Traveling with dog to Ireland? |
| Right now I live in North America and I am moving to Northern Ireland. We bought in America and we fell in love with it..so now we want to take it with us when traveling to Ireland. I checked every ... |
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What is the logic reason why people are calling Saint Patrick, St Patty? |
The people living in Ireland do not do it.
But some other countries do.
You could always shorten it to Pat.
Why Patty?
I asked in a different section.
They said P... |
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This is for irish people? |
| do u no any good cheep accomidation close to ... |
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Spending Birthday/anniversary in Dublin. What to do? |
Any suggestions? Budget options only plaese.
Its at the end of July. would like something romantic if possible, and very very cheap. Additional Details Thanks for the great ... |
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How much do groceries cost in Ireland? |
| I know it seems silly to ask.. but I've googled already and I can't find out how much things like bread, cheese, canned soup, fruit, vegetables, and snacks are in Ireland, I want to go on a ... |
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I want to go to Ireland next year with my family. Where should I go? |
| My kids will be 9 and 12. We want to see castles and lots of scenery. We also want to see famous landmarks. I was thinking about only staying a night or two in one town. What do you think?... |
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What are the chances of primary school teaching points going down by 2012? |
| I heard it's now gone up to 475, I want to do it but it's loads of points, What are the chances? Will it most likely go up? What's the lowest and highest it could possibly be? I'm ... |
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A question about vodafone (ireland) ... ? |
are there any special deals that i can avail of? like free texts or calls or anything?
much <3... |
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Charming village next to the city? |
Dear all,
every summer I plan a get together for my family and my parents. Ireland is one of the places all of us would love to visit!
My husband and I would like to see the architecture ... |
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Is Ros na Ruin a true portrayal of people in the West of Ireland? |
| I've watched Ros na Ruin a few times and I just wonder do people from the West get angry at being portrayed like that. Everyone seems to be arguing all the time, backstabbing, sleeping with ... |
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Do i need any specific visa to go to dublin? |
| I am not an eu passport holder, and i am on a working holiday visa.... |
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Phoebe Finch |
Public Transportation in Ireland? |
My best friend and I are planning a trip to Ireland and trying to figure out how much we need to save for the trip. Is it best to rent a car and drive ourselves around the sites or can we count of taking busses or public transportation? |
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haggesitze
 |
Apart from Dublin, public transport in Ireland is a catastrophe.
If you don't want to be confined to the railway line Cork-Dublin-Belfast (you can go to Limerick and Galway as well http://www.irishrail.ie/your_ticket/fares_enquiries.asp) you'd have to rent a car. Train fares are fairly high, e.g. Cork to Dublin 5 day return 64 Euro, so for 2 people it might be actually cheaper to rent a car, even so. Don't do that as long as you are in Dublin, parking is extremely expensive and traffic is just a single jam for hours on end.
In my experience it's quite hard and annoying to try to get to the nice small places like Baltimore (West Cork, one of the loveliest places on the planet) by public transport. |
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Puzzledirishgirl
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I agree, public transport in Ireland is bad. Dublin you can managhe alright as you have buses, luas and the DART but after that it is pretty bad. Not sure where you are coming from but if you are not used to roundabouts etc you might want to think about public transport. You can use it but you may find some places hard to get to. |
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Follower_of_Raphael
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Yes, rent a car. Many sites like cliffs of moher are not easy to visit without a car. The buses are unreliable. |
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slipstreamer
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Outside of Dublin you will likely need a car, I took trains around, not sure where you are going so cannot really recommend...but the rail isn't bad, you can reach many places by train. Starting off in Dublin, trains from Heuston and/or Connolly station will get you to major towns throughout Ireland/the Republic and Northern Ireland. But, honestly, to see everything you want to, you will need to rent a car at some point.
Irish traffic/driving is very different for an American (I am assuming here) from driving on the opposite side of the road, to the roundabouts. Take it slow if you do rent a car. You'll be fine - lots of people do the same thing when touring. |
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Louise 1.(",)
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Public transport is really good in ireland. Well its really good in Dublin, there is the luas, the train, buses and its not expensive. If you are going to Dublin, it would be best not to rent a car because the traffic is really bad and petrol is expensive. the public transport is cheap aswel. Im not sure about anywhere else is Ireland because i live in Dublin.
Hope i helped,enjoy your trip :) |
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