Glenariff Forest Park Antrim
Glenariff Forest Park in County Antrim is the largest and most spectacular of the Antrim Glens, a deeply incised river valley descending from the Antrim Plateau to the sea at Waterfoot on the Antrim coast, its combination of wooded gorge, waterfalls, river scenery and coastal views making it the most rewarding of the nine glens for which this section of the Antrim coast is celebrated. The forest park covers approximately 1,000 hectares and provides a network of waymarked walking routes of varying difficulty from the gentle riverside waterfall trail to longer forest and glen rim walks with panoramic coastal views.
The waterfall trail is the most popular walk in the park, following the Glenariff River through a gorge of considerable drama past a series of waterfalls, including the impressive Ess-na-Crub and Ess-na-Larach falls, in a landscape of mossy rock, ferns, oak, ash and willow that creates an atmosphere of green, dripping intimacy quite unlike the open moorland plateau above. The combination of the rushing water, the enclosed gorge and the quality of the woodland makes this one of the most atmospheric short walks in Northern Ireland.
The poet Thackeray, who visited the glen in 1842, described it as Switzerland in miniature, an enthusiastic Victorian comparison that captures the quality of scale and drama relative to the surrounding landscape if not the geological character. The glen has been a tourist destination since the nineteenth century when the combination of the Antrim coast road and the steamer services from Glasgow made the area accessible to visitors from mainland Britain.
The forest park facilities include a visitor centre, café and well-maintained paths and picnic areas that make it an excellent family destination in the Antrim Glens Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.