
Lettergesh as usual was spectacular. We were able to pitch right on the headland overlooking the bay and as usual caught the sunsets as the sun disappeared behind Inishboffin. Amazingly each evening brought a completely novel end to the day.


By now the weather was indeed beginning to turn and Tuesday brought rain and a drop in temperature with wind speed picking up from the sea. The past few days of sunshine had allowed us to wind-down: a couple of canoe trips along the coast echoed by bike rides preventing us from totally vegetating.
The boat trips were interesting: as usual giving a completely different perspective to the shoreline. We navigated as far as we could up the river as the tide was coming in; the contrast between the river landscape and the estuary was quite striking. Emerging later into the big sea was "fun", the wind was up and sizeable breakers caused us to surf-in - usually when we did not want to; battling with the wind, tide and the waves was hard-work.
The other trip was less eventual as the wind was quieter. We went for quite a trip round as far as the next beach - which we had reached by bike the previous day. The route required us to navigate round several headlands which forced us into deep water. Nonetheless, the clarity of the water was amazing - a deep green populated by hidden rocks wrapped in kelp, shoals of fishes and a host of tiny jellyfish almost phosphorescent as the same just below the surface. The trip, using double paddles was probably past our range - we were glad to beach below the van.
It was time to move on...