On a budget
Wild Honey Inn (00 353 65 7074 300,http://power-shoot.cba.pl/index.php?site=forum_topic&topic=11711cheapjordanshoesfreeshipping.com/bolg;?
wildhoneyinn.com) is an excellent gastropub-with-rooms on the edge of the town. Enjoy a first-rate dinner in informal surroundings: seafood is a particular strength. Double rooms from ?64, including breakfast.
Day one
6pm
Arrive at Gregans Castle Hotel at Ballyvaughan, an 18th-century manor house on the edge of the Burren, and settle in to enjoy the hotel's excellent hospitality. Begin with a stroll around the gardens, perhaps, and admire the marvellous views across to Galway Bay, before drinks in the Corkscrew Bar and a gourmet dinner of Clare Island salmon and Burren lamb.
10.30am
Breakfast – a locally smoked kipper, perhaps? – and then it's time to say farewell to Gregans. Follow the road (in fact, progressively more narrow roads: take the N67 coast road south from Ballyvaughan, before turning onto the R480 and then L1014) into the remarkable Burren, with its white limestone pavements and profusion of wild flowers. Take your time to admire this landscape – unique in Ireland – stretching in all directions.
[img]/content/dam/Travel/Destinations/Europe/Ireland/West%20Coast%20Ireland/Clare-ireland-travel-AP7655.jpg?imwidth=480[/img]
The Neolithic portal tomb at Poulnabrone
Credit:
AP/FOTOLIA
At Carron, follow the signs to the?Burren Perfumery, which sits in the very heart of the Burren. In summer, it's surrounded by limestone and green fields; in winter, the fields become a turlough - one of Ireland's seasonal vanishing lakes. At the Perfumery, wander through the working complex of perfume, soap and blending rooms, admire the elegant, colourful products, and visit the extensive herb gardens. Don't forget to sample 'Man of Aran', the Perfumery's signature blend. Finish off with a good lunch in the charming tea rooms, complete with outdoor, rose-fragranced patio area.
2pm
Drive south from the Perfumery (following the L1014, R480 and R476) to Kilfenora. If you have time, explore the excellent?Burren Centre,
cheap jordan shoes, which offers a glimpse into the ancient past of this region, before lacing up your walking boots and meeting up with Tony Kirby of Heart of Burren Walks. The walks begin at the Burren Centre. Tony proposes his own itinerary through the landscape – simply follow his lead and enjoy a superb walk blending history,
cheap retro jordans, flora, poetry and ecology. Allow 2-3 hours for the full experience.
6pm
Drive from Kilfenora to the old Victorian spa town at Lisdoonvarna, and check into the?Wild Honey Inn (see above), an excellent gastropub-with-rooms on the edge of the town. Enjoy a first-rate dinner in informal surroundings: seafood is a particular strength.
[img]/content/dam/Travel/Destinations/Europe/Ireland/West%20Coast%20Ireland/Cliffs-travel-ireland-AP128.jpg?imwidth=480[/img]
The Cliffs of Moher at sunset
Credit:
ALAMY
10pm
If you have the energy – I know, it's a big if after a long day – then pop along to?The Roadside Tavern for music and craft beer in this long-established bar, which is something of an institution here in historic Lisdoonvarna. Peter Curtin produces a small but fine range of brews: try the Burren Black - a rather impressive change from a certain other dark Irish beer...
Day two
10am
After an early breakfast at the Wild Honey Inn, drive the short distance (on the R47

west to the coast, arriving at the?Cliffs of Moher before the tourist hordes arrive. The cavernous interpretative centre is good and comprehensive, but of course the main event is the spectacular clifftop scenery. Fingers crossed for a clear day, but even under cloudy skies, the panorama of ocean and sky are tremendous.
12.30pm
Retrace your steps north along the coast, pausing in Doolin for a good lunch at?The Doolin Café (try the roast beef bap),
jordan shoes, before returning for a quick stroll around Lisdoonvarna. Drop into the excellent Burren Smokehouse and stock up on superb smoked salmon, mackerel and other local delicacies. And now, loaded with goodies and filled with fresh air,
cheap jordans free shipping, it's time to wave farewell to the Burren. Though a good way of stretching out this goodbye is by taking the spectacular N67 coast road north towards Ballyvaughan and distant Galway, en route witnessing the Burren rocks meet a pounding sea.
3pm
The Burren landscape comes to an end at Ballyvaughan, where it begins to tame and the village's seafront is quiet and pretty. Take a walk on the village pier before repairing to the Tea and Garden Room, just across the road, for good coffee and a slice of passion fruit tart. Alternatively, press on another few miles to the north to Seamus Heaney's dramatic Flaggy Shore ("And some time make the time to drive out west,/Into County Clare, along the Flaggy Shore,/In September or October, when the wind/And the light are working off each other"). The rocky scenery is the big draw here, but consider rounding your Burren tour off in style with a visit to?Cafe Linnalla for some fresh ice cream; the buttermilk variety with clotted cream and white chocolate chunks is a winner.
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When strong winds prevented filmmaker Jo Ruxton from sending a submarine to her chosen recording location off the coast of Marseille,
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The crew had just one chance to document evidence of the build-up of rubbish on the seabed for her award-winning film
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She needn’t have worried. As the submersible reached a deep trench one mile from the surface, the team were confronted by a junk yard of human debris. Tyres, plastic water bottles, synthetic netting, unexploded bombs and even an old parachute emerged from the gloom.
