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The Northwest Travel Guide | Fodor's Travel
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  • Plan Your Northwest Vacation

Plan Your Northwest Vacation

With its towering cliffs, secluded expanses of golden beaches and sun-tinted waters, the Northwest is an untamed and wild part of Ireland, shaped, influenced, and tormented by the sea. Wide skies make it the perfect place to appreciate the shape-shifting light, slowly moving cloud formations, and crimson sunsets. As you drive around counties Sligo, Leitrim, and Donegal, you will discover roads curve this way and that, following the course of the indented coastline, a mountain valley, glen, or stream. But the only traffic-jam you’re likely to encounter will be a herd of heifers, reducing you to cow-speed.

A place of nature on a grand scale, the Northwest should be appreciated in a leisurely way. Catch a cloudless evening and you may be enchanted by a night sky display of the Aurora Borealis, the Northern Lights; and amid this celestial light show, or even an astonishing star-filled sky, you will find a silence that kindles the imagination.

Like nowhere else, this region influenced the writer William Butler Yeats and his brother Jack Butler Yeats, a painter. Both immortalized this splendidly lush and rugged countryside in their work, and "Yeats Country" still attracts fans. Twenty-first-century Sligo pulses not only in the present but also with the charge of history, for it was the Yeats’ childhood home, the place that, more than any other, gave rise to their particular geniuses—or, as Jack B. put it: "Sligo was my school and the sky above it."

Northwest Ireland is overwhelmingly rural and underpopulated. That's not to say there isn't a bit of action here with plenty to experience. Sligo Town, with its winding streets and Italian Quarter is as busy as Galway—an amazing feat for a town of only 18,000.

After you’ve drunk in the best views in Europe, washed by the Atlantic Ocean at Slieve League, you can pick up unique tweeds in Donegal, look out for golden eagles at fairy-tale Glenveagh Castle, delve into the past at Glencolumbcille Folk Village, or sample burstingly fresh local seafood. Savor the boating town of Carrick-on-Shannon in Leitrim, a place full of architectural delights, or stroll through the county’s glens and hillsides—a completely undiscovered part of the country.

Restaurants

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Hotels

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Sights

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Shopping

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Nightlife

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Performing Arts

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Top Reasons To Go

  1. Gaeltacht CountryVenture to the seaside village of Ard an Rátha to listen to the seductive rhythms of locals conversing in full Irish (Gaelic) flight. Don't worry everyone has English at the ready for lost visitors.
  2. Follow in Yeats’s Footsteps From Sligo Town's museums head out to the majestic Ben Bulben peak to seek out places special to the famous brother duo, W. B. Yeats, the great poet, and Jack B. Yeats, one of Ireland's finest 20th-century painters.
  3. Garbo's Castle The legendary screen actress was just one of the many notables who enjoyed a stay at Glenveagh Castle.
  4. Hiking the Slieve League Cliffs To truly humble yourself before ocean, cliff, and sky, hike these fabled headlands, the highest sea cliffs in Europe.
  5. Lissadell House A magnificently restored ancestral home on the shores of Drumcliff Bay, not far from the grave of W.B. Yeats.

When To Go

When to Go

When it rains, it really pours. Forget about the winter months, when inclement weather and a heavy fog swing in from the Atlantic and settle...

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