This was the lovely view from our little house in Northern Ireland in the little village of Ballintoy on the Causeway Coast.
That's it just right of the fence - a three bedroomed cottage. Very comfortable for our two week stay.
That's the village of Ballintoy , the bigger white buildings further right - two good pubs, no shops and a small cluster of houses.
When we arrived the field behind our house had just been ploughed and planted (with potatoes I think) but it was all green with new growth by the time we left.
It was so lovely for these two city dwellers to look out towards the sea every day and soak in this lovely vista.
Below that church was the little Ballintoy harbour reached by a pleasant walk along the clifftops or alternatively through the village and down the lane.
This was the view looking back the other way as you walked along the clifftop path.
The road past the church zigzagged down to the harbour past a couple of cottages with glorious views back towards Mull (I think ?) and a few other islands layered behind one another .
There were always a few tourists about but not too many at this time of year
The coast line about here is dotted with these little harbours though they are not used much these days I think. The sea is littered with rocks and safe passage would not be easy.
Our walk home back towards the village took us past a lovely tea shop called the Red Door just down a little farm lane where this delightful purple flower grew out of the rock wall.
The Red Door is the only tea shop for miles and hidden in a quite obscure position. ( a sign on the main road points it out - a RED door is a very good idea in the circumstances !)
Needless to say we became regular visitors and the friendly owner- operators soon became new friends and gave us all sorts of good tips on places to go as well as some interesting insights into how the "Troubles" had impacted their lives.
Cheers.
Fabulous spot.
ReplyDeleteIt was !
DeleteHey there, Helsie....great photos.
ReplyDeleteMy paternal grandparents came from the township of Armagh, County Armagh...Northern Ireland. They came to Australia shortly after marrying and settled in Rockhampton.
I also have Irish ancestors Lee but they were convicts from the south !!Funny but my grandparents also lived in Rockhampton, they had 14 children !!
DeleteWow! Re your grandpartents, Helsie. My late older brother and I were both born in Rockhampton. (We moved to Gympie, the original hometown of our maternal grandparents, when I was three years old and my brother six years old...and there we spent our childhood and teenage years).
DeleteMy mother, although born in Gympie, relocated, with her parents, our grandparents, to Rockhampton when she was a toddler. Her younger brother, our uncle, was born in Rocky. They lived in Elphinstone Street, North Rockhampton.
Our paternal grandparents lived in Allenstown...over near The Salesyards.
An interesting post - nicely illustrated. Once again your holiday research and planning paid off and once again I applaud your adventurous spirit Helen - discovering places where ordinary tourists from Down Under would never go.
ReplyDeleteNone of that "just passing through" travel for us YP. We do like to get to know a place and relax a bit too.
ReplyDelete