Ross drove through
the worst possible driving conditions imaginable: pouring rain, poor
visibility, and worst of all, strong winds buffeting the van every which way. I
don’t know how he managed to keep it on the road.
At daylight, we
reached the Kerry Bog Village, where we had French toast and fresh coffee for
breakfast. Ross had bought the coffee at a garage in Killorglin where we had
stopped to ask for directions to the Bog Village. Google maps were wrong again!
He also bought some delicious pastries to eat with breakfast. We couldn’t
manage to get through all of them, but the apple slice was delicious.
It was still
bucketing down and the wind gusts of up to 100km/hour were buffeting the van from
side to side. No one was around so we drove up to the gate and took some
photos. I love this place, but even I wasn’t keen to exit the relative safety
of the van to traipse around in the mud. We wisely decided to skip the Ring of
Kerry; in this weather, we’d very likely be blown off the cliffs, and wouldn’t
be able to see anything anyway!
On to Dingle along
the Wild Atlantic Way and what an apt description! Neither Ross nor I had ever
seen an ocean so wild, nor waves so huge! I videoed as best I could, but kept
telling Ross to keep his eyes on the road. We pulled over to witness this
spectacle of Mother Nature. This must be what is described as an angry sea; and
this ocean was ferocious. Any boat caught out there wouldn’t stand a chance.
Finally, we entered the
little fishing village of Dingle, and were greeted by gale-force winds and
sheets of horizontal rain. We parked in the harbour car park, and went in
search of lunch. Ross had a hankering for an Irish stew, which he located at
Murphy’s Pub. I ordered the scrumptious seafood chowder washed down with a pint
of Bulmers cider.
On the way back to
the van, we called in to the tourist bureau just as she was shutting up for the
day. No one in his right mind would be visiting Dingle on a day like today
(except us!) Actually, there was another Australian family from Tasmania having
lunch in the pub. The lady in the information centre was extremely helpful as
people have been all over Ireland and told us not only was the Half Door
Restaurant open tonight, but gave us the phone number, as well as several other
recommendations in case the Half Door was booked out. She told us there was a
music festival in town tonight, so the restaurants would all be busy.
I rang and booked
an earlybird sitting as I knew this was a half-price deal. We drove around the
village looking for a spot to spend the night. We spotted a couple of likely
spots only to see signs that read ”no overnight parking” so figured we weren’t
the only ones who thought they were good spots! Eventually we found a spot with
a lovely view overlooking Dingle Bay and settled down for an afternoon siesta.
(We’d been on the go since 3am!)
The van was
a-rockin’ and a-rollin’ and I was secretly being nervous Nellie and paranoid
Pete, wondering if the van could stand up to such a beating. Ross was watching
a steel pole bend in the wind, so decided to look for a more protected spot. I
breathed a huge sigh of relief! I wouldn’t have slept a wink here.
I showed him where
the Half-Door Restaurant was and he found a place to park in a large carpark
just behind it, right next to another motorhome. We lay down for a siesta, but
set our alarm for 4.45pm in case we fell asleep. And you guessed it- we both
fell into a deep sleep to be rudely awakened by the alarm. Ross would have
happily slept on, but that dinner was calling me.
30.95 for a three-course
banquet! The price has increased by 1 euro in 4 years! I swear the menu is
identical though! If you do something well, don’t change it, I suppose, and
they do dinner extremely well.
I ordered the
gratinated mushrooms in brandy sauce for entrée while Ross had the lobster
bisque. For mains, I couldn’t go past the salmon while Ross ordered a pork
belly dish. Dessert was the most difficult choice. I loved everything! Tiramisu, pannacotta,
bread and butter pudding, pavlova with berries, baileys cheesecake, or Irish
coffee to name a few of my favourites. I chose pannacotta with an orange sauce.
Good choice! Ross had tiramisu, which was homemade and very tasty too. We
decided to make this a celebratory dinner (celebrating us just getting here!)
and ordered a bottle of Italian Pinot Grigio. Ross had one glass and I enjoyed
the rest. I did not leave one precious drop!
Back in our cosy
camper, I showered only to find I had used the last of the water – it lasted a
day and a half- we’ll have to fill up tomorrow. We were in bed and asleep by
8pm. Of course we were up at 2am, but we are gradually getting back to normal.
The wind has died down but it’s still raining cats and dogs!
This is an experience you will be talking about for years to come. Especially the memorable meals!
ReplyDeleteThis is an experience you will be talking about for years to come. Especially the memorable meals!
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