I nearly went to live in Co Wicklow. It was a matter of turning right or left at the port gate at Rosslare when we came off the ferry from France before dawn on a Sunday. But I heard on the ferry that the South African expatriates gathered in Co Wicklow and, as a very experienced exile (!), I've always avoided these hyper-political people in order better to blend into host countries. Also, the papers of General Smuts and my grandmother's diaries are in the archives of University College Cork. I also heard from a cleric on the ferry that the best Protestant school in the country is at Bandon, 20 minutes from Cork airport, in the West End of London by 11am without cutting into one's sleep and home again in time for dinner, and he (the cleric) would be delighted to arrange a full scholarship for my child. So I turned left and never regretted a moment of it. But Ireland is a very small place; Wicklow is only a couple of hours away. A friend and I were planning a day trip including a ride along over 20m of surfaced scenic cycle path in Wicklow, where I've also walked the hills in different company, when he died.
There is also a path around most of Ireland for hillwalkers, and theoretically for cyclists, but I've walked many sections of it and, frankly, I wouldn't take my bikes on it even in younger days. It's for young people on offload bikes that they don't mind being scratched up liberally and carrying a lot of the time. Irish hillwalkers who also cycle -- which is many of them -- clearly in their minds separate these paths (of which the surfaced section in Wicklow is a part worth mentioning by virtue of being exceptional) from genuinely cyclable paths. When they organise a cycling party it is on the little roads and lanes like the ones I favour, not on these hill paths.
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In in4's post I really like the photo of the Russian spy sub with its conning tower cunningly camouflaged in barnacles.
Andre Jute Ghost Ship "Hesperus" Off the Coast of Co Sligo, 2022 Oil on Canvas 6x8in 800pxw
Cycling with friends at their holiday home on the coast of Sligo, we came across the wreck of a ship, probably a hundred feet long, a Baltic trader. Unfortunately my iPhone's battery decided to go on strike just then, and when we returned the next day with fully charged-up batteries and a dedicated camera, the sea had taken the ship in the night. So I painted it from memory.