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Thursday, October 31, 2013

Ireland: The Cliffs of County Clare

The peninsulas of County Kerry are lovely enough, and their fame is considerable - so much so that Eileen and I expected our March 2012 tour of Ireland to concentrate on the southwest alone.  However, one of the advantages of being on your own, in a rental car, in a country full of B&Bs, and without specific plans is that you can change your itinerary.  Eileen and I decided, instead of lingering in the Southwest, to continue north and make a circuit around the island. I'm glad we did.  To the north of County Kerry lies County Clare, and its seacoast is, if anything, even more rugged and magnificent than in the Southwest. 

We found this out once we turned North from the base of the Dingle Peninsula and drove down to Loop Head, County Clare's southwesternmost point.  We followed the path out to its famous lighthouse, finding ourselves increasingly high above the sea as we walked.

Common Scurvygrass (Cochlearia officinalis)
 Ocean winds over the point hold the vegetation on the cliff top to a thin, clinging mat, sprinkled with a few hardy plants like Common Scurvygrass (Cochlearia officinalis) -  not a grass, but a member of the same family as cabbage (Brassicaceae) and once, as its name suggests, a popular preventative against scurvy.

Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus)
 From the heights, we could look over the sea at distant pods of Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus)  and the enormous, far-off dorsal fins of the second largest fish in the world, the Basking Shark (Cetorhinus maximus). Eileen even got to see a basking shark leaping out of the water, a sight I unfortunately missed. One of the problems of being on a high cliff, though, is that the marine life  below you is a long distance away.

On the north coast of Loop Head, not far from Kilkee, things became easier.  a stop to see the natural arch near Moveen brought us much closer to the ocean, and when I scrambled around to an adjoining inlet I was startled to see a Basking Shark foraging only a few meters from shore.

Basking Shark (Cetorhinus maximus)
Basking Shark (Cetorhinus maximus)
 The Basking Shark, like the even larger Whale Shark (Rhincodon typus), is a filter feeder.  It finds food by swimming slowly beneath the surface, its cavernous mouth agape, straining small organisms from the seawater through its gill rakers. That was, obviously, what this fish was doing, though all I could see from my perch on the rocks was the outline of a massive body just visible beneath the surface, a protruding dorsal fin, and the occasional glimpse of a tail. All the same, this was certainly my most thrilling wildlife encounter in Ireland.

Basking Shark (Cetorhinus maximus)
Basking Shark (Cetorhinus maximus)
Migrating Basking Sharks – An Liamhán Gréine, "Sun or Sail Fish" –  are fairly common sight along the northern and western coasts of Ireland.   They are docile creatures, and may allow swimmers a very close approach (there are a number of videos on YouTube to prove it). Unfortunately, we have returned the favour by grossly overfishing them, mostly for their oil-rich livers and their fins. This was one of the first sharks to be added to the Appendices of the Convention on International Trade In Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), and one of the particular pleasures of seeing wild Basking Sharkss was in knowing that, as part of the Species Survival Network (SSN), I had had some role in lobbying for, and winning, this protection.

Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus)
Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus)
There were Bottlenose Dolphins at Moveen, too,  not much further from shore than the Basking Sharks.   Their dorsal fins can vary considerably in shape; these are, clearly, two different individuals.

Northern Fulmar (Fulmaris glacialis)
 Even closer than the sharks and dolphins were Northern Fulmars (Fulmaris glacialis)  breeding along the rock ledges.  Though the word "fulmar" means "foul gull" -  a reference to their habit of expressing their displeasure by projectile-vomiting their stomach fluids - these are not gulls,  but the most accessible North Atlantic members of the shearwater and petrel family (Procellariidae).

Northern Fulmar (Fulmaris glacialis)
Northern Fulmar (Fulmaris glacialis)
Northern Fulmar (Fulmaris glacialis)
 I found a good vantage point, and spent a considerable time watching nesting pairs displaying to each other, squawking and nibbling at each other's bills - all part of a day's work maintaining the pair bond.  Eileen had some difficulty tearing me away.

 By now, though, it was getting late in the day, and we had to make tracks if we wanted to see the most spectacular coastline of all: the famous Cliffs of Moher,  some distance further north. they are such an extraordinary sight that  tourist buses regularly make the trips from Dublin, on the other side of Ireland, to see them.

The cliffs,  composed of compacted mud, silt and sand laid down and compressed into rock some 320 million years ago, rise two hundred metres out of the sea.  To come upon them in the late afternoon, and watch the rocks redden in the setting sun, is a remarkable experience.

We spent the night in the nearby town of Doolin enjoying traditional Irish music in a local pub (well, you have to do that sort of thing at least once, and Doolin is famous for it).

The next morning - April 3, 2012 - we continued our journey northward through County Clare.  In the county's northwest we found not cliffs, but dunes running down to sandy beaches dotted with flat, weed-covered stones.

