NotUrsula
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2002
- Messages
- 20,030
FWIW, we usually fly into Belfast when we go home to visit family, and I find that the car hire companies are mostly fine with taking a car over the border as long as it's brought back to NI for the return. PIcking up in one country and returning in the other is a jungle of red tape, and prohibitively expensive if you can get the agency to agree to it at all.
The ferry is a fun experience in general if you like water travel, but it greatly complicates movement between countries when you have a hire car to deal with. The odds are that when you start crunching real numbers you will find that it makes more sense in terms of both money and time to fly from one island to the other.
If you want to be able to do your own laundry, your best bet is basing yourself in a self-catering accommodation. (Sometimes you can find newer ones purpose-built and arranged so that the property has a main B&B and also outlying buildings that are self-catering, in which case you can usually still get breakfast if you want it.) Also, if you're not used to European home plumbing arrangements and you plan to go self-catering, brush up; in private homes hot water and washing machine operation work differently than they do in the US, and dryers in homes are seldom a thing in Ireland. IME, most homes have indoor drying racks instead.
(And I'll confess to one hopelessly American motivation of mine when it comes to self-catering accommodations: ice. If I have a freezer I can make all the ice that I want without having to justify it, and yes, I do travel with a couple of ice trays. My family like to laugh at this strange American Southern ice obsession, but they love me anyway, so they have learned to tolerate my ice trays when I stay in their homes. Otherwise I'd use the entire household supply.)
The ferry is a fun experience in general if you like water travel, but it greatly complicates movement between countries when you have a hire car to deal with. The odds are that when you start crunching real numbers you will find that it makes more sense in terms of both money and time to fly from one island to the other.
If you want to be able to do your own laundry, your best bet is basing yourself in a self-catering accommodation. (Sometimes you can find newer ones purpose-built and arranged so that the property has a main B&B and also outlying buildings that are self-catering, in which case you can usually still get breakfast if you want it.) Also, if you're not used to European home plumbing arrangements and you plan to go self-catering, brush up; in private homes hot water and washing machine operation work differently than they do in the US, and dryers in homes are seldom a thing in Ireland. IME, most homes have indoor drying racks instead.
(And I'll confess to one hopelessly American motivation of mine when it comes to self-catering accommodations: ice. If I have a freezer I can make all the ice that I want without having to justify it, and yes, I do travel with a couple of ice trays. My family like to laugh at this strange American Southern ice obsession, but they love me anyway, so they have learned to tolerate my ice trays when I stay in their homes. Otherwise I'd use the entire household supply.)
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