After the blog post yesterday, sleep came again rather naturally. I think I slept somewhere near sixteen total hours as part of recuperating from the airplanes… but the good news was I was now on local time (mostly)! I woke up early on Sunday morning, and decided to go for a walk around town.
I grabbed my camera, dropped the key at the front desk (they want you to leave the hotel keys here when you leave, and attached a big piece of leather to ensure you do because nobody would want that in their pocket), and said “I’m going for a walk!”. There was definitely water in the air as I stepped outside, but nothing coming down. The day would stay grey and bleak throughout.

A street in downtown Cork, Ireland
I’m staying just around the midpoint of the city south of both river branches, and after crossing onto the north side of the southern river branch I turned east and headed down one of the major streets into the city. Cork reminds me of a much shorter version of New York (the highest building here is some seventeen stories, most buildings are under four stories) mixed with some sort of college town where parties and long nights are the norm. One of the things I did notice was that the typical crowd that would walk by (when it wasn’t just one lone person like me) was a group of 4-5 friends all who had just woken up and were out to find breakfast after a wild night the evening prior. I reached the coffee shop early, and with it not quite open I spent some time on a bench watching the river flow through town.
When the time came, I headed back to the shop only to find it still closed, and then realized it was Sunday and not Saturday (sleeping sixteen hours made me forget I’d already been through Saturday!) and the coffee shop was closed all day! I consulted Google for the next available place, learned it was an hour away from opening, and decided to walk to the North side of the city and grab some pictures of the river there too. I needed to find breakfast, and then I needed to get over to Paddywagon Tours so that I could begin my day touring Blarney Castle and the town of Cobh (pronounced “Cove”) in a prearranged tour that began at 9:30. I took a few pictures, walked all over the North part of town, and then headed back just as the new place was opening.
Breakfast was traditional for this part of the world. I’ll add a picture in case that doesn’t make sense, but it had all sorts of things including white and black “pudding” which is sausages with oatmeal cooked into patties and in general it was very good! There were two different kinds of potatoes and plenty of meat, all I could really ask for in a breakfast. I finished up with about a half-hour to spare and walked to the Paddywagon bus station. After getting my ticket and hopping on the semi-full bus, it was off to Blarney Castle.

Breakfast at Tony’s Bistro
Blarney Castle was one of these tourist settings, and after walking up and into the castle and looking around, I decided not to kiss the Blarney Stone and instead meandered outside the castle for a while and looked around the gardens before heading back into the nearby shops. The bus was parked not at Blarney Castle (due to the lack of parking) but in the shopping complex next door. The complex was built to house the gaggle of tourists that come to visit but also to offer them food and souvenirs once they’d been through the castle tour.
As I walked back from the castle, it had started to sprinkle, and the chairs outside of the restaurant and store were all wet and most of the seats inside were already taken. I meandered through the shops, and after picking up a few items to bring back home with me, and wandering around the restaurant and grounds… I ended up back on the bus forty-five minutes before the tour was supposed to keep going. I’d seen what I wanted to see, I didn’t want to return to the “Biggest Irish Store in Ireland” after already buying things (no Belleek unfortunately, Mom!), and with no place to sit that wasn’t all wet getting back on the bus seemed like the best course of action.

The shops at Blarney Castle

Cobh, Ireland

A small orchestra playing along the water on Cobh, Ireland.