More scenic than Powerscourt and far emptier than the Aran Islands this fishing village on the Beara Peninsula is winning over visitors this summer

You don’t come here for spectacle so much as for stillness. The mountains lean into the sea, the harbor holds its breath, and the streets sound mostly of footsteps and gulls. What draws people isn’t a checklist; it’s the space between things — a margin wide enough for weather, for wandering, and for wonder.

Stand on the pier at dawn and you feel the place decide itself: a net flicks light, a kettle sighs in a cottage, a trawler’s engine rumbles awake. “By nine, we’re all sorted,” a retired skipper told me, “and the day just opens.” That’s the whole thesis here — not grand drama, but a clear, salt-edged calm that knows how to last.

Where sea and mountain clasp hands

On the Beara coast, peaks fall straight to water, and the harbor at Castletownbere curls like a sheltered palm. Out beyond the moorings, Bere Island sits watchful, keeping the swell gentler than you’d think so far west. Turn inland and the Caha range throws a shoulder of shadow over lanes stitched with fuchsia and fern.

The views feel raw yet somehow tidy: ridgelines get brushed by cloud, fields are combed into haphazard greens, and the light never settles for the same shade twice. A garden might be manicured, but this is scenery that sharpens you awake.

A working harbor with a gentle rhythm

This is a true fishing town, not a stage set with souvenir nets. Stainless tables glare in the midmorning sun, forklifts beep, and boxes of gleaming hake are lugged like treasure. You’ll see crews swapping jokes as matter-of-factly as they swap ropes, and cafés pouring strong tea for hands still salty from the quay.

Yet the pace stays measured. Old drystone walls lean into the wind, shopfronts paint the streets in patient color, and nobody hurries unless the forecast does. “It’s busy,” a café owner smiled, “but it’s the kind of busy you still breathe through.”

Walks that write themselves

Trails spool out in every direction, from laneways matted with wildflower edges to cliff paths that swing a bell of Atlantic blue. Pick a section of the Beara Way and you’ll earn panoramic silence that feels curated just for you.

Hop the ferry to Bere Island, where looped walks trace old batteries, unpeel sea history, and drop to coves with the cleanest pebbles you’ll ever skim. Drive farther west and the Dursey cable car — Ireland’s last — hums you over racing tide to a headland where wind does all the talking. Check operating times; the schedule is weathered by weather, as it should be.

Little rituals worth keeping

Make time for tiny, repeatable pleasures — the sorts that stitch a trip to your memory:

  • A dawn stroll along the pier, counting cormorants like slowly moving commas.
  • A ferry hop to Bere Island for a looping walk and a thermos of sweet, strong tea.
  • A swim in a sheltered cove followed by hot chips eaten too fast to stay hot.
  • A late-light spin to Dunboy Woods, where castle ruins brood and robins tut from the green.

“These days I paint more sky than boats,” a visiting artist laughed. “There’s just more sky to get through.”

Eating, sipping, lingering

Seafood is the quiet star. Chowders arrive steam-plumed and honest, studded with whatever the morning’s run brought in. Try a lemon-slicked plate of hake or a simple crab sambo, and let the Atlantic make its point.

Bakeries here do serious comfort: cardamom buns with a maritime swagger, brown bread that tastes like someone’s aunt insists you take another thick slice. Pubs glow at twilight, pouring pints with the patience of tides and hosting tunes that feel picked from the night like bright hooks.

Staying the night (and then another)

Accommodation tips to the intimate end — family B&Bs with startlingly crisp linen, rooms that frame the harbor like a moving painting, cottages where the stove clicks and the rain applauds the roof. You won’t find hotel sprawl; you’ll find hosts who know which lane the foxes favor, and which headland will catch the last burning stripe of sun.

If you’re eyeing high summer, book ahead but keep your plans loose. Weather shifts are invitations here, not problems, and the best day often rearranges itself with a single gust of light.

Getting there and getting around

From Cork city, allow close to three hours, skimming bays and looping over passes that behave like scenic speed bumps. From Killarney via Kenmare, you’re looking at two-ish hours, marked by roadside shrines and opportunistic sheep. Buses and Local Link services do exist, but a car unlocks the sidelong lanes and when-the-mood-strikes stops.

The Ring of Beara road is narrow, civil, and gorgeous — take it clockwise if you prefer cliff to mountain on the passenger side, or anticlockwise if you like your drama reversed. Either way, patience beats any horn, and every lay-by is an excuse to let beauty have the right-of-way.

Why it’s landing with travelers now

People are craving wildness that still feels held — places where you can hear your own footfall, taste the point of the sea, and watch weather wash a mountain in under a minute. This village gives you that, with the bonus of real work happening at the waterline: not a museum of maritime life, but the daily fact of it.

Come for the hush, stay for the habit. One morning becomes two, and before you know it, the gulls have learned your walk and the baker guesses your order. That’s how you know a place has quietly won you over — you start planning your return while you’re still standing on the pier.

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]