Glengarriff

Glengarriff (Irish: Gleann Garbh, meaning "rough glen") is a village of approximately 140 people on the N71 national secondary road in the Beara Peninsula of County Cork, Ireland. Known internationally as a tourism venue, it has a number of natural attractions. It sits at the northern head of Glengarriff Bay, a smaller enclave of Bantry Bay.

Glengarriff

Gleann Garbh
Village
Cromwell’s Bridge
Glengarriff
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 51°45′00″N 9°33′07″W
CountryIreland
ProvinceMunster
CountyCounty Cork
Population
 (2016)[1]
138
Time zoneUTC+0 (WET)
  Summer (DST)UTC-1 (IST (WEST))
Irish Grid ReferenceV925564
Websitewww.glengarriff.ie

Located 20 km (~12 miles) west of Bantry, and 30 km (~18 miles) east of Castletownbere, it is a common stopping-point along the routes around the area.

Economy

Primarily, the economy revolves around a combination of tourism, farming and local services.

Attractions

Glengarriff harbour

Glengarriff is a small seaside village on the Ring of Beara surrounded by high rugged mountains pocked with old bogs being farmed for peat. Local tourist sites include the Italian Gardens on Garnish Island (Ilnacullin), which may be visited by boat trip. Offering a broad view of the surrounding area, the round Martello tower on the island was built to guard against a threatened Napoleonic invasion that never materialized.

Restaurants and shops at the N71

In the nearby Glengarriff Forest is the glen that gave Glengarriff its name, (loosely translated as rough glen) containing some of the oldest and most extensive oak and birch groves left in Ireland. A short but steep trail leads up to Lady Bantry's Lookout, which has views over Glengarriff and the west Cork area. Other tourist amenities include the Bamboo Park, behind Toad Hall, a local amenity area featuring a child's playground and Blue Pool lagoon, the nearby Barley Lake and the historic Eccles Hotel. Walking trails in the area are extensive, kayaking on the bay is regularly scheduled, and live music is played at local pubs, particularly during the tourist season. Glengarriff also has several shops, art galleries, pubs, restaurants and other services.

Glengarriff harbour is a sheltered anchorage and has visitors moorings for visiting yachts.

Glengarriff has an annual music festival, the Jim Dowling Uilleann Pipe & Trad Festival, which takes in June and focuses on uilleann piping.[2]

Sport

Glengarriff Golf Club is a nine-hole course on the east side of the village. It is associated with the late Maureen O'Hara, the film actress, who had a home nearby.[3]

Glengarriff GAA Club [4] was founded in 1981 after breaking away from neighbouring Adrigole GFC. It fields Gaelic football teams from Junior ‘A’ level to Under 6s. Teams compete in leagues and championships run by the Beara GAA division.

Notable inhabitants

  • Jan Linzel (1915–2019), a former Dutch RAF-pilot during World War II, lived just outside the village.[5]
  • Maureen O'Hara (1920–2015), Irish-American actress, also had a home in the area[3]

Cultural references

Letitia Elizabeth Landon's poetical illustration, Glengariffe, (1832) accompanies an engraving of a view over Garnish Island looking towards the mountains in the West.

gollark: Really, applicationy stuff should be done with... not C, so C can do what it's mildly okay at, weird low level stuff.
gollark: > perl
gollark: If you just create, say, a 32kB array for some input, but it's possible to send more than that and you don't check very carefully everywhere (because C string manipulation functions are horrible and so are C strings), then BUFFER OVERFLOW!
gollark: It does it in not wildly unsafe ways.
gollark: Virtual memory.

See also

References

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