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Scenic Point in County Mayo

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Achill Island Mayo
County Mayo • F28 D2F9 • Scenic Point
Achill Island off the northwest Mayo coast is the largest island off the Irish coast, connected to the mainland by a bridge and offering some of the most dramatic and most unspoiled Atlantic landscape in Ireland. The combination of the great sea cliffs of Croaghaun, the magnificent beaches of Keem Bay, Dugort and Keel, the bogland and mountain walking and the character of the Irish-speaking Gaeltacht communities that have traditionally inhabited the island creates a destination of exceptional variety and emotional power. The Croaghaun cliffs on the west coast of the island are among the highest sea cliffs in Europe, rising approximately 688 metres from the Atlantic in a near-vertical face that rivals the more famous Cliffs of Moher while being far less visited and far more dramatically exposed. The approach on foot across the open bog of the island's western section adds to the sense of arriving at an edge of the world, and the views from the cliff top along the Atlantic coast in both directions are among the finest in Ireland. Keem Bay at the western tip of the island, enclosed beneath the great cliffs and accessed by a spectacular clifftop road, provides one of the most beautiful and most sheltered beaches in Connacht, its clear turquoise water and fine sand creating an Atlantic beach experience of exceptional quality in a setting quite unlike the more accessible beaches of the east coast.
Croagh Patrick Mayo
County Mayo • F28 YH21 • Scenic Point
Croagh Patrick, known as the Reek by the people of Mayo, is Ireland's holiest mountain, a quartzite cone rising to 764 metres above Clew Bay in County Mayo whose annual pilgrimage on the last Sunday of July attracts tens of thousands of pilgrims in a tradition of Christian devotion that has been maintained for over 1,500 years. St Patrick is believed to have fasted on the summit for forty days in 441 AD, and the tradition of barefoot ascent that many pilgrims maintain connects the modern observance with the penitential practices of the earliest Irish Christianity. The view from the summit of Croagh Patrick across Clew Bay, with its extraordinary collection of approximately 365 drumlin islands created by the last Ice Age glacier, and across the full extent of Connacht visible on clear days from the Mayo mountains to the Galway coast, is one of the finest in Ireland. The ascent, a serious mountain walk of approximately two to three hours, involves considerable height gain on a rocky path that becomes a pilgrimage route of intense focus on Reek Sunday when the summit is crowded with walkers of all ages and degrees of fitness. The modern visitor centre at the foot of the mountain provides interpretation and the small chapel near the summit provides the spiritual focus for the pilgrimage. The view of Croagh Patrick from the south shore of Clew Bay at sunset, the perfect cone reflected in the still water of the bay, is one of the most frequently reproduced images of the Mayo landscape.
Westport Mayo
County Mayo • F28 WP00 • Scenic Point
Westport is the most attractive and most complete planned Georgian town in Ireland, a market town in County Mayo on the shores of Clew Bay whose combination of the octagonal market square, the tree-lined Mall following the canalised Carrowbeg River and the surrounding streets of Georgian town houses creates one of the finest examples of eighteenth-century Irish urban planning. The town was designed by James Wyatt in the 1780s for the Browne family, later Marquesses of Sligo, whose Westport House provides the great Georgian mansion at the heart of the estate. The town's position at the foot of Croagh Patrick, the sacred mountain of Ireland's patron saint from whose summit the views encompass the entirety of Clew Bay and the islands that fill it, gives Westport a pilgrim dimension alongside its secular charms. The annual Reek Sunday pilgrimage to the summit of Croagh Patrick on the last Sunday of July attracts tens of thousands of pilgrims who ascend the quartzite cone in the tradition that has been maintained since St Patrick fasted on the summit in 441 AD. The Great Western Greenway, a 42-kilometre off-road cycling and walking trail from Westport to Achill Island following the former Midland Great Western Railway line through the Connaught landscape, provides one of the finest greenway experiences in Ireland. The combination of the town's Georgian quality, the pilgrimage mountain, the greenway and the extraordinary bay landscape makes Westport one of the most rewarding towns in the west of Ireland.
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