The world’s oceans are drowning in human rubbish. Each year more than 300 million tons of plastic are produced globally, and 10 per cent will end up in the sea. It is estimated that there is now a 1:2 ratio of plastic to plankton and, left unchecked, plastic will
outweigh fish by 2050.
Not only is the floating haze of scum unsightly, it is also swallowed by marine animals that cannot digest it. Chemicals leach into the water, and it has been shown that even humans who eat seafood ingest
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Ruxton, who has previously worked as a producer on the
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There are thought to be three million pieces of microplastics in the world's oceans
Credit: Plastic Oceans Foundation
Yet there are signs that the tide may be starting to turn, and Britain could be leading the way.
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Warwick University spin-off company
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The team at Recycling Technologies
Credit: Recycling Technologies
The goal is to roll out similar plants across the world and even install small versions on board dredgers, which can trawl the water, sucking up plastic waste and turning it into fuel to power the ships.
Plastic is notoriously difficult to recycle - and only 12 per cent of household waste is reprocessed. The rest is either burnt or goes to landfill. The new system aims to turn dumped plastic into a valuable commodity.
“This could really be a game-changing technology,” said Adrian Haworth, of Recycling Technologies.
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“Eventually we hope to be able to mine landfill sites for plastic, and we’ve had a discussion with a dredging company, with the idea that they would collect the plastic in ports and turn it into fuel on board.”
The US Navy has plasma torches on board to recycle waste
The US Navy and even some cruise ships already operate recycling systems, which take the waste of crew and passengers and heat it to temperatures of more than 5,000C to turn it back into a reusable form.
The plasma torch technology is powerful enough to convert plastics, metals and glass into granules or gas.
The Canadian company behind the system, called
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Some countries, such as Germany, have legislation over plastic. Since 1991, companies that produce it have been responsible for dealing with their waste, and most supermarkets contain state-of-the art bottle banks that scan bar codes so packaging can be returned to manufacturers.
Bottle banks in Germany scan barcodes and send packaging back to manufacturers
Credit: Plastic Oceans Foundation
In 2013, David Katz, a social entrepreneur, founded
The Plastic Bank in Lima, Peru, an organisation that pays locals in coastal communities for their plastic bottles, then recycles them, calling the result "social plastic". Further banks have since been established in Haiti and are due to roll out globally. The company has released the blueprints for its plastic recycling device so that others can follow suit.
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Dredgers are needed to trawl seas collecting waste
Credit: Plastic Oceans Foundation
Ruxton, the producer of
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“You go out now and look in the ocean and it is just so prolific. People need to realise that plastic is not disposable. We don’t need all this packaging.”
Seabirds are increasingly found with stomachs full of plastic which they can't digest
Credit: Plastic Oceans Foundation
A recent study estimated that nine in 10 of the world’s seabirds have pieces of plastic in their guts.
The southern hemisphere, around New Zealand and Australia, is particularly badly affected because of major polluters such as Indonesia and Thailand.
Some albatross and shearwater have been found to have nearly 3,000 pieces of plastic - up to 8 kg - in their stomachs, the equivalent of a human eating 12 pizzas worth of food. It can’t be digested, so the birds eventually die through lack of nutrition.
In countries such as Tuvalu, where plastic waste washes up by the ton onto shores, locals suspect links with fertility problems.
Professor Susan Jobling of
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"I hope it will make people really think about how they use plastics and make them wonder, for example, if they really need a plastic drinking straw or a single-use plastic bottle,” said Prof Jobling.
A dead puffer fish among human debris
Credit: Plastic Oceans Foundation
There are even worries that what is visible could be just the tip of the iceberg. About 70 per cent of all ocean debris sinks down from the surface, leading experts to fear that huge rubbish dumps are accumulating unseen at the bottom of the ocean.
Plastic becomes brittle in seawater because it’s subjected to sunlight, waves and salt. It breaks up into minute pieces and mixes with plankton, so tiny particles of the plastic are sucked up by marine life.
View more!
Craig Leeson, director of
A Plastic Ocean, said: “Plastic is the most durable material man has ever made, and every piece ever produced is still on the planet in some shape or form.
“If you take plastic water bottles as an obvious example, one of the major problems is that people are using plastic water bottles thinking they are doing themselves a favour, when they are actually damaging their own health.
“The irony of this is that the water in most of these bottles sold to people is not as good as their own tap water.”
Divers are increasingly reporting human rubbish on the bottom of the ocean
Credit: Plastic Oceans Foundation
David Jones, executive adviser on the film, added: “Technology can only do so much. We need to shift people’s perspectives.
“We need to make plastic valuable again. At the moment, the plastic around a water bottle is far more valuable than the water inside it, but people don’t see it like that.
“It’s bizarre that we have to pay someone to take away what is essentially a valuable commodity. Plastic is worth about ?400 a ton, but we just throw it away.
“With global warming, we probably have to accept we’re in a predicament and try and mitigate it, but I think with plastic we are still clinging on to the cliff by our fingertips and we still have the chance to pull ourselves back. We have the capacity to do it.”
A Plastic Ocean can be downloaded from iTunes and screenings are taking place throughout the country.
View more!