Rustic, welcoming Galway oozes with Irish charm. Get a guide from tourHQ to reveal its best Guinness pubs and castles, the farmers’ markets of Church Street and the secrets of the Gaelic tongue.
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After living and working for the past thirty years both inIreland as well as in a number of ...
I am qualified Failte Ireland National Guide and a licenced SPSV limousine driver. I holds a BA ...
Owner of Galway's Horrible History Tours and Fireside Tours. I am a History-buff, storyteller, ...
I have been sharing my love for Ireland through tourism for over 20 years. I was lucky to enough to ...
I am a qualified Regional and National Tour Guide based in the rugged and spectacular West of ...
Western Tours and Tales (WTT) offer Tourist Guiding services for visitors wishing to explore ...
Welcome! Brendan is a Failte Ireland Approved National and Local Tourist Guide and ...
My name is Gerry Grealish, an experienced tour guide and owner of Tour & Taste Galway. I was born ...
Liam Silke is a Certified Tour Guide by Failte Ireland, with a wealth of knowledge about the ...
I am a former Second Level History and French Teacher. I have tour ...
Your guide, Jim Ward, is an experienced, qualified Fáilte Ireland – Irish Tourist ...
I guide throughout Ireland and most especially on the Aran Islands. I am particularly interested in ...
I am a local tour guide, here to show you around and make your trip memorable.
I am a local tour guide, here to show you around and make your trip memorable.
An artsy, Guinness-fuelled conglomeration of old stone cottages and seaside homes painted by the ceaseless Atlantic salt spray, Galway is every inch a city of the Emerald Isle. Between its ancient alleyways, folk bars ring to the squeak of fiddles, and St Paddies Day revellers stagger beside medieval mansions like Lynch's Castle, as well as through the marketplaces of Church Lane. On the promenades and pavements of Salthill, the words of O'Flaherty ring out from nearby windows, seabirds squawk in the icy breeze and students ebb and flow like the waters of the all-seeing River Corrib. The fact that this town one was once a bastion of the tribal Irish kings, and later a hot point of contest between the natives and English loyalists, is indelible in its modern makeup. The old Gaelic tongue is still spoken in the bakeries and brew houses, and history oozes from every crack and crevice of the town, inviting visitors to follow Galway tour guides through the rooms of the City Museum and the old relics of the ruling de Burgh family alike.
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