u/Few-Award-7181

Hi! My partner and I are traveling to Ireland for the first time during the last week of July. I’m putting our itinerary below, we planned to do a 6 day walking trip in Dingle Way and spend the last two days in Dublin. The day in between had not been planned yet. We are not renting a car just taking public transport and walking.

Day 1: Dublin to Camp for the night

Day 2: hike camp to annascual

Day 3: hike annascual to dingle

Day 4: hike dingle to dunquin

Day 5: hike dunquin to ballydavid

Day 6: hike ballydavid/ onward travel (not sure where to stay for this night as it depends where we go for day 7 before coming back to Dublin)

Day 7: stay in Dublin

Day 8: Dublin

Day 9: fly out

Questions:
- recommendations on sights and towns to squeeze between the end of the hike and going to Dublin?
- Is 6 days to walk dingle overkill? I worry we may get bored and would miss out on other sights but I love the idea of inn to inn walking.

For reference we are in our late 20s, love nature and wildlife, pubs, live music, history, mythology, and just want to have a fun adventure!

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u/Few-Award-7181 — 7 days ago

I’m traveling to Ireland over the summer with my partner. We’re planning to be there for a week, we want to do an inn to inn walking holiday. But are also so fascinated by all the sights of Ireland and there’s obviously no way to do and see it all.

Right now we’re between Dingle Way, Wicklow, and Causeway Coast and Anterim Glens. I’m leaning towards Dingle because it seems more peaceful and may offer a deeper experience to the land and culture. However Anterim seems to be a great way to get lots of sights in, my concern is it would feel less wild with the heavy tourism around giants if causeway? Curious from others experiences what they recommend. If we do Dingle we obviously can’t do the whole thing in 6 days and would have to choose what part. Any recs would be lovely.

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u/Few-Award-7181 — 10 days ago