12 miles of coast and 700 feet of cliff above the sea — this Sligo loop is Julyʼs must-do walk

Salt on the air, wind in the heather, and the Atlantic humming its deep song — this is a walk that resets July to summer. Twelve purposeful miles fold into a single loop, with moments that lift you more than 700 feet above the water, where the horizon does what it always does in Sligo: it expands.

Why July makes this path sing

Long days mean long light, the kind that turns sea spray into glitter. Wildflowers shoulder the path in loose, painterly drifts, and the ocean keeps time with a patient, percussion-like swell. “It’s the kind of day that rewires your calendar,” says a local walker, eyes on the far blue line where Donegal and Sligo shake hands.

July also brings reliable breezes, tempering the sun so the miles feel generous. Terns knife the air, sheep crop the edges, and you move through a collage of cliffs, beaches, and back-lanes that reads like a county-sized postcard.

The shape of the day

Start early, when the light is clean and the roads are quiet. The loop works beautifully clockwise: harbor to headland, strand to dunes, lanes to lough, and back to the sea’s bright edge. You’ll trace scalloped coast, climb to wind-skinned bluffs, then soften into grassy tracks where stone walls hold the day in place.

“Don’t rush the high part,” advises a seasoned guide. “Give the cliffs their minute — the ocean is telling a story, and it’s better heard than seen.”

Highlights you’ll replay later

  • Cliffline moments where the Atlantic looks almost still, as if hold-your-breath quiet were its secret shape.
  • A long, level strand that invites an unbuttoned pace — footprints beside you, gulls drafting your shadow.
  • A bluff-top vantage where the land tilts toward the west and the sky feels briefly more room than roof.
  • A green corridor of boreens where foxglove and fern make a soft, dappled theatre.
  • A final sightline back to your starting harbor, boats stitching the water like loose, silver thread.

Route notes, light on your feet

From the village, follow the curve of the harbor to meet the headland path; the wind here has a bright, metallic edge. Watch for waymark posts and keep an eye on any livestock or fencing. The ground is mostly firm, but cliff-top sections can be exposed and occasionally boggy after rain.

The midway miles relax along beach, where the Atlantic hands you a flat, meditative runway. If the tide is high, step back through dunes and machair, where orchids and thrift perform a small, intricate ballet. Inland, quiet lanes offer a handrail back toward the sea, with hedges that tick and hum with life.

“Hike it like a conversation,” says another walker. “There are questions on the ups, and the flats give you the answers.”

Safety, tides, and small wisdoms

Cliffs demand respect. Keep a clean margin from edges and mind the gusts that arrive like quick, invisible hands. Check tide times before committing to long strand crossings; the best days match a falling tide with blue overhead.

Footwear matters: grippy soles for rock, forgiving cushion for lanes. Bring layers for that Sligo version of summer — sunny, then moody, then gloriously sunny again. And remember that wind steals water faster than you think.

Pack once, walk happy

  • Light waterproof, warm layer, hat and sunscreen
  • 1.5–2 liters of water and salty, honest snacks
  • OS map or offline app, charged phone, small first-aid
  • Respectful dog control, leave-no-trace bags
  • Curiosity, patience, and time to linger

Wildlife and the quiet theatre around you

Look for diving gannets, their white arrows vanishing into blue with a neat, decisive splash. In the short turf, larks unwind their fine, silver songs; along the dunes, butterflies stitch flickers of color from thrift to vetch. If luck turns your way, you may see porpoise or the slow notation of a dolphin’s back, just off the break.

Food, pints, and soft landings

Back in the village, salty skin and tired legs meet hot tea or something colder. A chowder with proper bread, or chips kissed with vinegar, tastes amplified after wind and distance. If you’re staying on, pub windows glow with that particular west-of-Ireland hospitality, where every corner seems to keep a story warm for you.

Little moments that stay longer than the miles

There’s the instant when the cloud lifts and the cliffs step forward, newly etched. There’s the way your shadow goes long on the strand, stretching into someone taller, steadier, more certain. And there’s the turning back toward the harbor, where a boat bell marks the hour and you realize the day has quietly turned to gold.

“Take the time it takes,” a local said, half-smiling into the wind. “Out here, the shortest way home is the long way round.”

Liam Kennedy avatar

Leave a comment

Contact details

Address:
Farmers Forum,
36, Dominick Street,
Mullingar,
Co. Westmeath,
Ireland

Phone:
+353 (0)44 9310206

Or email us:

For technical issues please check out our FAQ's page or email - [email protected]

For general Queries email - [email protected]

Request to add event to our Calendar - [email protected]

Send us your mart reports - [email protected]

Suggestions and feedbacks - [email protected]

News Items / Press Release - [email protected]

To Advertise on Farmers Forum - [email protected]