Tuesday, September 15, 2015

TRAVEL SPECIAL............... Dingle All The Way

 Dingle All The Way


The Dingle peninsula in western Ireland offers a rich cocktail of
 stunning seascapes, world heritage monuments and gastronomy

Foam-flecked Atlantic waves crashing on the shore, precipitous cliffs perched
 above breathtaking panoramas, seaside resorts honeycombed with beaches,
 epic views of the Slieve Mish mountains... The Dingle peninsula in Ireland's
 County Kerry lives up to every postcard cliché.
Given its salubriousness, it came as no surprise that this Gaelic-speaking
western-most Irish enclave is also a favoured Hollywood haunt. It was the setting
for the 1970 Robert Mitchum Hollywood blockbuster Ryan's Daughter, as well
as the Nicole Kidman-Tom Cruisestarrer Far and Away , to name a few.
Dingle is also unadulterated Ireland -quaint, charming, individualistic.
Its individualism manifests itself almost immediately to an outsider in its road
signs.They are mostly in Gaelic, a quiet assertion of the region's distinct Irish
 identity as well as its Celtic ancestry.Much of the peninsula has also been declared
 `Gaeltacht' or Irishspeaking, a concerted attempt at cultural preservation.
“We're struggling to revive our native tongue that was almost lost after centuries
 of English domination,“ says Francis O'Brien, a local shopkeeper. “So Gaelic
 is taught in schools, we speak it at home and make a conscious effort to
incorporate it in our lives as much as possible.“
To the unaccustomed ear, Irish Gaelic sounds like gobbledygook -a cryptic
 language that bears scant similarity to English.Yet it remains a classic symbol
of Dingle's rich heritage, engendering pride among the locals while acting as a
 communitarian glue.

Cultural Potpourri
Broadly, Dingle's culture strikes as a complex product of native Celtic roots and
 sundry external influences. Immigrants, raiders, invaders, Vikings, Normans,
 British and Spanish have all come here via sea and land enamoured of its scenic
 beauty. Inevitably, in the ensuing cultural osmosis, they imbibed much from it
while in turn shaping its lifestyle, music, arts and gastronomy. And of course
 architecture. Dingle is nothing if not an open-air museum peppered with
monuments incorporating myriad styles. Hundreds of archaeological treasures,
 some dating back to the Dark Ages -Celt ic crosses, moss-sheathed Nor man
 castles on rocky head lands, Iron Age forts, church es, ancient sundials and
monasteries -adorn its landscape.
The architectural pièce de résistance is of course the Gallarus Oratory,
 a 1,300-year-old sandstone church situated three miles northwest of Dingle.
 We get here on a rainy, thunderous day, elemental fury amplifying the iconic
 landmark's mystery. Shaped like an upturned boat, the church dis plays ingenious
 craftsmanship as well as longevity remaining intact even over a thousand years
later.
“The church was built with dry-stone corbelling, a technique developed by
 Neolithic tomb makers. It involved laying stones at an angle -lower on the
outside than the inside -to allow free flow of water,“ the guide informed us.
Myths and legends swirl around the oratory. Apparently, there's a curse on
anyone taking a stone from here. That person, it is said, will not be able to
sleep until the stone is returned. Another legend has it that if a person climbs
 out of the building's 18 cm-by-12 cm window, his soul will be cleansed.
A physical impossibility, even for the size-zero segment! There are a raft
of islands off the coast of Dingle that offer remote wildernesses to explore.
Slea Head is one of them. It unrolls as a pastiche of ancient sites, cosy villages
 and leafy expanses offering rich pickings for the camera. The headland that
gives this route its name is marked with a dramatic white crucifix silhouetted
against the rocks and an ocean side scenic pull-off. Unhindered views of the
 Blasket Islands and Dunmore Head loom in the distance.
Being a fishing port, Dingle's Bay offers plenty of sensory stimulation.
Cruise ships depart from here for fishing expeditions deep into the Atlantic.
 There's much to reel in -pollack, mackerel, ling, cod, conger, tope, bass,
dogfish, trout, golden grey mullet, turbot as well as others which flow in
from the Gulf Stream and the Mediterranean.
One early morning, we skimmed the glutinous water body to pluck fruits
of the ocean. The excitement in our ship was palpable as Timmy, a skipper
 who had spent a lifetime at sea, initiated us into the nuances of angling.
A short demo later, we were in business. The first half hour proved uneventful.
But then suddenly, just as sighs of disappointment were becoming audible in the
 group, a member landed a five-kg pollack eliciting whoops of joy from all. After that, sporadic cheers rent the air each time somebody landed a fish, with Timmy capturing the joyous moment in a selfie.

