Showing up to 15 places from this collection.
Portballintrae AntrimCauseway Coast and Glens District • BT57 8TE • Scenic Place
Portballintrae is a small and attractive coastal village on the north Antrim coast of Northern Ireland, a sheltered bay of considerable charm near Bushmills that provides a quieter and more residential alternative to the busier tourist destinations of the Giant's Causeway coast immediately to the east. The village sits on a rounded bay of golden sand backed by low cliffs, its stone cottages and the small pier giving it the character of an unspoiled seaside community that has developed organically rather than for the tourist trade. The village's position on the north Antrim coast places it within easy reach of the major attractions of this section of coastline. The Giant's Causeway, one of the natural wonders of the world, is less than two miles to the east along the cliff path, and the walk between Portballintrae and the Causeway along the coastal path is one of the finest short coastal walks in Northern Ireland, passing above the columnar basalt cliffs and providing views along the entire north Antrim coast toward Rathlin Island and the Scottish mainland beyond. The Bushmills Distillery, the oldest licensed whisky distillery in the world, is a short distance inland from Portballintrae and provides one of the most visited and most rewarding industrial heritage experiences in Ireland. The combination of the distillery visit, the Giant's Causeway and the coastal walking makes this small corner of north Antrim one of the most concentrated areas of visitor interest in Northern Ireland. The beach at Portballintrae provides safe bathing and the sheltered bay is popular with families who find the combination of the small village character and the beach facilities more relaxed than the major tourist centres nearby.
Dungiven CastleCauseway Coast and Glens District • BT47 4LQ • Historic Places
Dungiven Castle in County Londonderry, Northern Ireland, is a nineteenth-century Gothic house incorporating the ruins of an Augustinian priory founded in the twelfth century by the O'Cahan family, who are commemorated by one of the finest medieval tomb monuments in Ireland within the priory ruins. The site has a long ecclesiastical history as the location of Dungiven Priory, founded in the twelfth century by the O'Cahan family who were lords of this part of Derry. The early seventeenth-century bastion fortification added to the priory site reflects the plantation era's military requirements. The priory ruin with its decorated O'Cahan tomb is the most significant heritage element of the site and can be visited freely. The surrounding Sperrins landscape provides outstanding walking and cycling country in one of the most scenic upland areas of Northern Ireland.
Kinbane CastleCauseway Coast and Glens District • BT54 6HJ • Historic Places
Kinbane Castle is a dramatically situated ruined sixteenth-century tower house on Kenbane Head on the North Antrim coast, its white limestone walls rising from the narrow headland that gives the castle its name, kenbane meaning white headland in Irish. The castle was built by Colla MacDonnell, brother of the Scots-Irish lord Sorley Boy MacDonnell, one of the most significant figures in the turbulent history of sixteenth-century Ulster. The castle was twice attacked and damaged by the English Crown during the wars against the MacDonnells, and was eventually abandoned. The headland position above the Atlantic provides outstanding views along the North Antrim coast and is accessible from a steep path descending from the clifftop car park. The surrounding coastal landscape, including the Giant's Causeway and Carrick-a-Rede rope bridge nearby, is one of the most celebrated in Ireland.
Dunseverick CastleCauseway Coast and Glens District • BT57 8SR • Historic Places
Dunseverick Castle is the dramatically situated ruins of one of the oldest castles in Ireland, perched on a narrow sea stack on the North Antrim coast between the Giant's Causeway and Ballintoy, its fragmentary walls rising from sheer basalt cliffs above the Atlantic. The site was fortified from at least the early medieval period, with Dunseverick mentioned in the ancient Ulster annals and associated with the legendary figures of early Irish history. The present masonry represents the latest phase of occupation, with the castle destroyed by Cromwellian forces in 1653. The coastal path that passes the castle is part of the Causeway Coast Way, one of the most spectacular coastal walking routes in Ireland, with the Giant's Causeway UNESCO World Heritage Site a short distance to the west.
Murlough Bay AntrimCauseway Coast and Glens District • BT54 6RX • Scenic Place
Murlough Bay is one of the most remote and most beautiful bays on the Antrim coast, a sheltered crescent of beach and grassland enclosed between the Fair Head basalt headland and the lower ground of the Torr coast in a setting of complete isolation accessible only by a steep and winding road descending from the clifftop above. The combination of the dramatic headland of Fair Head rising 180 metres from the sea to the north, the views across the North Channel to the Mull of Kintyre barely twenty kilometres away and the quiet of this remarkably undisturbed bay makes Murlough one of the most rewarding and least visited destinations on the Causeway Coast.
The bay has strong associations with the Irish cultural revival through the graves of Roger Casement and several members of the MacQuillan family of Bun-a-Margy in the ruined chapel above the beach. Roger Casement, the humanitarian activist and Irish nationalist who was hanged for treason in 1916 following his attempt to land German arms for the Easter Rising, was repatriated and buried in the ruined Carey Church above the bay in 1965, fulfilling his wish to be buried in this corner of Antrim that he loved. The grave has become a place of quiet pilgrimage.
