Destination Golf Ireland 2016 | Page 10

Crack is not an Irish word. The spelling “craic” oddly enough is a translation of the word for fun that emerged from some of the mid-Atlantic slang that permeates Irish culture. It turned full circle that a translated spelling of a Hiberno-English word is being used to describe what happens in Irish pubs. Where do you find the craic/crack? There are over 4,000 pubic houses, throughout every city, town and county, where informal Irish music is served up alongside pints and meaty sandwiches. So where to start? TEMPLE BAR: Irish people might sneer a bit at Temple Bar but when they need to bring the cousin from Boston out on the town, this is where they head: to the Left bank of Dublin which is, appropriately, on the right bank, in a series of small medieval streets between the River Liffey and Dame Street, the 18th century artery of the city, connecting the houses of parliament and Trinity College with the ancient Liberties. The site was designated as a bus station in the 1970s, which meant that a nest of 8 businesses with short leases, restaurants and alternative music spots sprang up under the raised noses of the city fathers, who had to listen to the city mothers and the city children and establish a bohemian quarter there. There are two dozen pubs hosting live music, depending on which boundary you chose and they have a rotating series of fiddlers and uileann pipers playing sessions of two hours’ duration, with balladeers and fiddlers Dave Houston, Christy Davy, Sharon Hussey, John Mulvihill, harpist Amy McAllister and uileann piper Dan O’Sullivan amongst them. DOOLIN: You could not find it on the map, but the fame of a tiny village street in west Clare, with three pubs and a ferry departure point for Inisheer, spread so rapidly in Germany in the 1970s that writer Cormac MacConnell