Category: In The Movies

  • Positano

    positano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holiday

    Ciao Positano!

    I think it was about here, that the already narrow coastal road got even more narrow with all the parked cars. At least the slow driving and often standing made it possible to enjoy the view and take a few pictures.

    positano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holidaypositano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holiday

    And from the other side – looking for a parking space I passed the city by driving by and decided on this point to turn around and just drive into Positano. Which was a good idea as there were a lot of garages – I just took the first one and walked the rest down.

    positano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holidaypositano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holiday

    Picture perfect Positano – main “actor” of many movies and the “front cover” of the Amalfi Coast. Stunningly beautiful (esp when seen a little bit from afar) it´s the centre of attraction for many, many people.

    positano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holiday

    The fashionista history runs deep – moda Positano was born here in the ’60s and the town was the first in Italy to import bikinis from France. (Lonely Planet)

    positano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holidaypositano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holiday

    Positano was a sleepy and poor fishing village until the mid-century and started to attract larger numbers of tourists in the early 1950ies, especially after the publication of John Steinbeck’s essay in Harpers Bazaar 1953:

     “Positano bites deep”, Steinbeck wrote. “It is a dream place that isn’t quite real when you are there and becomes beckoningly real after you have gone.” (Wikipedia)

    positano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holiday

    Movies and celebrities on vacation made Positano to a dream destination for many!

    Positano has been featured in several films, including Only You (1994), and Under the Tuscan Sun (2003), as well as more recently in Kath & Kimderella (2012) and being mentioned in the 2009 musical film Nine in the song “Cinema Italiano”. …

    Mick Jagger and Keith Richards from The Rolling Stones wrote the song “Midnight Rambler” in the cafes of Positano while on vacation. (Wikipedia)

    positano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holidaypositano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holidaypositano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holidaypositano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holiday

    Hidden beaches almost everywhere on the Amalfi Coast.

    positano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holiday

    Positano – the vertical city – Ciao!

    positano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holidaypositano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holidaypositano, italia, roadtrip, campania, amalfi coast, dream holiday

    Traffic along the Amalfi Coast…

  • Walking around Dublin

    I stayed in a lovely and super cosy little cottage near the Guinness Brewery, a very central location and a great starting point for just walking around the city. For the last years, there is a huge housing crisis going on in Dublin with ongoing protests and many projects trying to solve this or at least help people who either have lost their homes or aren´t able to get on. As a tourist one doesn´t notice that much but besides the Brexit, this was the one big topic people talked about with me.

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    Walking along River Liffey…

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    Ha´Penny Bridge – or as it is named officially the Liffey Bridge – a pedestrian bridge built in 1816.

    Before the Ha’penny Bridge was built there were seven ferries, operated by a William Walsh, across the Liffey. The ferries were in a bad condition and Walsh was informed that he had to either fix them or build a bridge. Walsh chose the latter option and was granted the right to extract a ha’penny toll from anyone crossing it for 100 years. (Ha´Penny Bridge)

    The toll was dropped in 1919.

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    Molly Malone – the fictional fishmonger from the song “Molly Malone” by The Dubliners.

  • Mussenden Temple and Downhill Demesne

    Mussenden Temple and Downhill Demesne

    Magilligan Point – say “hi” to Ireland. County Donegal is close by! Another very idyllic beach and coast, when you ignore the huge prison along the way.

    Mussenden Temple and Downhill Demesne

    The word ‘demesne’ is used throughout Ireland. It indicates the part of the estate that was usually enclosed by a demesne wall and was for the use of the landowner only. His estate would have been much larger, including all the tenanted lands and may have been made up of parcels of land geographically isolated from each other. (National Trust)

    Two beaches later I arrived at Bishop´s Gate – one of the two entrances to Downhill Demesne and the Mussenden Temple.

    Downhill Demesne which is sometimes simply referred to as Downhill House is an amazing 18th century mansion built by the eccentric Earl Bishop. Beautifully set within open grounds it is the perfect place for a day trip. Bring a picnic and enjoy the sheltered gardens of Hezlett House. (Downhill Demnese)

    Mussenden Temple and Downhill Demesne

    After a short walk through beautiful gardens and even a little wood (The Black Glen) suddenly this comes into view! Downhill House. Frederick Hervey, the 4th Earl of Bristol as well as the Bishop of Cloyne and later the Bishop of Derry, commissioned the estate in 1768 and construction began in 1755.

    After the death in 1803 of Lord Bristol (he had succeeded to the Earldom in December 1779), the estate passed to his cousin, The Rev. Henry Bruce, who had acted as steward of the Estate during the Earl-Bishop’s absences. Bruce’s sister was Frideswide Mussenden, for whom Mussenden Temple was built, and which became a memorial after her death. (Downhill House)

    Mussenden Temple and Downhill DemesneMussenden Temple and Downhill Demesne

    Walled garden and old icehouse.

    The house was seriously damaged in 1839 and big parts of the house were damaged by a fire in 1851. Reconstruction works began in 1870 and continued until 1874.

    Mussenden Temple and Downhill DemesneMussenden Temple and Downhill Demesne

    During World War II Downhill House hosted RAF servicemen and -women. The Bruce family owned the demnese until 1946, by 1950 it has been dismantled and the surrounding land was sold. The National Trust acquired the house in 1980.

    Mussenden Temple and Downhill DemesneMussenden Temple and Downhill Demesne

    Dining Room

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    First view of the Mussenden Temple, the library and monument to Bishop Lord Bristol’s niece Frideswide Bruce. It´s said that the relationship between Earl Bishop and Frideswide was far too close and he often stayed with his “cher cousin”. Frideswide later married the banker Daniel Mussenden.

    Mussenden Temple and Downhill Demesne

    Downhill House is seen from Mussenden Temple.

    Mussenden Temple and Downhill Demesne

    Mussenden Temple, a library modeled on the Temple of Vesta in Tivoli. Perched dramatically at the edge of a basalt cliff on the coast of Ireland east of Derry, the perilous location and design of Mussenden Temple embodies many of the aesthetic ideals of the philosopher Edmund Burke’s A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and the Beautiful. (World Monument Fund)

    Mussenden Temple and Downhill Demesne

    Once it was possible to drive a carriage around the temple – nobody would try to do this today. Nature has brought it right on the edge. The National Trust had some cliff stabilisation work done in 1997.

    Built in 1785 as a library it was once lined with bookcases and a fired burnt day and night in the basement to keep the books dry. Today you would be married in the Temple!

    Mussenden Temple and Downhill DemesneMussenden Temple and Downhill Demesne

    View of Downhill Beach.

    Mussenden Temple and Downhill DemesneMussenden Temple and Downhill Demesne

    Lion´s Gate – the second entrance to the demnese.

    Downhill Demnese is open all year from dusk till dawn and you wouldn´t want to miss it! Located near Castlerock it´s just a short (and beautiful) drive from the Causeway.