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Ailladie

Ailladie
Aill an Daill
Ballyreen Cliffs
Map showing the location of Ailladie
Map showing the location of Ailladie
Location of Ailladie in Ireland
Location
Nearest city6 km south of Fanore[1]
8 km north of Doolin[1]
RangeThe Burren
Coordinates53°04′14″N 09°21′30″W / 53.07056°N 9.35833°W / 53.07056; -9.35833
Climbing type
Heightcirca 35 metres (115 ft) above sea level at its peak
PitchesSingle pitch
Ratings
  • Diff to E7
  • Little below VS
  • Majority above E1 5b
Rock typeLimestone
Quantity of rock
  • +200 routes online database
  • 170 routes 2008 guidebook
Development
  • Roadside parking
  • No facilities
  • No fresh water[2]
Cliff aspectWest
ElevationAt sea level
Camping
Classic climbs
  • Pis Fluich (HVS 5a)
  • Gallows Pole (E2 5c)
  • Skywalker (E3 5c)
  • Kleptomaniac (E3 6a)
  • Through Looking Glass (E3 6a)
  • Wall of Fossils (E4 6a)
  • The Cutter (E4 6a)
  • Refraction (E5 6a)
  • Ouicksilver (E5 6a)
  • On Reflection (E6 6a)[2][1]
WebsiteClimbing.ie Ailladie

Ailladie (Irish: Aill an Daill, lit.'Blind Man's Cliff'; also known locally as the Ballyreen Cliffs),[3][4] is an 800-metre-long (2,600 ft) west-facing limestone sea cliff, that varies in height from 8 metres (26 ft) to 35 metres (115 ft), situated on the coast of The Burren in County Clare, Ireland. Ailladie is one of Ireland's most highly regarded rock-climbing locations, particularly for high technical grade single pitch traditional climbing routes and deep-water soloing routes. It is also a location for shore-angling competitions, and, with its cliffs and view of the Aran Islands, is a popular photography stop for tourists.[1][2]

Naming

The name Ailladie is an anglicized translation from the Irish language name, Aill an Daill, which means 'The Blind Man's Cliff' or 'Cliff of the Blind Person'.[3][1] The cliffs are also referred to locally, and by anglers, as Ballyreen Cliffs and Ballyreen Point, which is an anglicised version of the name given to Ailladie's local townland of Irish: Baile Uí Rinn; 'Ó Rinn's homestead'.[4][5][6]

Geography

Ailladie is an 800-metre (2,600 ft) long west-facing limestone sea-cliff, varying in height from 8 metres (26 ft) metres to 35 metres (115 ft) metres, that is situated on the coast of The Burren in County Clare, in Ireland.[1] The northernmost sections are not sea-cliffs, and their bases can be accessed by short descent routes (see Access) to flat limestone shelves below.[1][2] The southernmost sections are all sea-cliffs that can only be accessed by rope abseil.[1][2] The cliff straddles the Clare townlands of Ballyryan (southern section),[7] and Crumlin (northern section).[8]

Access

The cliffs of Ailladie are hidden from direct view, and are situated just a short walk from the R477 road, 1.5 kilometres (0.93 mi), at a point before the road turns inland and south-east to Lisdoonvarna. The Ailladie car-park (grid M0901102910), is marked on online maps, and it lies directly opposite the Stone Wall section of the cliffs (see Ailladie map below). Beside the car park, to the southeast, is the smaller rock climbing crag known as Ballyryan (climbers on the Ballyryan crag can be seen by the passing R477 traffic).

Access to the base of the cliff is only possible without abseiling at the northernmost end, where a 3-metre (9.8 ft) roped fisherman's descent gives access to a large limestone platform at the cliff-base of Ailladie.[1][2]

Rock climbing

Reputation

Ailladie is a traditional climbing crag, with no bolted or sport climbing routes. With few exceptions, the vast majority of the climbing routes are single pitch 25–35-metre (82–115 ft) long traditional climbs. Where bolts and pitons have appeared, they have generally been removed.[1][2]

Ailladie has remained at the "cutting edge" of Irish outdoor traditional rock climbing, along with the dolerite cliff of Fair Head in County Antrim.[9][10] The UKC described Ailladie as "Best coastal limestone in the world! Fact!".[11] The Irish Examiner said, "The mecca for rock climbing in Ireland is Ailladie".[12] The Irish Times called it "one of Ireland's best rock-climbing sites".[13] In 2007, American free solo climber Michael Reardon made the first of several visits to Ailladie and said that it was "redefining everything I know about the mental game of climbing",[14] and that it was "one of my favorite places on the planet".[10]

In 2019, On Reflection (E6 6a), on the Mirror Wall section, was listed in UK Climbing's "The Five Best E6 Routes in the UK and Ireland".[15]

Layout

Climbers on The Cutter (E4 6a), using the hanging belay start, on Mirror Wall, Ailladie

Ailladie's northern half includes the sections known to climbers as the Dancing Ledges and the Aran Wall,[16] and sits above a large rock platform that is accessible, via the 3-metre roped fisherman's descent (see Access), regardless of tides. Experienced climbers use a climber's descent at O'Conner's Corner (10-metre, Diff).[17] The Dancing Ledges are the lowest cliffs of Ailladie with routes of 10–15 metres and many below the E-grade, which makes them the most popular section for intermediate climbers; whereas the Aran Wall routes are up to 30-metres in height and mostly E-grade.[1][2]

