Believing deeply that getting lost often paves the path to self-discovery, my latest escapade began as many do: serendipitously. I had just dropped off a gratitude gift to the delightful Frank and Natalie, the host of the Irish Ladies’ Book Club, and the kind couple who assisted during my flat tire ordeal. After coffee and Frankβs glowing recommendation, I set off to explore the Millenium Cross.
True to form, I soon found myself bewilderingly off-course.
Instead of hiking towards the Cross, I stumbled upon the haunting site of The Graves of the Leinstermen. This is where, according to legend, early in the 11th Century, the King of Leinster was ambushed and killed en route to Kincora to woo King Boru’s daughter. King Boru’s wife, opposed to the union, had conspired his demise, ordering her husband’s men to set up an ambush on the trail.
Thinking I was walking towards the Cross, I set off with gusto and began an uphill trek into the Arras mountains. But between the foreboding clouds hinting at rain and the absence of my trusty knee brace, I soon had second thoughts. About 15 minutes in, on a slippery, mud-caked path, my instincts screamed for retreat.
I trudged back. At my car, I asked the guidance from a passerby. Did the road continue on and lead me back towards Portroe, where I needed to be by 5pm without having to take the road already travelled?
She reassured me it did and armed with her directions, I once again set off, forward. I thought I was following her directions but… what felt like the correct left turn soon turned into a narrow muddy and treacherous path leading downhill through dense woods. With my tires sliding precariously on the steep, muddy decline and my heart in mouth. I pulled on the handbrade and came to a stop.
I knew this couldn’t be the right road but I had few alternatives. The narrow forest-lined trail offered no exit, save to cautiously move forward. Easing off the clutch, shifting into first girl, I began to inch slowly forward.
Then, almost out of a scene from an old movie, a bend led me into a dead end leading to a decript yard littered with relics of old machines, children’s toys, furniture and other objects that had lost thier connection to whatever they may have been, complete with, a weather-beaten stone cottage.
It felt like I had been thrust into an eerie Irish rendition of “Deliverance”.
My intuition suggested caution, but the need to turn around urged me towards that timeworn cottage. Its gate moaned with age as I stepped through, and angry dogs could be heard growling and barking from beyond the door. The suspense was palpable as I knocked, half-expecting an ominous response. But silence, except for the incessant barking, filled the air.
Getting no response to my knocking, and urged on by my fear the dogs might break through the door, I raced back to the car, drove it into the yard, turned around. All the while, half expecting a grizzled face to suddenly appear at the driver’s winder, waving a double barrel shotgun, screaming at me to go away!
Heart pounding, adrenalin coursing, I sped away, as fast as the muddy track and steep incline would allow, grateful for the escape.
Over a delicious dinner prepared by my gracious host, Pippa of the Half Door Cottage, she later confirmed my unease about that mysterious place.
As I told her the story of the woods I’d become lost in, her eyes grew wide and she shuddered visibly. She knew exactly where I’d ended up. “You don’t want to be meeting with those folk,” she cautioned. And in hushed voice she added, “It’s rumoured there’s a lot of clandestine activity going on in those woods.”
But here’s the thing, as thrilling as that experience was, my journey wasn’t all danger and suspense. That evening, after dinner, we headed to the opening of the Dromineer Nenagh Literary Festival. By sheer coincidence, my trip to Ireland and the Half Door Writer’s Retreat overlapped with this literary feast.
The readings, by Vona Groarke and Kit de Waal, felt transformative. It was as if a grand door to an entirely new literary adventure swung open before me.
Life’s detours, both literal and literary, continue to prove enlightening. Whether finding ancient graves, narrowly escaping a Deliverance encounter in ominous woods, or being inspired by poetic readings, every twist and turn deepens my belief: “It doesn’t matter how or where adventure unfolds, when approached with optimism and arms wide open to the possibility of the best, every outcome is a blessing.






What an adventure! As much as I was gripped with a bit of fear as I was “watching” the next scene unfold in my overactive imagination I was also chuckling as I sensed you would come ouf of this smiling like “an Irish rose”.
Glad all turned out well and attending a literary event to boot. Life is grand!
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LOL — I was gripped with more than just a ‘bit’ of fear Iwona! I was mostly worried about getting stuck in the mud! π It was grand! β€
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Perhaps you need an eSim card so you can use the navigation feature on your car? It definitely is hard to navigate while driving, and although it turned out OK that dead end road could have been trouble in many ways. Lovely that you gave your rescuers a gift and saw a literary event.
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Haha — even with my phone sinked to the car, I am an expert getting lost-er kind of person Bernie! I think it comes from having lived years in Europe and enjoying just taking off on weekends, no map, no destination, just a desire to see where the road would lead me. π
And the literary event was fabulous — especially the one late yesterday afternoon with a harpist, Irish songstress and an author. Fabulously held in the Nenagh Castle tower.
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You are getting lost off the navigation tool? Wow, that is a special kind of talent!
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It’s a very rare talent… or should I call it affliction? LOL — I finally realized the arrow wasn’t the direction I needed to go, but the direction I was going. That helped… π but not entirely. π (I also love that I typed ‘synced’ as sinked! LOL. I’m leaving it. π
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Sinked all right!! Oh well you went and you saw amazing things even though you occasionally got lost!
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