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Facilities within the Property

 
Breakfast
We proud to offer a rich and hearty full Irish breakfast. Our guests find an extensive selection of jams, yoghurts, fresh fruit, cheese, sausages, fried or boiled eggs, bacon and so on. Take your time and enjoy this experience to the fullest!
 
Garden: the B&B has a pretty and intimate garden, where guests can sit comfortably, read a good book or enjoy a cup of tea. In front of the house there is a spacious area to park your car.
Staff: very polite, the staff can help guests providing information about attractions in the Dingle Peninsula.
 
Property Facilities Summary:
Private Parking 
 
Nearby Facilities
 
There are so many things to see, to do, to explore, to experience on the Dingle Peninsula... from almost 2,000 archaeological sites, to more walking than you could fit into a year, to Fungie, a bottlenose dolphin who's been living at the mouth of Dingle Harbour since 1984, to a day spent on the Blasket Islands.

Dingle Oceanworld Aquarium:
Dingle Oceanworld is a state-of-the-art aquarium overlooking Dingle Harbour and the Dingle Marina. It is Ireland's premier purpose-built sea life centre and sanctuary for the rare fish life often found stranded along the shores of the Dingle Peninsula. The overall theme of Oceanworld reflects the sea culture of West Kerry and indeed, the whole western seaboard of Ireland. It also highlights the historic interface of West Kerry's people with the wild Atlantic Ocean through the mists of time. At Dingle Oceanworld, visitors can walk through an undersea tunnel and see the creatures of the deep... feel the fish life in the aquarium's touch tank... come face to face with artefacts of the Spanish Armada... and follow the footsteps of St. Brendan the Navigator on his voyages of discovery across the Atlantic Ocean. Oceanworld also boasts an excellent cafeteria, gift shop, and full facilities for wheelchair visitors.

The Blasket Centre:
The Blasket Centre in Dún Chaoin, at the western end of the Dingle Peninsula, celebrates the Irish language and the distinctive character of the people who once lived on the Blasket Islands. A main focus of the Centre is the unique literary achievements of this isolated community off the Kerry coast which was evacuated in 1953.

Pubs and restaurants:
The specialities of the region are what attract the modern traveller, and none more so than the food and the cooking of the region. This is why regional tourism is the tourism of the future, because it allows the visitor to truly understand and appreciate the complexity and inimitable character of a region.
The cooking of the region, and the chance to meet the people who prepare the food, allows the visitor to confront the culture intimately, in the most delicious way possible.