The woodland and scrub behind the beach provide habitat for a range of birds and the rocky shore below supports the marine life of the North Channel in the clear cold water typical of this exposed coastline. The walking from the bay north along the cliff toward Fair Head provides increasingly dramatic views of the great basalt columns of the headland and the sea below, one of the finest short cliff walks on the entire Antrim coast.
Bushmills VillageCauseway Coast and Glens District • BT57 8QH • Scenic Place
Bushmills is a small village in County Antrim on the north coast of Northern Ireland, famous throughout the world as the home of the Old Bushmills Distillery, the oldest licensed distillery in the world, whose whiskey has been produced on this site since at least 1608 and whose visitor experience provides one of the most popular and most rewarding distillery tours in Ireland. The village itself is a pleasant Antrim settlement of stone cottages and the River Bush that flows through the village has provided the water for whiskey production for over four centuries.
The Old Bushmills Distillery, the centrepiece of the village's identity, produces the triple-distilled Irish whiskey that has made it one of the most recognised whiskey brands internationally, its distinctive smooth character a result of the triple distillation process and the quality of the local water filtered through basalt rock. The distillery tour, one of the most popular in Ireland, takes visitors through the production process from malting through distilling to maturation in the warehouse where the whiskey develops in oak casks over periods from three to twenty-one years.
The village's position on the Causeway Coast provides access to the remarkable natural and heritage attractions of this section of the Antrim coast, including the Giant's Causeway three miles to the east, the Carrick-a-Rede Rope Bridge and the dramatic coastal scenery of the Antrim cliffs. The Bushmills to Causeway tramway provides a heritage transport link to the Causeway visitor centre.
Ballycastle Beach AntrimCauseway Coast and Glens District • BT54 6QH • Beach
Ballycastle is a small market town and seaside resort on the Antrim coast of Northern Ireland, its beach and harbour providing the principal visitor focus in a town that serves as the main gateway for the Rathlin Island ferry and as the central settlement of the Causeway Coast and Glens area. The beach at Ballycastle stretches for approximately one kilometre along the bay below the town, a mix of sand and shingle that is sheltered from the prevailing Atlantic swell by the headlands on either side and overlooks the distinctive flat-topped outline of Rathlin Island two kilometres offshore.
The town and beach have a character that is distinctly different from the more heavily developed resorts of the Antrim coast further south. Ballycastle retains the feel of a working Irish market town with a functioning harbour, a weekly market and a local economy that extends beyond tourism alone. The Ould Lammas Fair, held annually in late August since at least the seventeenth century, is one of the oldest fairs in Ireland and draws visitors from across Northern Ireland and beyond, combining a traditional horse and cattle fair with amusements, traders and the distinctive dulse and yellowman confectionery for which Ballycastle is particularly known.
The harbour below the town is the departure point for the Rathlin Island ferry, which makes the twenty-minute crossing to one of Northern Ireland's most rewarding day trip destinations several times daily in summer. Rathlin is a small, shaped island with a permanent farming and fishing community, dramatic seabird cliffs at its western end, and the cave beneath the lighthouse where Robert the Bruce is traditionally said to have sheltered and drawn inspiration from the famous spider. The puffin colony at the West Light is one of the largest and most accessible in Ireland.
The surrounding Causeway Coast and Glens Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty provides extensive walking and coastal scenery, with the Fair Head cliffs immediately east of Ballycastle offering some of the most dramatic headland scenery on the north Antrim coast.
Torr Head AntrimCauseway Coast and Glens District • BT54 6RX • Scenic Place
Torr Head is a dramatic headland on the Antrim coast at the point where the North Channel between Ireland and Scotland narrows to approximately twenty kilometres, the closest point between Ireland and Scotland from which the Scottish mainland, the Mull of Kintyre and even individual buildings of Campbeltown are visible on clear days. The combination of the dramatic headland scenery, the narrow sea crossing and the remote character of this section of the Antrim coast gives Torr Head a distinctive quality. The Torr Head road from Cushendun to Ballycastle is one of the most spectacularly scenic coastal roads in Ireland, a narrow route climbing and descending the series of headlands above the North Channel with continuous views of the sea and the Scottish coast beyond. The road's combination of narrow width, dramatic gradients and extraordinary views makes it a memorable driving experience on a section of coast that rewards those who venture beyond the main tourist routes. The landscape around Torr Head is part of the Antrim Glens Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, and the combination of the coastal headlands, the glens descending to the sea and the agricultural character of the North Antrim uplands creates a coastal landscape of considerable diversity. The view from Torr Head on a clear day of the Scottish coast is one of the most immediate reminders available of the proximity and common cultural heritage of Ulster and the Scottish Highlands.