WHAT TO DO IN AND AROUND WILD ATLANTIC WAY

Map |
Achill Island

Achill Island

Achill is the largest of the Irish islands, it lies to the Northwest of the Corraun Peninsula to which it’s connected by a small bridge and reminiscent of the hornet, it too flies without regard to its limitations.

Clew Bay

Clew Bay

The ancient amphitheatres were built in the form of an incomplete circle, the opening of which was occupied by the stage, the centre of attention and connection point between the two ends of the tiers. Clew Bay inspires this exact same feeling: the city surrounding it, in place of the amphitheatre, holding hands, all eyes turning toward the ocean that winds between the many islands of the basin (365 in fact, just like the days in the year according to legend), as if in a common connection.

Erris

Erris

Protection signifies a common and ancient attribute - love. We protect what we care about, what we think is important, that which has a place in our hearts and we do so with words or with silence, with our hands, our body or with just a cover.

Killala Bay

Killala Bay

Killala
Killala Bay is formed out of the estuary of the River Moy and straddles counties Mayo and Sligo, forming part of the Wild Atlantic Way route. It has long been a place for famously good salmon fishing, a fact that became internationally known in part due to the second home of the Republic of Ireland’s football team manager, Jack Charlton.


Killary Harbour

Killary Harbour

Killary Harbour (An Caoláire Rua) is the Republic’s only glacial fjord which slices the mountains north and south of it, creating a natural border between counties Galway and Mayo. Stretching 16 kilometres in length, it runs 45 metres deep the unspoilt scenery has a magnetic calmness about it.

Cross Beach

Cross Beach

Louisburgh
Enjoy Cross Beach with your family!

Old Head

Old Head

Louisburgh
For an easy stroll, while observing life in a rock pool, the beach at Old Head provides a lot of interest and has a satisfying cliff walk and the best woodland habitat around, with excellent bird-watching opportunities.

Roonagh Quay

Roonagh Quay

Louisburgh
Clare Island and Inishturk can be easily reached by regular ferry from Roonagh Pier, near Louisburgh and the boat journey is part of the adventure.

Blacksod Lighthouse

Blacksod Lighthouse

Mullet Peninsula
Blacksod Bay may seem like an unlikely place to have a connection to a strategic World War II operation, but this remote lighthouse on the southern end of the Mullet Peninsula in Erris, on the edge of Europe, far from the action, played a pivotal role in one of the greatest dramas of the 20th century--the D-Day landings in France.

North East Mayo & Moy Valley

North East Mayo & Moy Valley

There is something profoundly literary about the life of a salmon. Born into the waters of a river, they head to the mouth of the river at a young age, fattening up and preparing for the changes in water salinity that they will experience as adults.

North Mayo

North Mayo

the feeling that explodes in your chest when you reach the mouth of the River Moy, in Killala Bay, at the most eastern point of the North coast of the County, A feeling that can be described as a wave, a force that permeates through you, created by the interaction with nature and one that whilst not visible, reverberates inside you like the truest of truths.

Southwest Mayo

Southwest Mayo

The fjord is almost a peninsula in reverse, the sea claiming its right to be habitable as it moves forward into the unknown. From the sea, the land perches on the horizon.

Wild Atlantic Way

Wild Atlantic Way

The term was coined in 2011 by Taoiseach, Enda Kenny, but the route was always there. The Wild Atlantic Way (WAW) spans from Ireland’s most northerly point, Malin Head in Donegal to its most southerly, Mizen Head in Cork, taking in Leitrim, Sligo, Mayo, Galway, Clare, and Kerry along the way. 2,500 kilometres of stunning coastline, staggering cliffs, windswept lighthouses, Blue Flag beaches and national parks make this a special route.