Travel the Greenery of County Cork, Republic of Éire – Ireland

County Cork: Historic garden and cottage at blarney castle and gardens center in Cork, Ireland


Historic garden and cottage at blarney castle and gardens center in Cork, Ireland

I am delighted to be in County Cork, in the truly green Republic of Eire – a place I lived in for roughly 5 years some years ago – up in the Northern wilds of County Donegal, mainly.

The Constitution of Ireland of 1937, provides that Ireland (or Éire in Irish) is the official name of the State and following the enactment of the Republic of Ireland Act of 1948, in 1949, Ireland became a Republic.

Following on from a fellow prophet’s recent posting on the green initiatives of New Jersey, I’m curious to see exactly where Eire is on the green scale of actual practical initiatives in greening up its environment, as well as being a green and wet environment (although no Irish drizzle yet: we seem to have arrived on the only day of Irish summertime!).

My first observation is the lack of plastic bags being carried by shoppers in the streets. About 5 years ago, the Irish Government brought in the world’s first legislation to reduce and eventually ban plastic bags. Activists and Governments around the world (including the Knesset) have been watching the Irish example to see how the political action would work in practise.

Over 4 days, carrying out random observations in Cork City centre, I saw fewer plastic bags being carried than I expected to. They seem to have been replaced by either cotton bags or one off paper bags from the store, which is better, but not the ideal solution.

In a health food store, I was shocked to see the customer in front of me being offered a plastic bag. I asked the store manager how the scheme was working, and she felt the current charge of 22 cents (a cent is the small change of the Euro, which would be roughly 1 NIS, or thereabouts) was working, and, apart from the elderly gentleman ahead of me – a regular customer apparently – was deterring shoppers from taking plastic bags on every trip. Would that it were the environmental incentive that deterred them, rather than the economic!

cork skibbereen, adrigole cork

A labyrinth in County Cork

Despite arriving after 2 weeks of heavy rain across Eire, and visible greenness everywhere I looked, water use and conservation is also a huge issue here. I learnt that due to a water poisoning scare recently, householders are rushing to get expensive filters fitted to their taps.

Most of the populated areas of the country have moved away from household or community wells to group schemes, where the price of water is regulated, and the system is supposedly monitored, until agricultural runoff gets into the system, and the filters clog up.

The Irish are very mobilised on such issues – an example is the group Sustainable Clonakilty (Clon is a fair sized town in County Cork), which campaigns on water, climate change, urbanisation and green education amongst other issues.

Transport is another key issue in the Republic. The so-called ‘Celtic Tiger’ or economic upswing in Eire over the past 10 years has brought business and tourism to a previously poor Country. The airports in Cork, Shannon (near Limerick) and Dublin particularly are expanding, and flights bring in thousands of people daily for work and pleasure. The advent of cheap air travel means a daily commute between Cork and London is possible – but at the long-term expense of a once pristine environment.

ferry in county cork

Take a slow ferry in County Cork

Getting there by ferry is fun and slow, and also has an environmental impact, with oil and carbon spewed out at sea instead.

With a population in the Irish Republic of 4 million, Ireland has a smaller population than Israel, but is spread over a larger land mass. Island life brings certain unique environmental and economic issues to a community, and it’s clear that the Irish Government has pioneered some green initiatives, and yet is slow to respond in other cases.

For instance, the agricultural lobby is huge in Ireland, and has a lot of power and influence inside the Dail (Irish Parliament).  On my desk I have a review copy of ‘The Environmental Movement in Ireland’ by Liam Leonard, a distinguished green academic and activist at Galway University. Comments and links welcome from Ireland, Israel and beyond!

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James Murray-White
Author: James Murray-White

Growing up in a green village outside Cambridge, UK gave me an eye into the natural world, and years later, after being an actor, dramatist, weary traveller and anthropologist, the environment fires me up the most – and the need to save and nurture it… while we live within it. I now live in the UK, with partner Tania and 2 pesky cats – writing and filming the world (slowly making a documentary about the Bedouin situation) take up my creative time. I do this while growing things organically and composting profusely take up the remainder. James can be reached at james (at) greenprophet (dot) com.

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4 thoughts on “Travel the Greenery of County Cork, Republic of Éire – Ireland”

  1. Hello James. Thanks for reviewing the book. Ireland has indeed seen its share of community mobilisations, as the country made the transition from a rural agrarian society to an industrialised economy in the last 40 years. With the current economic crisis, perhaps an opportunity is emerging for the introduction of truly sustainable policies. The Green Party are in coalition government here as junior partners, so its possible. Neo-liberalism and mega-profits were never sustainable in any event. Less consumption may slow climate change, and Ireland might stay green.
    Nice webpage. The New edition of Ecopolitics Online Journal is available from http://www.ecopoliticsonline.com with a range of international articles on environmental issues. Regards, Liam.

  2. james says:

    Hey Sophie, how strange – what a small world! CTB is one of my very favourite places in the world – we’ve got literary friends we must put you in touch with – theres a writers retreat, and I’m sure you already know Dzogchen Beara….. be in touch afore you go, would be great to meet & discuss all this!

    and Chris, thanks for being in touch. There’s lots of info on our site about cycling & green places to stay in Israel. Explore our site, and be in touch if we can help more. Enjoy your cycle tour of Israel!

  3. Sophie says:

    Hi James I am moving to Castletownbere down on Bantry Bay, Co. Cork after Succot will you still be there. I recommend a visit, incredible scenery.
    By the way Ireland’s recycling facilites are fantastic, everybody has learnt to wash and seperate all their rubbish, I hope Israel can follow their lead.

  4. Chris Collins says:

    How exciting. Last Nov 1, 2007 I was in Cork and Kinsale. It was dry and nice. I bicycled all around for two days. Ironically, this Nov 1, 2008 I am visiting Israel. I’ve come to your site looking for information on bicycling around.

    In Ireland I stayed at a beautiful Organic/vegetarian bed and breakfast.
    http://www.gortnanain.com/
    Lucy and Ultan really took care of me. (and acquired a bicycle for me to use while there.)

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