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Cracking Donegal
It was sunny and hardly a breeze disturbed the Atlantic at Malin Head in Donegal.
There werenât many people around as we sauntered over to the coffee van and chatted to the barista. I laughed when I noticed the napkins printed with Irelandâs Most Northerly Napkin and the sign for Irelandâs Most Northerly Drinking Bowl.
âYou have to make the most of what you have, â the barista quipped and told us anecdotes about working at this remote spot. When she said, âBelieve me, you have come on a good day, â I imagined how different it would be in stormy weather.
We sat in the sunshine munching chocolatey brownies, with a view over craggy rocks and a sparkling sea, feeling blessed to be here on a glorious day. From the high point of Banbaâs Crown we meandered above jagged outcrops through heather and wispy cottongrass to the weathered gash of Hellâs Hole, where pink thrift brightened up the rocks.
Driving south through Inishowen, the off-the-beaten-track peninsula in the north of County Donegal, we made slow progress as we kept stopping when pretty thatched cottages and sandy bays caught our eye. At Trawbreaga Bay we ate lunch listening to the sound of waves gently lapping the shore.
Family-run museums are always more quirky than restrained corporate exhibitions and Doagh Famine Village
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