Sunlight spills across polished rails as the vintage train breathes back to life, its brass fittings catching the early glow and its timber carriages releasing a faint, sweet scent of varnish. County Kerry wakes to the whistle, and with it comes a slower, more tender way to cross a landscape of sea breezes, stone walls, and faraway hills. This season’s reopening invites travelers to look, linger, and gather a gallery of moments—a journey best told in pictures, stitched together by steam, salt, and sun.
A whistle back to life
On the platform, volunteers in caps and sleeves rolled to the elbow polish final brackets, their tools clicking in rhythm with the soft hiss of steam. The locomotive—compact, sturdy, and slightly impish—shuffles forward, couplings clinking like teacups in a saucer. A child points at the plume, which billows into the sky like a hand-drawn cloud on blue paper.
“We run at the pace of the countryside,” says one longtime volunteer, tugging the brim of his cap. “If you miss a view at one bend, you’ll catch a better one at the next.” The guard’s lamp lifts, the whistle peals, and metal slides on metal with a lullaby smooth as butter.
Along the edge of the Atlantic
Out the window, gorse sparks yellow, and ragged hedgerows unspool like ribbon along low fields. Far off, a haze of peaks outlines the sky—mountains not so much looming as lingering, like an old story retold at the hearth. The train drifts past salt-tinted marsh, weathered stone cottages, and cattle turned like coins in soft light.
When the line bends toward the coast, a breath of Atlantic air ushers through the carriage: iodine, heather, and the faint whiff of iron and ash. Seabirds scribble white strokes against the horizon, and the track seems to tiptoe between water and pasture. Every mile is a postcard, but the kind you’d rather keep than send.
Inside the carriages
Inside, the world becomes wood and fabric—warm-toned panels, moquette seats that spring with cheerful give, brass latches smoothed by generations of hands. A conductor clips tickets with a satisfying snip, leaving scalloped confetti of paper on the floor. “It’s a moving time machine,” murmurs a returning passenger, tracing a rivet on the window frame. “You don’t just travel through Kerry; you travel through memory.”
Conversations soften to murmurs and the carriage settles into its own cadence—the sway, the thrum, the rhythmic consonants of an old engine doing new work. Cameras rise, then lower again, as riders remember to simply look, letting the windows do the framing.
Frames to seek
- The first curl of steam over a morning platform, pooling like cream in coffee before lifting to the sky.
- Sunlight cutting through a carriage corridor, making dust motes float like slow snow in liquid gold.
- A curve along low bogland, rails shining with silver as reeds bow in the wind.
- Faces at the open window, cheeks pinked by spray, hair blown into laughter.
- The engine at rest—warm metal, cooled ash, and the last shy drip from a polished valve.
How to ride this summer
The summer timetable favors unhurried days, with weekend and holiday runs that match long light and soft evenings. Booking ahead is wise, especially on bright Saturdays when families arrive in flocks and the platform hums like a market. Pack layers—a shawl for breeze, a light raincoat for sudden showers, and stout shoes that laugh at puddles.
Snacks are welcome, but local cafés near the station do a brisk trade in scones and fresh bread; pairing a ride with a village wander turns a morning into a gentle day. Accessibility varies by carriage and platform, so it’s best to check ahead with the team who can advise on steps, seating, and extra assistance. “We’ll find a way,” a station hand promises, tapping the side of a luggage trolley. “That’s the spirit of heritage rail.”
People and the line that binds them
Between departures, the yard fills with voices and spanners, with stories handed down like tools. A volunteer points out a rivet stamped decades ago, proud as a medal on a lapel. Another smiles at a soot-smudged photo on the office corkboard: “We keep it running so the place keeps talking.” The engine’s small firebox glows like a pocket sun, and the day seems to fold more kindly around those who tend its heart.
Out on the line, farm gates click shut, dogs wag, and cyclists lift a hand as the train passes with courtly grace. You don’t measure this journey in kilometers, but in stitched-together scenes—a heron arrowing across a ditch, a hayfield turned to green velour, a sudden tunnel of hawthorn and shadow.
Why this ride endures
In an age of quick routes and noiseless screens, the old train offers a different ledger: time paid in patience, refunded as clarity. It rescues skills—lathe, lamp, and lever—and returns them to daily use, not glass case. It calls strangers into light conversation, and invites the county to see itself in moving panels of sea and field.
“Every summer we open, and every summer someone remembers,” says a soft-spoken driver, wiping the rim of a gauge. The whistle sounds again—bright, hopeful, familiarly new—and the carriages roll into their next small story, ready for anyone who wants to ride by ear, by eye, and by the old, brave beat of the rails.
Where is it?
Good question
A long article but the writer doesn’t say where this railway is located. So it’s a somewhat pointless read!
We are none the wiser
Name? Website? Phone number? Location?
Where is this?
Where is this mystical railway???
Would be nice to know where this is.
Where is this railway?
Where in Kerry is this situated and what is the route?
I live in kerry, i dont know where this is.
Some info would be helpful, location, times, costs . Or do I just turn up to kilarney railway station and wait?
It would be really helpful if you told us exactly where in Kerry this wonderful train journey is so we could go and experience the joys of it as you have written in your article .
From reading this I’m certain it’s the Lartigue narrow gauge railway line from Listowel to Ballybunion, it’s not stated where it is but the mention of Atlantic breeze I’m certain it’s it. It’s a museum in Listowel.
Its not listowel but there is a fab monorail and museum. https://lartiguemonorail.com/
Sorry Margaret, The Lartigue replica is a moorail, look it up
Is this another Kerryman joke?
Train can be got from platform 9 and 3/4
Why go to such descriptions and won’t mention where this train is!??? Are you trying to succeed in business?? What kind of marketing is this???
Well said Roger. Heaven forbid the article would tell us where it is???
Like most articles like this one you have to read for half an hour to find the hidden message except in this one it dos’nt exist
This is just like the article about the best caravan site in Ireland, which also failed to mention its name and location details. So where is this railway, how to book etc. ?
This train journey sounds awesome BUT it’s still a mystery!! Where can you take the journey from & timetable plus cost please.
Incredible that the author completely forgot to add the most essential information about his article. Proof reading is an essential part for journalists.
I want to take my grandchildren but what do I put into Google maps. I was at sea for years with a great man who said the new watches were great and tell you everything except the time.
I would love to book a trip on this railway and from reading all the other comments I believe I’m not the only one.
So to the article writer I ask.
PLEASE GIVE US MORE INFORMATION
What a lot of waffle, & no information.
I think that I brought my children on this journey about 30 years ago. But has been closed since. Insurance etc. Tralee to Blennerville I would guess.
Where does it depart from?
How often?
Where does it go to?
How long is the journey?
How much does it cost?