Catch and Cook!
Post the cruise, we headed to The Boatyard restaurant located just across the
marina. Within an hour, the chefs rustled up a tasty feast for us from our catch
. Coupled with a chilled glass of chablis, it was food for the soul. Apparently,
this is a ritual at all of marina's eateries under their `catch and cook' policy.
They cook the catch the tourists bring in and serve it to them. Win-win if you
 ask me -while the punters save on fish money, the eatery gets business.
Pubs are an intrinsic part of Dingle's social scene, pretty much like the rest
 of Ireland.These outfits are also where you get to feel the real pulse of the
 place. The atmosphere is made all the more convivial with traditional music
 -usually local musicians congregating and playing impromptu. A fiddle, a
flute or a tin whistle, a guitar, a bodhrán (goatskin drum), and an accordion
 are all that are needed to get a session going. The result is engaging and
interactive entertainment -accompanied by much clapping and thumping
of feet -that draws all into its joyful embrace.
Locals claim that Dingle, with 52 pubs for its 1,300 residents, has more
watering holes per capita than any town in Ireland. They also proffer
delicious grub, mostly traditional dishes such as Irish stew, soups and
 chowders. Some even offer specials like coddle (bacon, pork sausages,
 potatoes, and onions stewed in layers), collar and cabbage (boiled bacon
 coated in bread crumbs and brown sugar, then baked and served with cabbage),
 boxty (potato pancake filled with fish, meat, or vegetables), and champ
(potato mashed with milk and onions).
Dingle balances the competing imperatives of medieval and modern with
 bursts of cosmopolitanism. This is most apparent in the downtown area
where street façades mimic the cheery and colourful doors of the national
 capital city of Dublin. Boutiques showcase pretty hand-made lace and
crochet apparel, musical instruments, utensils and other bric a brac.
Atmospheric cafes welcome visitors with warm croissants at breakfasts
 and croquemonsieur at lunchtime. There is organic coffee as well as
hundreds of types of tea served with homemade cakes and scones.
Generally, Dingle's food is a manifestation of the triumph of local culture.
Fresh fish is supplied from the local fishing boats while meats and vegetables
 are sourced from regional farmers. We try some of these at Out of The Blue,
 a funky blue-and-yellow, fishingshack-style restaurant on the waterfront.
The menu here proudly announces `No chips'.There's a fervent devotion
instead to fresh local seafood. So much so, that if the pernickety chefs don't
 like the catch, they don't open. There's no set menu either. Inventive dishes
 showcasing the freshest of produce change daily and include steamed crab
claws in garlic butter, beer-battered fish or panseared scallops flambéed in
Calvados. Who needed chips?

Fungi -the Famed Fish
Dingle has a “national hero“ -Fungi -the dolphin which has been delighting
 tourists for over three decades. It is believed that Fungi was born in the
 mid-1970s, and washed up ashore to the Dingle harbour in 1984. Although
 dolphins are known to be clannish, usually travelling in pods, Fungi loves
the company of humans and spends his days swimming with the local boats
 and tourist tours.
Today, a whole industry has spawned around the bottle-mouthed Fungi with
 tourists rushing to visit him. Dingle has even honoured its celebrity resident
 by commissioning his statue on the pier. Three years ago, when there was a
scare that Fungi had died, local authorities sent out frantic search parties to
locate the fish. After breathless live coverage on local channels, normalcy
soon returned when it was discovered that the fish was alive and well.
When we got to the pier to say hello to the famed fish, it took its own sweet
 time to pop up. But when it did, its showmanship was endearing.
Fungi frolicked and jumped and splashed water all over with child-like glee.
He was warm and personable, much like the locals themselves.
Neeta Lal

ETM6SEP15

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