OUTDOORSmagic member Simon Kirwan takes a trip to the Mountains of Mourne and their slightly batty wall. Words and pics.
OUTDOORSmagic member Simon Kirwan recently visited the Mountains
of Mourne in Ireland, this is his account with pictures. For more of
Simon's rather nice travel photographs, check out his web site
'The
Lightbox'.
"Where the Mountains of Mourne sweep down
to the sea..."
Well, that's how Percy French put it in his song The Mountains of
Mourne, and sitting outside the pub that bears his name, sipping a
well-earned pint of Guinness, looking back up to Slieve Donard, it's
an apt image - the Mourne Mountains tower above the seaside town of
Newcastle, Co. Down, a hectic tourist town in summer, but agreeably
quiet and deserted in January.
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The oversized summit cairn on
Slieve Donard
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What I like about Ireland is the unassailable logic of the way things
are done here. When the Express bus from Belfast made an unscheduled
stop at the grocers to enable the driver to deliver the bread, I was
mildly surprised. The next stop, to deliver magazines at the
newsagents seemed perfectly reasonable. By the time the bus driver
had dropped off a complete exhaust system at the garage, it seemed
madness to do it any other way - why wait a week for the next
delivery when the bus is going past the front door in an hour?
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Summit cairn on Slieve
Commedagh
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By 10.30, I'm at Bloody Bridge, named for a famous massacre, at the
start of the walk into the Mournes. There are ten summits over 2000
feet and the range covers around 80 square miles of unspoilt mountain
and moorland scenery. They are volcanic in origin, then carved into
horseshoe valleys by glaciation, but with rocky outcrops, called
nunataks, that poked through the ice-sheet and escaped the scouring
effect of the retreating glaciers. They aren't huge, none of the
peaks reaches the 3000 foot mark, but they are dramatic and shapely,
and the Mourne Wall, which runs like a scaled-down version of the
Great Wall of China over the summits, is a highly-distinctive
feature, and a useful navigational aid to boot! In fact, in the
100mph gusts that threatened to hurl me into the Irish Sea yesterday,
the wall acted as a windbreak when it was almost impossible to remain
standing.
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Looking up the Mourne Wall to
Slieve Donard summit from the Donard Bog (and I do mean
bog)
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At 12.45 I reached the summit of Slieve Donard, the highest peak of
the Mournes at 2796 feet, shared a very welcome nip of whiskey with
the only other walkers I met all day, then headed up Slieve
Commedagh, with glorious views of Slieve Binnian and Slieve Bearnagh
with their rocky turrets and pinnacles, the wall making an unlikely
ascent of each peak it encounters. Although the wind blew
remorselessly from the south-west all day, apart from the odd hail
squall, the skies were clear and the views were fantastic, taking in
all the peaks of the Mournes, and the surrounding countryside, as
well as the gentler rolling hills of the south.
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The Mourne Wall makes a rapid
descent of Donard
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I ambled down the ridge, or rather I was propelled down the ridge by
a fierce gale, avoiding the rock crags which plummet down into the
valley, sinking knee-deep into a foot of soggy Irish peat bog on
several occasions. The final part of the route takes you through the
mixed plantation of the Donard Forest, then it's a short stroll to
the seafront, and that pint of Guinness at Percy French's bar, and
time to reflect on a perfect mountain day, magnificent scenery, great
people, and the opportunity to visit a place I had never previously
considered as a a walking destination, but one to which I plan to
return."
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Sunset over Slieve Donard and
Slieve Commedagh
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