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- Day 32
- Friday, September 26, 2025 at 10:28 AM
- 🌬 55 °F
- Altitude: 36 ft
IrelandGalway53°16’16” N 9°3’15” W
Galway

We took four buses to get from the end of our hike to Galway. Fortunately, they were all on time and we did it in just a little over 6 hours. After checking into our BnB we headed to Eeamon Deasy Stadium to watch the Galway vs Cork futball (soccer) game. It was a little bit of a rival match since the coach for Galway used to play and coach for Cork. Galway won 2-1. The home stands were pretty full and had a lot of energy.
The next day we took a bus tour to the Cliffs of Moher and a few other sites. We passed a castle, did a tour of the Aillwee caves, and had lunch in the town of Doolin. The cliffs are big and are amazing, but much of the scenery we saw in our hike was just as impressive. In the evening we found some pubs with Irish music.
The next two days in Galway we started with liesurely mornings, not something we do much when hiking. One day we walked around the town taking in the major sights then went to 13 on the Green bar to watch the Steeler game. There were about a dozen Steeler fans and a half dozen Viking fans enjoying the game on the big screen. This is an official NFL bar and a Cleveland Browns bar! Afterwards we walked the town some more. There is a lot of street musicians here and a majority of them are middle school/high school age kids who are really good. The second day we went to the neighborhood town of Salt Hill, a resort beach town. We enjoyed our coffee and took a long walk on the shore. Back to town for dinner and one more walk along the main street. Tomorrow off to Dublin.Read more
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- Day 36
- Tuesday, September 30, 2025 at 7:37 AM
- ☁️ 57 °F
- Altitude: 89 ft
IrelandDublin53°20’37” N 6°15’34” W
Dublin - part 1

We traveled to Dublin and spent four days and 5 nights there.
Our Tuesday trip from Galway to Dublin was easy - a couple hours on the train. It was a 30 minute walk to Blooms Hotel in the Temple Bar area, the most touristy part of town (and the highest concentration of pubs). We spent the afternoon and evening getting familiar with the area.
Day one (Wed) - we went to...
... the Book of Kells at Trinity College. Here there is a 1,200 year old manufacturer manuscript of the gospels. They are ornately decorated with colorful pictorial script.
The long room there contains a copy of every book ever written in Ireland. We walked around the campus as well.
... The National Archeology Museum. Here they had an exhibit of the bog bodies. These were from the Iron Age (500 BC to 100 AD). People were killed and thrown into the bogs. Some of them were royalty. The conditions of the bogs - wet, acidic, and having low oxygen, kept the bodies from deteriorating.
... The Ha Penny Bridge, the most ornate of the bridges in Dublin. A river runs through Dublin and it had so many bridges - another connection to Pittsburgh. One of the bridges is wider than it is long.
... 14 Henrietta St. This is a building that went through major changes in it's history starting as an elaborate summer home for the wealthy and then becoming a tenement for the poor where families of 10 - 12 people lived in one room.
... The shopping streets of Henry St, and Grafton St.
Day 2, we...
... Did the Guinness Tour Experience learning all about Guinness beer, how it is made, how it has changed, and it's history of advertising.
... Toured Christ Church, originally a viking Church. The church went through many reformations, decay and rebuilding, including a major renovation paid for by an Irish whiskey giant, Henry Roe. The church tower has 19 bells and they are rung by bell ringers weekly and for special occasions.
... Toured St. Andouen's church, the only remaining medieval church in Ireland. It, too went through changes but the original walls still exist.
... Walked around the Temple Bar area where we were staying. It is the center of the tourist area. We went into the famous Temple Bar but didn't stay.
... Attended a Coldplay by Candlelight concert at St Patrick's Cathedral, the largest in Ireland. It was a different way to see the beautiful church. This church again has a long history of registration and renovation. In the 1800's,a major restoration took place paid for by Benjamin Guinness (yes, the beer family).
We ended each night with Irish music at our hotel bar.Read more
Traveler
Good looking couple
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Ditto
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Did you dive?