who claim he drew inspiration from the rocky Burren for some of the landscapes of Middle Earth. But for me, the strongest Tolkien vibe (aside from the Hobbit-like breakfasts of eggs, tomatoes, bacon, sausage, toast, etc and the Prancing Pony-ish pubs) came from the hill valleys in Connemara, which brought to my mind Rohan. The landscape had such a strong pull on me I had to get out and explore it. I think if I hadn’t had a husband to call me back to the car I might have just kept walking up into the hills:

The Call of the Hills

Our favorite part of the trip was the time spent in the town of Dingle, for many reasons: the brightly painted storefronts, the availability of Indian food and good desserts, the proximity to the gorgeous Slea Head drive, the squat tower overlooking the harbor that looks disturbingly like a giant Dalek (it even has a big arrow pointing out the side 2/3rds of the way up, just where an extermination rod would be). I also particularly liked this:

Writer's Wall in Dingle

There were a bunch of other plaques along the wall beautifully carved with quotes (in Irish, so I don’t actually know what they said) by Irish writers.

And you may have guessed what my preferred souvenir might be: foreign editions of books! I found myself a copy of R. J. Anderson’s Knife with the lovely shiny fierce Brian Froud fairy cover. Yay! I only wish I’d been able to find editions of a few more of my favorites! But we didn’t go into any of the really big towns (this I found in Ennis).

Lastly, if you need to add a bit more angst to your writing I know where you can go to fuel up your emo-engine:

Emo on tap! Need some angst?

I also did bring along four books as reading material for the trip, and apparently it was just the right number. I finished three during the trip (The Morning Gift, Crown Duel and A Coalition of Lions) and started the last (The Name of the Wind). All of them were excellent too, so thank you to those who helped me pick from my to read pile!

I particularly enjoyed Crown Duel and it’s left me in a mood for something similar. I’m impatiently waiting for my copy of Elizabeth Bunce’s StarCrossed to arrive at the store as that seems a perfect follow-up, but if anyone has suggestions for other fantasy books with intrigue and adventure of that sort I would love to hear them! I’ve already read the Beka Cooper books…

The Magic of Place

06
October
2010

Every trip I’ve taken recently has one: A place that stands out in my mind because of some ineffable quality – a magical resonance that pulls me to it and keeps it in my mind long afterward.

In Paris it was the Luxembourg gardens, specifically the Medici fountain:
Medici Fountain

The trailing begonias, the lush-even-in-October greenery, the lavishly carved stones.

In Italy it was San’Antimo Abbey:
San Antimo
(picture by my dad! Thanks, Dad!)

The quiet peace, the monks in white, the chanting, the dim warm stones inside and the brilliant green and blue outside. The simplicity.

I’m looking forward to discovering what new special place I’ll encounter next week in Ireland!

What are your favorite places and moments from your travels? Or from right in your own home town?