Ottawa Citizen

Let the Game begin in Northern Ireland

- SIOBHAN STARRS

On the Kings Road ... at last ... en route to Winterfell. I, a true pilgrim and loyal bannerpers­on, do pledge allegiance to the clan Stark and wish to pay homage at Winterfell, seat of the King in the North.

My journey began in Belfast, my mother’s ancestral home. I confess to being a fan of the HBO cult hit Game of Thrones, and, having travelled to Northern Ireland to visit family, I have seized the chance to visit some of the filming locations scattered across Northern Ireland. About 75 per cent of the show is filmed here, transformi­ng the fortunes of those lucky people who can now find work in the film business — and giving a boost to the tourist industry.

First I travelled north, to the Antrim Coast, whose scenic glens and coves play host to numerous Game of Thrones dramas, on a one-day tour organized by McComb’s Travel. McComb’s started these bus tours a year ago. Co-owner Caroline McComb, tells me they appeal to a new demographi­c of tourist: the “Throners,” generally under 50, who come to Northern Ireland to see the filming sites. Once here, they get to see all the stunning vistas, castles, forests, moorland and caves that originally lured the cable network — all within a two-hour drive of Belfast. An added bonus is the traditiona­l “hundred thousand welcomes” from the locals in Northern Ireland, who have a tale or two to tell of their own and legends to rival those written by George R.R. Martin.

Our first stop is near the town of Ballymoney, at “the Dark Hedges,” which framed one of the bestknown scenes from the series — the flight of a young heroine, Arya Stark, from her father’s betrayers at King ’s Landing. There is no mistaking the eerie beauty of this avenue of beech trees, and it has become a favourite subject of amateur photograph­ers.

People don’t often visit Ireland in the hope of fine weather, but I was blessed with blue skies and glistening seas. The picturesqu­e Ballintoy Harbor served as the backdrop to anti-hero Theon Greyjoy’s homecoming. Today elderly couples mill around a whitewashe­d café, while Game of Thrones fans snap selfies in another of the show’s most recognizab­le locations.

The Larrybane quarry on the Antrim Coast will be recognizab­le to fans as Renly’s military encampment in Season 2. It also serves as an overflow parking lot for the nearby Carrick-a-Rede bridge — a famously terrifying rope bridge suspended 30 metres above the sea, connecting a rocky island to the mainland cliffs. Alas, our bus schedule meant that we didn’t get to make the crossing. But if you have a head for heights and the resolve of a Stark, it’s well worth a visit.

Most northbound tours make a detour to the Giant’s Causeway, Northern Ireland’s most famous natural feature and a UNESCO World Heritage site (though it hasn’t — yet — appeared in the show). A six-kilometre promontory made of huge, interlocke­d basalt columns rises from the North Atlantic as if it was carved by the giants who stalk Ulster’s mythology. The columns were created about 60 million years ago when this landscape was volcanic and took their striking polygonal form from rock crystalliz­ation as lava slowly cooled.

The second day of my pilgrimage took me south, by car, toward the Mourne Mountains. I grew up in the foothills of these granite giants, not far from Sandy Brae, whose bleak landscape appears in the TV series as the entrance to Vaes Dothrak, home of the Dothraki people and their new Khaleesi, Daenerys Targaryen, a key heroine and claimant to the Iron Throne of the Seven Kingdoms.

Tollymore Forest was a favourite spot for many outings of my childhood; memories of negotiatin­g stepping stones over the Shimna River came back as I wandered through woodland glades enjoying the dappled sunshine.

Onscreen, though, this idyll is often a place of menace. Tollymore appears in the very first episode as a snowy forest haunted by the mythologic­al undead. Later, patriarch Eddard Stark and his men are travelling in the woods when they come upon a gored stag and some dire wolf pups, which the Stark children adopt.

I had family in tow, and after a hearty walk around Tollymore, we stopped at Inch Abbey, a ruined 11th-century monastery near Downpatric­k. For us, it was the perfect spot for a picnic and some solitude; in the series, this is where Robb Stark, son of Eddard, is declared “King in the North” by the rebels.

Another short drive brought me and my companions to my journey’s end: the show’s Winterfell.

Castle Ward is an 18th-century mansion on the shores of Strangford Lough, popular with visitors in its own right. But its fame is now overshadow­ed by that of the 10 Game of Thrones locations on the estate — particular­ly a castle dating from the 16th century that plays the role of the Stark family home, Winterfell.

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