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Need a Flight to Ireland?
Booking your flight to Ireland is simple. You can
use this page to find your flight, book a flights from Bangkok Thailand
to Ireland and and you can check the weather forecast for Ireland too.
SaveFlights.com offers the selection of various airlines with great
savings airfare on one way air ticket, round trip air ticket with
online flight booking. Easy to use, friendly and save.
Guide to Ireland?
Early on a Friday night, spirits in the district
of Temple Bar in Dublin are already sky high. Ancient pubs, complete
with grubby d?cor and cosy nooks and jammed with trendy young folk,
are thick with smoke, pints of Guinness, and a blur of accents from
all over Ireland and the world.
Outside on the cobbled streets, a steady hubbub of boisterous punters
continues well into the wee hours, as the throngs move from pub
to pub, to restaurant, then later, club.
Not since its Georgian glory days has the Irish capital seen this
much spend, spend, spend - and never in its history has it been
such a hotspot on the tourist map.
Mercifully, although Ireland's wave of good fortune has rolled over
the length and breadth of the country, the utterly unique charms
of the 'land of the little people' are still as enduringly captivating
as ever.
In village pubs, surrounded by countryside luxuriant in every hue
of green imaginable, craic (good times) - often to the sound of
a fiddle - is still the order of the evening.
400-year-old castles teeter on the edge of jagged cliffs or emerge,
from misty hilltops, while stone abbeys nestle into lush mountainsides
under dramatic skies, watchful over calm loughs (lakes) below.
Best of all, the locals show no signs of losing their legendary
gift of the gab and impish humour - much to the disarmed bewilderment
of any unsuspecting visitor.
Dublin, Cork and Galway all make great city-break destinations,
but if you can spare more time, the best way to see the Emerald
Isle is to rent a car and explore. For a little country, there's
a lot to see, from the otherworldly limestone landscapes of the
Burren and the rugged beauty of Connemara, to the wild western coastline,
the monastic site of Clonmacnois, and the prehistoric monuments
in Sligo. One thing to remember though - don't forget your brolly.
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