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            Welcome to Been there. Your tips on the places you know - that you love,
            live in or have just visited - are what make this guide.
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                <title>St Kieran’s well, Carna</title>
                
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                <description><![CDATA[Most of the wells and springs in Ireland that were venerated by the Celts, were taken over by the Church and became Holy Wells. One such is St. Kieran’s, just outside the village of Carna. It’s a sad wet place, ferns dripping and brambles ready to snag the unwary. But up here is a cross to St. Kieran. He is supposed to have stayed here on his way to the Aran Islands to convert the heathen. The water from his well is supposed to cure problems with the sight.]]></description>
                
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                <title>Killary Harbour</title>
                
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                <description><![CDATA[The Killary, as it’s known to the locals is the only fjord in Ireland and was gouged out of the rock by the glaciers of the last ice-age. The town of Leenane is close by, where the film The Field was made, and I suspect they are still living on the merits of it.<br><br>The Connemara Princess, a state of the art catamaran will take you on a most enchanting ninety-minute tour of this fjord, complete with commentary, video and very pleasant food and drink. Along the way, sheer cliffs drop to unimaginable depths while sheep cling impossibly to the precipice. Terns plunge into the slate grey surface of the fjord, to surface, most times triumphantly, with fish in their beaks. <br><br>On the far shore, the remains of lazy beds can be seen from famine times, where potatoes were grown, their nutrition gained by the back-breaking labour of trailing seaweed from the shoreline up onto the slopes. Until a tax was levied on it. Lazy beds? A misnomer if ever there was one.<br><br>Apparently during the last war, there was a great storm off this coast and in order to take shelter, two submarines patrolling the Atlantic, put into the Killary. The only problem was that one was British and one was German. And Eire was neutral. In order to avoid what could have been an international incident, the Government of the Republic ignored them, the submarines ignored each other, and the crews met down the pub for the craic during the three days it took for the storm to blow over! Apparently there was a continuous stream of Arthur Guinness’s dray horses delivering from Clifden. Now that’s what’s called a peace process!<br>Only problem was afterwards when the storm was over, and they went out into the Atlantic, instead of sinking pints they started sinking each other.]]></description>
                
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                <title>Clare Island</title>
                
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                <description><![CDATA[Further out past Louisburgh is Roonah Quay where the ferry leaves for Clare Island. Here on the edge of the island is the gloomy remains of the castle of Grainne Uaile the famous pirate queen who was so revered that she was received at the court of Queen Elizabeth l.]]></description>
                
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