The Guardian Australia

Sharks, murder and a neolithic ‘spaceship’: the mysteries of Ireland’s new national parks

- Vic O'Sullivan

Ireland’s National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) has had a busy time in recent months, adding another two sites to its portfolio of six national parks since last September. First, it announced the state purchase of 223 hectares (551 acres) of land on the Dowth

Hall estate in County Meath. Then, on Earth Day in April, it unveiled its first marine park – 566 hectares centering on Corca Dhuibhne – the Dingle Peninsula – and including Conor Pass, a vertiginou­s narrow laneway that whips around the contours of Mount Brandon in County Kerry.

Brú na Bóinnenati­onal park

Just an hour from Dublin, County

Meath’s low-lying fertile land, dappled with fern-green hills, has produced bountiful harvests since the dawn of civilisati­on. To the north of the county, on a bend of the River Boyne, lies Brú na Bóinne (Boyne Valley), a place where several millennia of human endeavour still scar the landscape with a series of massive cairns, castles and ancient relics.

This is now Ireland’s seventh and smallest national park, following the purchase of a large tract of historical land bounded by two miles of the River Boyne, known as the Dowth Hall estate (or demesne). The park will also include the existing state-owned plot that contains Newgrange and Knowth passage tombs to become a vast, ancient necropolis along with dozens of satellite passage graves and Europe’s largest and most prominent concentrat­ion of megalithic art. Dowth will bring with it the addition of splendid mansions clustered close to prehistori­c sites.

Sites within the parkWith so many places to explore in Brú na Bóinne, it’ll take a full day to discover them all. If

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia