Take a jaunt in Killarney
For a park for all seasons, you’d be hard pressed to beat Killarney National Park
in Co Kerry. You can walk through it, boat across it, take a jaunting
cart around it or a horse ride in it. At every turn you’ll find a view
more spectacular than the last, including two waterfalls
Torc and O’Sullivan’s Cascade. Tour the house and gardens at Muckross, or take a spin around the 1930s farmsteads of its heritage park.
Go electric in Glenveagh
If you think cycling is better than walking, you’ll appreciate that
electric bikes are better still. Certainly when you’re faced with an
estate the size of Glenveagh National Park, a 16,000-hectare wilderness
in Co Donegal, you’ll welcome a little extra oomph. E-bikes are available from Grass Routes,
a bike hire company that takes up residence here in summer. Whizzing
around on one should help you outrun the midges that take up residence
too.
Tweet from a Wicklow wetlands
Ditch Twitter for twitching at the East Coast Wetlands & Nature Reserve at Kilcoole, Co Wicklow. It’s the place to see such feathered friends as little egret, kingfisher and Greenland white-fronted goose. The endangered little tern comes all the way from Ghana
to lay its eggs on the beach here, but right now it’s all about the
skylark, whose song rivals only bees and lawnmowers as the official
sound of summer.
Make a break for the Burren
If you think there’s a reason just one letter separates Burren and
barren, think again. The unique northwest Clare landscape is home to 75
per cent of native Irish flora and this is the time to go, when
wildflowers burst through its limestone cracks. It is more than 250sq km
in area, with seven way-marked trails and free guided tours in summer
Bog off in Offaly
Bog has undergone something of a transformation, no longer
tantamount to an insult, a la bogman and bog-trotter. Nowadays, it’s
recognised by our much more insightful young folk as a unique habitat
and invaluable part of our natural heritage. See for yourself at the
Lough Boora Discovery Park in Co Offaly, a bog-based mix of Mesolithic
archaeology, sculpture trail and wildlife park, perfect for wandering
and pondering whether anyone says bog-roll anymore
Find yourself in a Dublin forest
State forestry body Coillte
has almost transformed itself into a provider of outdoor pursuits,by
building permanent orienteering courses at 13 of its forests, from Ards
in Co Donegal to Ballyhoura in Co Limerick,
and including many – Carrickgollogan, Hellfire and Massey – handy for
Dubs. There are courses for beginners, intermediates and advanced
practitioners, and maps are downloadable from its website.
Bike down a mountain in Galway
If you like your outdoor pursuits to provide a little more
adrenaline, ditch hiking for biking at one of the dedicated mountain
bike paths now in a range of forest parks, including Ticknock in Co
Dublin, Portumna in Co Galway and Ballinastoe in Co Wicklow. Among the most scenic is Derroura, a 16km looped biking trail near Oughterard,
Co Galway, providing picnic- perfect views north into the Maam valley,
west to the Twelve Pins and, at the halfway point, overlooking Lough
Corrib.
Picnic on a platform in Wicklow
For a dining-room with a view, you can’t beat the platform at Spinc
Mountain, in Wicklow Mountains National Park. Accessed via a hidden
staircase tucked into a steep forest, it offers panoramic views over
Glendalough’s lakes. Take the mountaintop boardwalk all the way around
the ridge, descending through a deserted miners’ village, or stay put
and recover from that 600-step staircase with a restorative picnic and a
bird’s-eye view
Enjoy the high life in Roscommon
For variety, Lough Key Forest Park has to be the country’s top
playground. It has a terrific outdoor play area for kids, plus an indoor
brain-teaser – the Boda
Borg – for all the family, and a treetop canopy walk and zipline course
too. It also has trees, and lots of them, which is important given a
recent survey found one-third of Irish kids had never climbed one. It
also has a campsite, so you can stay over and climb some more tomorrow.
Go wild in the West
At Ballycroy
National Park, the big draw is the opportunity to go camping in remote
places that nobody has likely set foot on. The 11,000-hectare park, in
the midst of the Nephin Beg range in northwest Mayo,
is Ireland’s first designated “wilderness area”. You don’t have to go
completely off grid, however: it also has a number of Adirondack
shelters specially built for trekkers.