"Wild Ireland": The Burren in Spring, County Clare, Ireland
From the
Irish 'Boíreann' meaning a rocky place, the rolling hills of the
Burren are composed of limestone pavements criss-crossed and gouged by fissures called grykes, leaving clints - raised, slab-like flat areas. The limestone, laid down in a shallow tropical sea in the
Lower Carboniferous some 350 million years ago, has been shaped by episodes of glaciation, most recently during the last
Ice Age. Covering roughly
360 square kilometres, parts of this karst landscape lie in one of
Ireland's six national parks.
The Burren boasts the most extensive area of limestone pavement in
Europe, harbours a unique floral diversity with Arctic,
Mediterranean and
Alpine flowers blooming side by side, and is one of the finest examples of a glacio-karst landscape in the world.
The rocky landscape that we see today is not just the result of glacial erosion and natural weathering, but also 6,
000 years of agricultural activity. The Burren has been settled since the Mesolithic and boasts a cornucopia of archaeological monuments from the stone walled field systems and megalithic structures of the Neolithic, including the well preserved portal dolmen at
Poulnabrone, to later
Bronze Age settlements,
Iron Age hill forts and
Medieval churches. A landscape rich in both nature and lore, the Burren and
Cliffs of Moher Geopark, managed by
Clare County Council, is a member of the
UNESCO Global Geoparks Network.
Walkers will be amply rewarded by the extraordinary preservation of natural and cultural heritage; the extent of the limestone pavement with its sculpted surfaces, cliffs and whorls; shady narrow country lanes lined with hazel scrub; reed fringed aquamarine turloughs and dramatic views of the wave washed
Wild Atlantic Way coastline that includes the famous Cliffs of Moher. The Burren in spring is the very stuff of dreams as the landscape is literally misty with flowers.
We consider the Burren in
County Clare, to be Ireland's most unusual, striking and memorable landscape. It is our favourite part of this island.
Featuring panoramas, time-lapse and medium close-up shots of the various flowers, our footage, to make the fourth in our '
Wild Ireland' series, was captured in 4K over three visits from early-May to mid-June, when the flora is at its very best.
Enjoy!
Music tracks:
Xavier Rudd:
Choices
Sophie Zelmani:
The Ocean and Me
Alexi Murdoch: All
My Days