Jan 24, 2008
Categories: Bogs
Above: Irish Bogs
Bogs Ireland (Ireland Tours) is remarkable for the number and size of its bogs. They are of two kinds flat bogs, or those lying on plains, and mountain bogs on hills and high valleys. A large part of the Central Plain consists of bogs. The most extensive is the Bog of Alien, which covers the greater part of Counties Kildare (Accommodation, Kildare, Ireland) and Offaly (Bed and Breakfasts, Offaly, Ireland). It is covered ... Read More
Jan 24, 2008
Above: Classic house in Leinster
County Wicklow lies on the shore of the Irish Sea, south of County Dublin. Except at Bray Head and Wicklow Head, the coast is low and has few harbours. The surface of the county is a mass of mountains, having less level land than [...]
Above: Classic house in Leinster
County Wicklow lies on the shore of the Irish Sea, south of County Dublin. Except at Bray Head and Wicklow Head, the coast is low and has few harbours. The surface of the county is a mass of mountains, having less level land than that of any other county in Ireland. The Wicklow Mountains are thrown together in groups, separated by long narrow valleys. They reach a ... Read More
Jan 24, 2008
Above: Celtic Graveyard in Leinster
Leinster, the largest province in Ireland, comprises the south-east portion of the country, and reaches over more than half its length and more than half its breadth. It contains the most extensive bog in the island, called the Bog of Allen, which covers a large [...]
Above: Celtic Graveyard in Leinster
Leinster, the largest province in Ireland, comprises the south-east portion of the country, and reaches over more than half its length and more than half its breadth. It contains the most extensive bog in the island, called the Bog of Allen, which covers a large part of County Kildare and King's County. There arc twelve counties in Leinster.
county longford, in the middle of Ireland, borders the Shannon ... Read More