Ireland Cruises 2018
2018 Ireland CruisesCruise ships that stop in Ireland.
Cruise Offers Ireland 2018 & 2019
and P&O Cruises. Have a look at our P&O Cruises brochure here and now directly in your web browsers - starting from 1,417 Euro per user. Explore the'Green Island' in all its diversity on an Ireland tour. It is also known for its kind folk, folksy folk songs and vibrant bar life, not to speak of its powerful literary legacy.
Iconists such as James Joyce, WB Yeats and Dylan Thomas have all found their inspirations in their profound Irish origins, and once you set off on a trip to Ireland, you will certainly get a foretaste of it. There is so much to see and discover here, from the ports of Cork and Dublin to the dozy town of Foynes and Greencastle, where it seems as though times have stopped.
Ireland is the third biggest European isle. Ireland has won the Eurovision Song Contest seven time. The writers James Joyce, Bram Stoker and Jonathan Swift were all Irishmen. In Dublin lives a fourth of the entire people of Ireland. Ireland's oldest public is over 900 years old. At the Guinness Storehouse in Dublin you can find out more about Ireland's most popular exports, or if whisky is more your thing, visit the Ireland whisky museum, where you can find out about the beverage's story and taste one or two dramas.
Alternatively, you can stroll the stairs of the Great on a literature stroll or enjoy the impressive ambience on a Kilmainham Gaol itinerary. The Waterford Museum in Waterford on the southern shore will direct your gaze to the polished crystals. Cobh Harbour, an important navy harbour since the nineteenth centuary, provides simple entry to the town.
See the beautiful scenery of St. Finbarr's Cathedral, unwind in Fitzgerald Park, take in the view of the stream and refresh your own story at the Cork Museum. The Cork English Market is a great place to dine and drink and dance, Barrack Street is known for its large number and diversity of inns.
It is a land that sticks to its tradition, be it the Galician tongue, the Ceilí dance or an old Iranian-balad. To enjoy a little of this wealth of cultural life is a must on every journey here, be it to enjoy a night of local folk tunes in a local club, to cheer on a local soccer game or to explore one of the museum sites devoted to the country's literature heritages.
Ireland is also smoothing the way with a range of present-day culture activities. Theaters, galeries and centers for the arts are abundant, and you will find an ultra-modern rocking group leading the livemusic of a bar, just as you are a tradional pop group. As you stroll through the roads of Ireland you will come across wonderful sculpture and roadworks.
When you know where to look, perhaps with the help of a guide trip, you will find culture delicacies on every nook and cranny.