Fanore Beach, where Eileen is standing in this photo, is popular with swimmers - though admittedly not at the time of year we were there!

After Eileen retreated to the comfort of our car, I headed down to the beach to see what I could find on clinging to the rocks before they were covered by the incoming tides.  There were seaweeds, of course…

bladder wrack (Fucus vesiculosus)
bladder wrack (Fucus vesiculosus)
…in particular, lots of Bladder Wrack (Fucus vesiculosus),  its fronds studded  with the pea-sized bladders that give it its name….

Spiral wrack (Fucus spiralis)
…and its relative Spiral wrack (Fucus spiralis).

Common mussel (Mytilus edulis)
Common mussel (Mytilus edulis)
Common mussel (Mytilus edulis)
 Many of the rocks were covered with colonies of Common Mussel (Mytilus edulis), the same species frequently found in wine sauce ("edulis" means "edible").

Common limpet (Patella vulgata)
Common mussel (Mytilus edulis)
Where the mussels hadn't completely taken over the surface of the stones I could find Common Limpets (Patella vulgata).

Little tide pools, in hollows in the rock surface that could hold water, provided shelter for creatures that found not survive exposure to the air (as well as, I'm afraid, odd bits of plastic fish net and other junk).

Common mussel (Mytilus edulis)
Common mussel (Mytilus edulis)
Just out of the water, sea anemones appeared as shrunken gelatinous blobs, their tentacles tucked safely out of reach.

Dog Whelk (Nucella lapillus)
By now the tide was starting to creep in.  I headed back across the sand, pausing to photograph a last few remnants of coastal life: a Dog Whelk (Nucella lapillus), the footprints of a wandering seabird, and a windblown  feather.

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Ireland: The Ring of Kerry

Any tourist worthy of the name who visits southwestern Ireland drives the Ring of Kerry, a 179-kilometre loop road from Killarney around the Iveragh Peninsula, and carries on to the even more famous Dingle Peninsula immediately to its north.  As tourists ourselves Eileen and I could hardly do otherwise, and so the last day of March 2012 found us setting off from Killarney for the long and circuitous drive to Dingle.

The Ring - which is, of course, an invention for tourists but is none the worse for that - takes drivers along some extremely narrow and, at times, steepish roads past magnificent coastal scenery, with nature, history and archaeology thrown in.

I interrupted our drive (while proceeding in the recommended counterclockwise direction) for a bit if coastal botanising.  Seaweed collecting was a popular Victorian pastime for young ladies (even the Queen indulged).  In his Bab Ballad The Rival Curates, W.S. Gilbert makes fun of the excessively  mild-mannered clergyman who "In old maids' albums, too / Sticks seaweed - yes, and names it!"

Bladder Wrack (Fucus vesiculosus)
I choose to collect my seaweed with a camera, and to stick it into this blog instead of an album.  I will, however, name it: Bladder Wrack (Fucus vesiculosus).

Common Dog-Violet (Viola riviniana)
Mosses and wildflowers dot the cliffs above the sea: this is Common Dog-Violet (Viola riviniana).

Thrift (Ameria maritima)
This is Thrift (Ameria maritima), a popular garden plant.  It is highly salt-tolerant, and in the wild is an habitué of seacoasts (as its Latin name suggests).

Kidney Vetch (Anthyllis vulneraria)
Kidney Vetch (Anthyllis vulneraria) seems a rather unlovely name to bestow on these attractive yellow flowers, but the name refers to its medicinal properties (it is also known as Woundwort, and its specific name "vulneraria" means "wound healer".  Presumably a useful plant to have handy around steep and jagged rocks?

Yellow Scales (Xanthoria aureola or X. parietina)
The rocks themselves are more likely to carry lichens: here, mats of Yellow Scales (either Xanthoria aureola or X. parietina) surmounted by upright clumps of Ramalina cuspidata.

Ramalina cuspidata
Ramalina spp. are sometimes, rather evocatively, known as "sea ivory".

From botany to prehistory.  A few kilometres west of the rather oddly-named town of Sneem is a highlight of the ring, the late iron-age Staigue stone fort.  The fort,  which probably dates from the fourth century CE (but may be a few centuries older),  is a large and impressive structure, remarkably composed entirely of drystone. There is no mortar holding its stones in place, and the stones have not been dressed to fit together.  The ring-shaped wall, six metres high and four metres thick, encloses an area thirty metres across.

 It's a handsome place, though perhaps aesthetics could not figure heavily in its design.  its purpose was defense: getting into the fort through a narrow entrance like this one was clearly a one-at-a-time proposition. Eileen is not a large person.

Small Tortoiseshell (Aglais urticae)
 Naturally, even at an impressive archaeological site like this one I could not ignore the little things in nature: this is a Small Tortoiseshell (Aglais urticae).

