Europe's Highest Sea Cliffs |
1. Sliabh Liag: Drink in the best views in Europe
A narrow road twists steeply up from Teelin to the
dramatic Slieve Liag cliffs and mountains. From the viewing point, you look across
one of the finest panoramas in Europe that
will set your heart racing. An information panel, part of the Donegal
Interpretative Project, sets out the details of what you see. This area of
Donegal is also part of the famed Appalachian Trail that leads eastwards along
the Bluestacks Way
and joins up with the Ulster Way
and the Causeway Coast . The nearby cultural centre, Tí
Linn, is run by Paddy Clarke, a rich source of information on the area and its archaeological
heritage.
2. Fanad Head: Hire a pedalo at Portsalon
Fanad Lighthouse, Fanad Head |
3. Malin Head: Dip into history or look up at the night sky
Catch a cloudless evening and you may be enchanted by
a night sky display of the Aurora Borealis, the Northern Lights. The celestial
light show, with its ghostly wispy rays of dancing colours has been seen
hanging like a fluorescent curtain over Malin Head – what better reason to go
than to witness this astonishing sight.
As you make your way around the 100-mile circuit of the scenic Inishowen
peninsula, you will find many attractions and distractions on the journey to Ireland ’s most
northerly point, Malin Head. Those with an interest in military history will
want to see Fort Dunree Military
Museum near Buncrana. Further
along, Doagh Famine Village ,
an outdoor museum, provides a thought-provoking look at the area from the tragedy
of the Famine in the 1840s up to the present.
4. An Grianán Aileach: Awaken your mystical spirit
An Grianán Aileach, Inishowen |
5. Surfing in Bundoran: Ride the waves
Bundoran - A surfer's mecca |
Carnival Fun during Earagail - July each year |
6. Earagail Arts Festival: Catch a song and singalong
They enjoy their culture and craic in Donegal like nowhere else and music plays a huge part in
people’s lives. Many small towns stage popular summer festivals. One of the
biggest, the Earagail Arts Festival attracts international performers from the
musical and theatrical world. Home-grown talent features strongly on the bill too
and Irish musicians who have taken part include Moya Brennan, Mary Black, Donal
Lunny, Paddy Glackin and Liam O’Flynn to name but a few. Groups such as the Saw
Doctors, Clannad and The Henry Girls have delighted audiences. Alongside the
music, film shows, literature events and a host of children’s entertainment,
all add up to an action-packed programme.
7. Angling: Bag a salmon, hook a trout or wrestle a shark
Sparkling rivers, well-stocked lakes and the fruits of
the sea attract anglers from many countries. Donegal is noted for game and coarse
fishing and its coastline is washed by some of the cleanest and clearest seas
in Europe , offering shore and deep sea angling.
Many species, including pollock, mackerel, wrasse, gurnard, tope, ray and shark
have been caught in the sea. Shore angling enthusiasts enjoy the sheltered
waters of Lough Swilly and many other locations along the coast right round to Donegal Bay . Trout and spring salmon are found
in abundance at fisheries such as those at Gweebarra, Dunfanaghy and on the
Eske, combining the River Eske, Lough Eske and its tributaries.
8. Golfing: outdoor tonic
Ballyliffin Golf Club, Inishowen |
Click here for more information
9. Hike Errigal: stand at the top of Donegal
The distinctive white conical peak of Errigal ,
(from the Irish translation, Aireagál
meaning ‘oratory’) the highest point in the county, is a potent symbol and has
a grip on the imagination. Pull on your walking books for a pleasant hike across
heather and grass before joining a stony path to the summit at 2,466 ft., where
two cairns are connected by a narrow path. Anyone with a reasonable level of fitness
– and the right gear – will be able to complete the walk to the top in less
than two hours. It’s well worth the effort. You will be rewarded with an
uninterrupted panorama of Bloody Foreland, a countryside speckled with sheep
and white cottages, and lying out to sea, the islands of Inishbofin, Inishdooey
and Inishbeg.
10. Glenveagh
National Park : look out
for golden eagles
Scenic Beauty at Glenveagh |
The largest tract of land in the wildest part of Donegal,
11. Daniel O’Donnell Visitor Centre: a glittering life of music
He has appeared 18 times in the US Billboard World
Album Charts and now Donegal’s famed singing star, Daniel O’Donnell has his
very own visitor centre charting a glittering musical career. The Daniel
O’Donnell Visitor Centre in Dungloe opened in 2012 and since then thousands
have come through the doors to celebrate the story of his life. A 12-minute film
explains his humble beginnings in Kincasslagh and rise to international
stardom. Memorabilia includes gold discs, stage outfits, his wedding suit and
his wife’s wedding dress, as well as his first schoolbag. O’Donnell’s repertoire
of songs covering Irish, country and pop has struck a chord with many emigrants.
In a musical career of more than 30 years he has sold 10 million albums.
12. Glencolumbcille
Folk Village
Museum : Commune with the rural
past
There are few better places to delve into the past
than at Glencolumbcille
Folk Village .
This clachan, or village, comprises
eight thatched, whitewashed cottages showcasing three specific years of Irish
culture: 1720, 1820 and 1920. New exhibitions house a fisherman’s cottage and a
traditional pub-grocery and shoemaker’s shop. Potter around this reflective
place and you will find a sweat house (an early Irish sauna) replica lime kilns
and mass rocks. A few miles north of Glencolumbcille, at Port, you can follow
in the footsteps of the Welsh poet Dylan Thomas who holidayed in the area in
1935. Organised walks lead through the serenely beautiful peat bogland of the valley of Glenlough ,
past glacial waterfalls, and over the Glengesh Pass
to Ardara.