Outdoor Odysseys

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

Published on 20th December 2024 Estimated Reading Time: 7 minutes

After the energetic tramping of the preceding days, my mind was fixed on an easier day. Though the morning began with cloudy skies, I was determined to make something of the day. My choice became the Gap of Dunloe, somewhere that I only glimpsed from a passing car thirty years before. One particular vista from the narrow valley was immortalised by John Hinde in a jigsaw puzzle that I completed when I was younger. The colours may have been embellished by hand, yet the scene centred on a bridge surrounded by steep slopes, and perhaps with a jaunting car in there as well, comes to my mind’s eye as I write these words.

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

While much of my traipsing around Killarney in 2022 linked me to family outings from thirty years before, the day around the Gap of Dunloe and beyond was where this meme particularly took hold. It echoed a similar meme that took me back twenty years in Scotland. In the main, the latter linked solitary experiences, while the former supplanted communal ones with solitary counterparts. There are times when it is easier to imbibe your surroundings with no one else to distract you. At least, that is how it appears to work for me, anyway.

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

Again, being a year too early for improved bus services again comes to mind. The last bus of the day between Beaufort Bridge and Killarney did not leave so much of the day for being around the Gap of Dunloe given the time of my outbound journey. Services between Killorglin and Killarney cover more of the day these times, especially since route 279 complements Expressway route 40 by going via Killorglin between Tralee and Killarney. The limitation of a bus timetable played on my mind at the head of the gap, even if I could have made the return leg of my walk in the available time.

Between all that, I gained much from clouds breaking in the sky over my head. Quiet lanes led me from the bus stop past Beaufort and some ogham stones to reach Kate Kearney’s Cottage, where horse and carriage tour providers had a terminus. My rambling involved sharing with others using various forms of transport: walking, cycling, motoring and equine. Even so, the unpeopled scenes that you see above were as they came out of the camera, something worth saying in an era when distraction removal has been made so much easier by the advent of Generative AI.

Such is the list of lakes passed on my way that the words “Pater Noster” come to mind in their geographical sense; the string of lakes are akin to beads on the string of a set of rosary beads, thus gaining the Latin words for Our Father, a pivotal prayer in Christianity. Going south, the list builds like this: Coosaun Lough, Cushnavally Lake, Augur Lake and Black Lough, each a “bead” on the “string” of the River Loe. All added interest as I went on my way, as much as the steep slopes rising around me.

Some were walls of rock, offering a sound mirror for passing tourists and their guides. While the delight of hearing echoes may marvel some, the pursuit runs counter to my desire for quietude. Thankfully, I only witnessed this happening lower down the valley and relinquished that experience to encounter the actual delights that sated me.

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

Inasmuch as it appeared that the sunshine would carry on for the rest of the day, that was not to be. It was as I neared the head of the gap that a passing rain shower caught me; it was as if it were trying to steer me into sticking with my original plan. However, the sight of a sign welcoming visitors to the Black Valley sunk my adhesion to that idea. Though Killarney was around twenty kilometres away on foot and I had only trail shoes rather than hiking boots, the prospect was one that I was not to surrender. Travelling under one’s own power adds a certain amount of security anyway; all is under your control as far as your physical condition allows.

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

As the shower faded, I descended into a valley where I had not passed for around thirty years. This time, I was on foot and could soak in my surroundings, scenery, ambience and all else while following another section of the Kerry Way. It is challenging to do that so completely while travelling in a motor vehicle, as I was on the previous occasion in the area. The locality’s church got a visit when I stopped a while on the way to Lord Brandon’s Cottage. Cars were about as well horse and carriage tours, and I marvelled at where the former came from, especially when surprised by one that was behind me. It was not as if I expected a small convoy to pass me.

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

Though the boreen was not without its attendant delights, I was happy to leave all encounters with other traffic after me, at least for a while. Sadly, the sun ducked behind clouds around Lord Brandon’s Cottage to foil attempts at photographic capture of the bridge across the Gearhameen River. In time, amends were made as I approached and passed Upper Lake on the way to Derrycunihy and Galway’s Bridge. Though others were about, much was quiet too, and all was relished.

Crossing the N72 got me onto a track leading towards where I had been the previous day. Going straight ahead instead of turning left for Esknamucky Glen would have landed me back in Kenmare again. Since Killarney was where I was headed, turning left and retracing eastbound steps was my lot. If I had wondered about my trail shoes dealing with a rough path, I need not have worried. Merrell build their wares well, as I had plenty of cause to discover during 2022.

That small cascade where I could not linger the previous day became a lunching stop for me. Humanity and civilisation felt very far away in the blissful spot. Though overcast skies lay over me, that did nothing to take from the respite offered by this uncelebrated and unpeopled spot. Once I got going again, I was not minded to once more climb Torc Mountain after what the previous evening brought me while I was up there. Sticking to the trail sufficed, and I descended by a busy Torc Waterfall. If I was hoping for the place to be quiet and unfrequented at the time of day that I was passing, it was not to be.

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

An Impromptu Venture: Going through the Gap of Dunloe and around by the Black Valley

Another crossing of the N72 ensued, this time for a passage by Muckross House and Muckross Friary that had me being more present with the exercise. It offered a chance to make amends for any self-perceived slight at how I passed through the place the previous evening. There was a chance to pause at the ruined friary too, so there was no rushing. Savouring the delights of a summer evening was what it was all about, particularly when the clouds again parted to release more invigorating sunshine.

That approach pervaded the rest of the way, too. Going via Maurice O’Donoghue Park adjusted my course, so I ventured through Knockreer for what I though might be the last time. As I was moving with less fatigue than 24 hours previously, I wondered if impromptu long distance walking with lighter footwear was paying its dividends. An impulsive decision had granted me more than I would have dared to seek; the length of the route seemed overly ambitious during a spell of planning. This was a day that was memorable in so many good ways.

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