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Beara Way

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Your Self-Guided Hiking Tour Includes:

  • Top-Choice Accommodation
  • Detailed Itinerary, Maps & GPS Tracks
  • Baggage Transfer
  • Breakfasts
  • Insider Tips
  • 24/7 Support
  • Access your tour details & documents on the go with your designated Hillwalk Tours account
from €1159 per person*
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  • Day 1 Arrival in Glengarriff

    From your point of arrival, use the public transport information we provide to make the journey to Glengarriff.

  • Day 2 Glengarriff - Adrigole

    11.5 Miles / 18 Km 6-8 Hrs 740 Metres

    Quiet roads and forest trails take you through the beautiful woodlands of the Glenariff Forest Park into the remote Coomerkane valley. From there, a steep climb brings you to a ridge of the Caha Mountains that guides you towards Sugarloaf Mountain, where the Beara Way reaches its highest elevation at 560m. Enjoy splendid views over Bantry Bay before descending into the village of Adrigole.

  • Day 3 Adrigole - Castletownbere

    11 or 14 Miles / 18 or 22 Km 6-9 Hrs 630/700 Metres

    Today you pass famous Hungry Hill – a mountain immortalised in Dame Daphne Du Maurier’s epic novel of the same name. After hiking around Hungry Hill the trail follows a route along the southern slopes of the Slieve Miskish Mountains to the charming fishing port of Castletownbere. Along the way, you can enjoy views of Bere Island and Berehaven, one of the finest natural harbours in the world.

  • Day 4 Bere Island

    9 or 15 Miles / 14 or 24 Km 4-6/6-8 Hrs 400/500 Metres

    A short ferry ride across the sheltered harbour will take you to Bere Island where walkers are spoilt for choice with routes of varying length and difficulty. You will find some of the highlights of the Beara Way here. From sites of rich military heritage from various eras to the spectacular scenery of the Slieve Miskish and Caha Mountains on the mainland.

  • Day 5 Castletownbere - Dursey Sound

    14.5 or 17 Miles / 23 or 27 Km 6-9 Hrs 800 Metres

    A hike along century old country roads takes you past a Bronze Age stone circle and through some forestry before it climbs up into the Slieve Mishkish Mountains. You can catch a glimpse of the northern side of the peninsula before the trail climbs once more and then descends past an old disused copper mine into the brightly coloured village of Allihies. From there a stunning coastal walk in truly spectacular surroundings takes you right out to the western end of the Beara Peninsula, where the Atlantic Ocean pounds the coastline.

  • Day 6 Dursey Island

    9.5 Miles / 15 Km 4-6 Hrs 1804 ft / 550 Metres

    Take a trip on Ireland’s only cable car which will bring you across Dursey Sound, a narrow stretch of water with a very strong tide and reefs of rocks. With just 6 permanent residents, little motorised traffic and abundant wildlife, Dursey Island is a walker’s paradise.

  • Day 7 Dursey Sound - Eyeries

    15 Miles / 24 Km 6-8 Hrs 720 Metres

    You retrace your steps back as far as the colourful village of Allihies. From here, a lovely mountain path brings you past reminders of the local copper mining past and across the northern slopes of the Slieve Mishkish range. The trail now follows the side of the mountains for a bit, with great views over Coulagh Bay, before it descends towards the coast near the picturesque little village of Eyeries.

  • Day 8 Eyeries - Lauragh

    17 Miles / 27 Km 7-9 Hrs 350 Metres

    Start today with a beautiful coastal walk along the shores of Coulagh Bay, with the waves crashing onto the shore next to you. Pass a rock formation, known as the ‘The Hag of Beara’, one of the oldest mythological creatures of Ireland, before an old boreen takes you past Lough Fadda and onward to the tiny village of Ardgroom. Minor roads are now followed by a scenic hike on a rugged mountain path across Drung Hill. Continue on towards Cashelkeelty stone circle, dating back almost 3,000 years, before you finish in the tiny hamlet of Lauragh, hidden away in a large old forest.

  • Day 9 Lauragh - Kenmare

    15 Miles / 24 Km 6-8 Hrs 660 Metres

    Today’s hike will lead through fields and valleys and across a number of hills. About half way you will visit the Gleninchaquin Valley with its waterfall and the mystical Uragh stone circle – an undoubted highlight of the entire Beara Way and, on a quiet day, possibly one of the most tranquil and beautiful places on Earth.  From here you climb to another mountain pass before descending towards the bustling market town of Kenmare.

  • Day 10 Kenmare - Glengarriff

    15 or 17 Miles / 24 or 27 Km 7-9 Hrs 470/550 Metres

    You have a choice of two routes for the first half of today’s hike . Either follow an old boreen through the Dromoghty River Valley and across a mountain pass or follow minor roads through the pretty Sheen River Valley. Quiet roads then guide you to a remote, ancient pass between Esk and Barraboy Mountain. From there the route descend into the beautiful Glengarriff Forest Reserve – a woodland area rich in wildlife and packed with lots of different walking trails. These trails guide you to charming Glengarriff, situated on the shores of Bantry Bay, where the mountains meet the sea.

  • Day 11 Departure from Glengarriff

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