They left Ennis on a damp March morning with a map, a kettle, and no hard plan. Nine months later, their camper smells of coffee and sea salt, and the road still feels new. “We kept saying, one more cove, one more lighthouse,” laughs Maeve, tucking a wool hat into the camper’s netting. “Now we can’t imagine stopping.”
What started as a modest loop along County Clare’s own coast became a full-tilt immersion in the Wild Atlantic Way’s bruised skies, green hills, and long ribbons of tarmac. “You think you know the west,” says Tom, checking tyre pressure, “and then a side road takes you to a place you’ve never heard of that feels like home.”
Freedom mapped in pencil
They travel with a rough rhythm: drive until a view demands a pause, boil the kettle, watch the weather think. Their timetable is a tide, not a clock. “The camper gave us permission to linger,” says Maeve. “We can follow a skyline, not a schedule.”
Loop Head called them first, a lighthouse pinned to Atlantic foam. Connemara kept them second, peat-smoke and silver bog pools widening the silence. In Donegal they learned the grammar of wind, while Achill Island taught them to read light. “We started walking small, then we walked far,” Tom grins. “Kilometres just happened.”
The art of living small
Their camper—nicknamed “Síle” after the old Irish namesake—holds less than their attic, but more than they need. Pots nest like seabirds; blankets double as curtains. Every item earns its keep, and clutter gets brisk goodbyes.
“We keep our luxuries tiny,” says Maeve. “A good pan, a book lamp, fresh herbs in a jar beside the sink.” The interior is all hooks, soft light, and a map scarred with pencil stars. Each star is a memory they can park inside.
People stitched into the shoreline
“Coastal towns know how to chat,” says Tom. “A mechanic in Belmullet found our leak and refused payment. ‘Buy a dinner in town,’ he said.” In West Cork a baker wrapped warm soda bread like a letter and waved them down the street. Near Dingle a fisherman taught them to read a swell and gifted a mackerel, glittering like a small storm.
They traded recipes at campsite tables, drifted into sessions where fiddles flew like swifts, and learned that “good luck” travels easily between strangers.
Weather as a companion
They learned to love the forecast’s moods: high wind means cliff choirs, low cloud means inland wander. “The rain isn’t a stop sign,” Maeve notes. “It’s a different lens.” On gloomy days they hunt stone circles and drink soup in pubs oiled by stories.
When the sky splits, they sprint shoreward, shoes in hands, feet in foam. “We do meteorology by ear now,” Tom laughs. “If gulls fly low, we brew tea and wait.”
Edges that changed them
Malin Head sharpened their senses; Skellig Michael glowed on a far-off line like a prayer in rock. The Burren, close to their roots, felt newly alien—orchids in limestone, hares like quick brushstrokes. “You think wild means empty,” Maeve says, “but it’s packed with signs if you slow down.”
They learned to measure days by tides and trails, not emails. A good day is a quiet engine, a steady boil, a horizon that moves as you breathe.
How they make it work
The couple didn’t stumble into ease; they built habits that keep the road gentle:
- Dawn starts and short hops to dodge dusk stress
- Picnic lunches and local shops to meet neighbours
- One splurge night each week—hot shower, linen sheets
- Regular service checks, small repairs, no heroic ignoring
- A shared rule: if one says “stop,” they stop
Not done yet
They meant to be home by late summer, and then by early autumn, and then by a date that never quite stuck. “We’re not running away from anything,” Tom says. “We’re running toward what keeps us awake.”
In a lay-by above Keem Bay, they watched a seal surface like a thought they’d almost lost. On the Beara Peninsula, they counted switchbacks like rosary beads and whispered at a sunset that wouldn’t end. “We’re retired,” Maeve smiles, “but that just freed our curiosity.”
What the road taught them
Patience, for one: the kind that lets a heron finish its breakfast, or a tractor claim the lane. Attention, too: to tides, to people’s names, to the way a place changes with a cloud. And thrift, not as stinginess, but as a way of finding value in the simple.
“The camper is our window,” Maeve says. “The coast is the book. We’re just slow readers taking notes in the margins.”
Tonight, they’ll angle the van into a small windbreak, level the chocks, and let the kettle argue with the hush. Tomorrow might be a cliff path, a shy café, or a rain-soaked museum with a cheerful guard. Whatever comes, they’ll make it roomy, one mile at a time, leaving soft footprints on a long, salt-stitched line.
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]