Calgary Herald

A visit to Kenmare, Ireland, provides a bite-sized view of country’s long and colourful history

Kenmare provides a bite-size view of Ireland’s long history

- ANNE CALCAGNO

Stepping out of the Dublin airport, the polyglot crowd of Germans, Americans, Poles, Spaniards and French waiting for rental cars on this early May morning seems confirmati­on that left-side driving should be a cakewalk.

Fast-forward. We’re barely half an hour into our adventure, experienci­ng vertigo, my husband clenching the steering wheel, circling a roundabout he can’t seem to exit, when we gain two critical insights: first, we should have eased into this dyslexic driving, especially with jet lag; second, GPS navigation is essential, utterly worth incurring roaming charges.

Our friends have retired to Kenmare, in southwest Ireland, prompting our visit to celebrate our 30th wedding anniversar­y in my husband’s ancestral land. We’re driving from Dublin to Cork to spend a week exploring Kenmare’s environs. From there, we’ll depart for four days of staggering coastal drives, dipping into the Wild Atlantic Way, through the Ring of Kerry, Valentia Island and the Dingle Peninsula, staying nightly at bed and breakfasts.

As we approach Kenmare, five hours southwest of Dublin, hills smooth as brushed velvet are dot- ted with sidesteppi­ng cows. We catch sight of ewes and bleating lambs, their fleece dabbed with blue, red or orange dye, indicating their owners. We’re in the land of wool and dairy.

We’re also skirting the Atlantic Ocean. Road signs with a cheery turquoise wave point to Wild Atlantic Way: 1,600 westernmos­t miles (2,575 kilometres) of aweinspiri­ng coastal road. Kenmare is deeply nestled in an Atlantic bay, poised between the Iveragh Peninsula (famous for the Ring of Kerry) and the rugged, mountainou­s Beara Peninsula. Talk about location, location, location!

Downtown Kenmare has a colour palette straight out of a child’s colouring box, overseen by the copper-covered spire of Holy Cross Church. Like an efficient and compact primer, Kenmare provides a bite-size view into Ireland’s long history: its walkingdis­tance attraction­s range from ancient Celtic to contempora­ry Irish.

A five-minute walk away from Kenmare’s main square, a sombre mound features a large Bronze Age stone circle: 15 huge, standing stones surround a flat-topped boulder dolmen, marking an ancient seat of Celtic power.

Skip forward a couple of millennium­s to Oliver Cromwell’s victorious Irish campaign, and the new reign of British landlords, among whom was Sir William Petty. Circa 1670, he founded Kenmare, designed around a traditiona­l English village green, now the main square. (Actually, it’s more of a triangle!) To further cement a British town feel, in 1775, his great-grandson, William Petty-Fitzmauric­e, 2nd Earl of Shelburne (who later became prime minister), instituted Kenmare’s unusual “X” plan, converging Kenmare’s roads upon the square.

Subsequent absentee British landlords oversaw the deaths of at least a million tenant farmers during the potato famine, from 1845 to 1852.

The national tragedy converted Kenmare in two ways. The city became the site of a local travel office for the White Star Line and the last glimpse of home for many a 19th-century Irish emigrant. And it compelled the Poor Clares nuns to open a convent here, providing aid. Priests taught boys literacy, leatherwor­king and woodcarvin­g.

But bold Sister Mary Francis Clare, says historian Stanley Edward Goddard, had an “overwhelmi­ng desire to allow women to be educated on a similar footing to men.” The nuns taught premium lacemaking.

Meet Nora and Emer Finnegan at The Kenmare Lace and Design Centre — both authors, historians and teachers — keeping the tradition alive.

Nora informs me: “Queen Victoria wore a lot of lace, and it sure made a heck of an amount of employment for our women. Understand that, in 1866, a Texas woman paid £300 for a Kenmare lace bedspread when you could buy a house for £100.”

Thousands of young women were given an education and a portable skill, their equipment — tatting shuttle, thread, needles, crochet hooks — small enough to fit in a pocket, and take to America.

Original artisanshi­p continues to distinguis­h Kenmare today. Sure, some stores sell the ubiquitous heraldic mementoes and shamrock jewelry — “paddywhack­ery” as the locals call it. More notably, Kenmare is a haven for shops offering cutting-edge crafts. Creations sells designer Sabine Lenz’s bracelets inscribed with “croi alainn” (“beautiful heart” in Gaelic); Cleo sells Avoca woollens, modern leatherwor­k, and, like the lovely Purcell Gallery, beautiful contempora­ry art. At PFK, we watch master goldsmith Paul Kelly working and chatting away. “I was out on the skiff this morning,” he regales us, “and, I tell you, there wasn’t a sinner around.”

We relish good traditiona­l Irish fare: live music, fish and chips, bangers and mash at O’Donnabhain’s. But we also savour high-end fish dishes at Tom Crean Fish & Wine. The eateries of Kenmare take delectable risks. At Mick and Jimmy’s for breakfast, owner Mick Wilson explains the contempora­ry California foodie vibe: “We wanted to shake things up a bit.”

Neil Harrington, who along with his son Stan, runs the excellent Virginia’s Guesthouse right upstairs, agrees: “A lot of people are tired of the cholestero­l artery-clogging Irish food.”

Kenmare also boasts the Park Hotel Kenmare, a grand former Victorian country estate, evoking Downton Abbey elegance. In short, Kenmare is compact and cosmopolit­an, historic and avant-garde. Even the bustling weekly Wednesday market reverts to a time-honoured muddy animal fair every Aug. 15, the Feast of the Assumption.

Finally, and not to be ignored, is the stunning landscape encircling Kenmare. As the vector for many trails and roads, Kenmare is a hiker’s, biker’s and driver’s dream. Daily jaunts take us, easily, to Killarney National Park, to Gleninchaq­uin Park’s waterfalls, to the imposing Neolithic Uragh Stone Circle. Into the Sheen Valley Heritage Area and through the rock-hewn Caha Pass. There’s Moll’s Gap and Ladies View for panoramas. Or Priest’s Leap with Bantry Bay to the south, the Caha Mountains to the north and Macgillycu­ddy’s Reeks showing off Ireland’s highest peak, Carrauntoo­hil. The landscape modulates with cliffs, moors, meadows, woodlands, bogs, rivers and lakes. Blossoming gorse and grasses make a gold and green carpet across the hillsides. Honeysuckl­es, fuchsias, foxgloves and rhododendr­ons blaze brightly.

We depart from Kenmare for our southweste­rn coastal tour. We’ve become semi- competent Irish roadsters but, even better, we are motoring in the opposite direction of the many tour buses. They clog the roadway and block views — but not so much when proceeding clockwise, with comely Kenmare in our rear view.

 ?? ANNE CALCAGNO/ THE WASHINGTON POST ?? The Neolithic Uragh Stone Circle is near Gleninchaq­uin Park, in County Kerry, Ireland.
ANNE CALCAGNO/ THE WASHINGTON POST The Neolithic Uragh Stone Circle is near Gleninchaq­uin Park, in County Kerry, Ireland.
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 ?? ANNE CALCAGNO/ THE WASHINGTON POST ?? The top of Gleninchaq­uin Park’s 140-metre-high waterfall provides great views of Kenmare Bay. The landscape around Kenmare, includes cliffs, moors, woodlands, rivers and lakes.
ANNE CALCAGNO/ THE WASHINGTON POST The top of Gleninchaq­uin Park’s 140-metre-high waterfall provides great views of Kenmare Bay. The landscape around Kenmare, includes cliffs, moors, woodlands, rivers and lakes.

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