Monday 27 August 2012

More North Coast

As I said in the last post, we've been out and about being tourists at home for the last week. Our first stop was the North Coast in Co. Antrim. We stopped at Larrybane Bay and crossed the Carrick-A-Rede rope bridge onto Carrick Island, followed by the impressive new visitors centre and guided audio tour round the Giant's Causeway. We finished up with a meal by the harbour in Portrush.

As someone who grew up in Northern Ireland during the Troubles and has seen the changes the country is going through, I was still surprised by one huge difference I witnessed this summer; the amount of tourists from outside Northern Ireland. At Carrick we found Germans, Americans, Swedes, Italians, French. The new visitors centre at the Causeway is not only massively bigger than the old one, but a technological world away from it. When we rounded the path, into Port Ganny we saw a different view of the famous stones than we'd ever encountered before. It was covered in dots of colour as visitors in a rainbow of shower proofs picked their way across the stones to walk in Finn McCool's footsteps. Again we found a plethora of accents, not just near neighbours from Southern Ireland, Scotland, England and Wales but many parts of Europe, America and Australia. 

I find that encouraging. Talking to people they are certainly much less wary of travelling to Northern Ireland and many say they wanted to visit for years but were just too put off by the bombs and bullets to do so. I do also wonder what will happen to scenery that in some way was sheltered from the march of tourism. How much more walked and worn will those basalt stones become?

A further dash of colour was added to the Causeway thanks to the art installation embedded in the landscape by German artist, Hans Peter Kuhn; a series of red and yellow flags that rotate in the wind.

The view from the headland in Larrybane Bay, looking at Carrick Island (you can't see the rope bridge from this side) and Rathlin Island in the distance. 

The cliffs in Larrybane Bay, looking back towards the visitors centre.


The view from Carrick Island after crossing the bridge.



Portnaboe (Giant's Causeway)

Can you spot Humphrey the camel?
The yellow squares are the art installation

The chimney stacks on top of the McCool House









The organ pipes

Portrush Harbour


1 comment:

  1. Beautiful! I know tourists can use up a place, but with the right preservation and teaching, those stones should outlast us all. They are a remarkable example of earths geological advancement!!!

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