From Staigue we contend our way, westward around the ring, past more magnificent coastal promontories…

… with  a detour through the town of Portmagee to the north coast of Valentia Island,  the site of one of Ireland's most unusual zoological attractions. Some 385 million years ago, one of the first vertebrates to crawl onto the land left  a trail of footprints in soft Devonian mud. The footprints were preserved when the mud turned to stone, to be discovered only in the early 1990s.

 Trackways this old made by four-legged vertebrates – tetrapods –  are exceedingly rare, and the Tetrapod Trackway on Valentia  is one of only four widely-accepted examples (two of the others are in Australia, while the fourth is in Scotland.   It is the largest of them all.

 As with the vast majority of fossil footprints, we cannot tell for certain what animal made them. This illustration, from one of the display signs at the site, gives something of  an idea of what sort of animal trekked its way over the mud. All of the possible candidates from long ago had substantial tails, and the fact that there are no drag marks on the trackway suggests that its maker may have been underwater at the time, or at least in enough water so that the tail could float free. This would match recent studies suggesting that the first tetrapods may not have been land animals at all, or at least that the reason that their fins evolved into legs may not have been connected with any pressing need to crawl out of the water.

Anyway, the trackway was a fascinating thing to see. Perhaps my biggest surprise was its size: the animal that made it must have been fairly substantial, at least a meter or so long and perhaps more. Why I was surprised I am not sure, because I knew that the earliest tetrapods, animals like Ichthyostega and Tulerpeton,  were at least that size. Perhaps coming face-to-face with evidence of the living creature brought this home to me in a way that even fossils in a museum could not.

From Valentia, we continued our circuit around the Ring of Kerry and turned north to the Dingle Peninsula, passing the  beach made famous in the opening scenes of David Lean's film Ryan's Daughter. After a night in Dingle we headed west again, to the extreme end of this Peninsula…

Thrift (Ameria maritima)
… and to a distant view of the Blasket Islands, seen from Slea Head over a blooming clump of Thrift.

 Here, again, were wild sea cliffs…

Northern Fulmar (Fulmarus glacialis)
...and here, too, I saw my first Northern Fulmars (Fulmarus glacialis) of the trip, roosting on narrow ledges far below.

 Mind you, it pays to be careful when exploring this particular part of Ireland!

The western end of the Dingle Peninsula has its own share of historical/prehistorical sights.  The Dunbeg (or Dún Beag) Promontory Fort dates back to about 580 BCE.   it, too, is a drystone structure, and if it is less spectacular than the Staigue fort its seaside location makes up for it. That may not have been its builders' intention, of course – there has apparently been a lot of erosion along the coast, and the fort is considerably closer to the sea than it used to be. Parts of it, in fact, have been washed away.

 Today, aside from its value as a draw for tourists, Dunbeg seems particularly attractive to the local sheep.

 Not far away is a notable cluster of beehive-shaped stone huts,  of extremely uncertain date despite what the sign says.

 Apparently huts of this type were built from Neolithic times right up to the 20th century. This particular grouping, however, seems to go back to the 12th century at least.

Herring Gull (Larus argentatus)
Herring Gull (Larus argentatus)
Herring Gull (Larus argentatus)
Stone, in this largely treeless landscape, is the most durable and readily available building material. Besides being of use to human beings, stone walls along the coastal road make useful and functional  perches for Herring Gulls (Larus argentatus), who in their turn seem to be singularly unafraid of the  peculiar species that built them.

Herring Gull (Larus argentatus)
Herring Gull (Larus argentatus)
Herring Gull (Larus argentatus)
 This  immature gull seems not to have gotten out of the habit of begging from its parent, though in this case – at least as far as we could see – with little success.

Herring Gull (Larus argentatus)
Herring Gull (Larus argentatus)
Oh, well...

Red-billed Chough (Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax)
Red-billed Chough (Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax)
More exciting from a purely birding point of view were Red-billed Choughs (Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax), smallish, glossy black cousins of crows with long, down curved, bright red bills. In the west of Ireland and on the western coasts of Great Britain these are birds of sea cliffs, though in the rest of their range they are more likely to be found high in the mountains. The Dingle Peninsula seemed to me highly suitable place to see them: my favourite writer (and hero) as a child, the late Gerald Durrell, once owned an extremely tame member of the species which he named, appropriately, Dingle.

Not prehistory, but not quite history either: our circuit of the western Dingle Peninsula took us next to one of the most famous buildings in Ireland, the Gallarus Oratory.  This is an early Christian stone church - not entirely drystone, as some mortar seems to have been used, but similar enough to the older, wilder drystone monuments to just eke out a place in a natural history blog.  It may date from the 8th century CE, but no one is quite sure.  Anyway, it's a fascinatingly odd little thing.

Perhaps this old pillar outside the oratory, marked with a cross, recalls the famous St. Brendan, who may have sailed to America (or somewhere), a thousand years before Columbus, not far from this very spot.