The first part of Ailladie's southern-half is Mirror Wall (mostly graded E4–E7), and it is accessible by boulder-hopping at low-tide, although climbers also abseil down to start routes.[1] The remainder of the southern-half of Ailladie, the Stone Wall, An Falla Uaigneach, and Boulder Wall sections, require abseils for access. Many of the climbs in the imposing An Falla Uaigneach sector are started from a hanging belay, and the sector also offers extreme deep water soloing (DWS) routes (e.g. The Jelly Situation 7c+ S1, and King Crozzle, 7b+ S1),[18] and with significant 30-metre (98 ft) drops.[19]

Layout of Ailladie (incl. parking). The grey area at the Fisherman's Descent are the northern limestone ledges used by shore-anglers

The rock is limestone, of a clean blue/grey quality and mostly hanging in a sheer vertical form, with both vertical and horizontal cracks described as reminiscent of granite routes,[9] and texture described as "varies from smooth, in the few small areas recently exposed by rockfall, to a sharp popcorn texture which provides excellent friction".[1] Most climbs follow steep narrow finger-crack lines, and the rock climbing protection is considered to be good.[9][1] The last guidebook, published in 2008,[2] lists 170 climbs (the current Ailladie online database, see below, has over 200),[9] nearly all single-pitches, with grades up to E7 6c (e.g. Snell's Law, No Reflection, Black Mirror, all at E7 6c and over 35-metres in length).[20] Most Ailladie routes are at, and above, E1 5b grades; there is little quality below VS 4c graded routes, although Ailladie has several classic VS and HVS routes.[20] The lower sections of some routes, and the grade, can change due to the movements of boulders in sea storms,[9] and hence why many Mirror Wall climbers start from a hanging belay.[1]

History

The middle sectors of Ailladie. On the left is the Aran Wall sector (with its distinctive dual square blocks halfway up the wall), with most climbs at E2–E5. To the right is the inset sheer Mirror Wall, with most climbs at E4–E7. The last prominent black corner visible on the right is the classic early Ailladie route, Pis Fliuch (grade HVS/5a, 1972).

The climbing potential of Ailladie was discovered in August 1972, when it was visited by a group of Dublin climbers who would return several times culminating in the November 1972 ascent of one of Ireland's most classic rock climbs, the 30-metre corner of Pis Fluich (HVS 5a) by Jim McKenzie.[21] Word of Ailladie's quality spread, and development also began alongside the smaller nearby crags in The Burren area, which became the only on-shore limestone rock climbing locations in Ireland; the others being mainly granite, sandstone and dolerite.[22] Early pioneers of the crag in the late 1970s included Dermot Somers and Calvin Torrans (The Ramp E1 5b, 5a), but it was with the arrival of Tom Ryan and Keefe Murphy, that many of the crag's most important classics began to appear by the early 1980s, including Skywalker (E3 5c), Kleptomaniac (E3 6a), Through the Looking Glass (E3 6a), and Wall of Fossils (E4 6a).[9][21] Throughout the 1980s, classic lines were put up by Eddie Cooper including Quicksilver (E5 6a), Damn the Torpedoes (E5 6a), and White Witch (E5 6b), and a visiting British climbing team of Gary Gibson, John Codling and Martin Manson, who added Ice Queen (E5 6a), Refraction (E5 6a), The Cutter (E4 6a), On Reflection (E6 6a), and Prism Sentance (E5 6a, 6b) in a June 1985 visit.[1][2][23]

The 1990s saw new harder 3-starred routes such as Welsh climber George Smith's Very Big Springs (E6 6b, 1993), and Seeing Things (E6 6b, with Alan Wainwright, 1993), and Peak District climbers Dominic and Daniel Lee's Phoenix in the Mirror (E6 6c, 1996).[1][21] The following years saw more E6 and E7 graded routes from some of the leading Irish-based climbers such as Dalkey Quarry regulars Ronan Browner and Herbert Hebblethwaite (Earthling and Forbidden Kink both E6 6c, 1997), and by Ricky Bell (The Happiness that Hurts and The Power of the Hobo both E7 6c, 2006), and Andy Long (The Vein and Forever Young both E7 6c, 2004, and Faith E7 6c, 2005).[2][21] In addition, Bell, free soloist Julian Lines, and later, Colm Shannon, developed the DWS potential of the An Falla Uaignech section, establishing extreme DWS routes at grades of up to 7c+ S2/3.[19][18] In 2007, Belgian climber Sean Villanueva O'Driscoll [fr] established a new E7 on Mirror Wall that he named Snell's Law (E7 6c),[2] and in 2021, Irish climber Conor McGovern added two further E7s on Mirror Wall, named No Reflection (E7 6c), and Black Mirror (E7 6c).[20]

Facilities

Visiting climbers either camp in the fields above the crag (however, there is no source of freshwater), or stay at one of the many hostels in the surrounding villages (particularly Doolin for nightlife and additional bouldering,[24] or Fanore for serviced camping grounds).[1] There are several nearby inland 10–20 metres (33–66 ft) high limestone crags with a good range of graded rock climbs, especially in the grades below VS, that are within walking distance (e.g. Ballyryan) or a short driving distance (e.g. Murroughkilly, Aill na Cronain and Oughtdarra), from Ailladie; however, these do not have anything like the quality or popularity of Ailladie.[25]

Other sports

Cave diving

Starting at circa 9.5 m (31 ft) below sea level, Cliff Cave (also known as Mirror Wall Cave or Pollaillte), extends inland from the crag. It was discovered in 2012, and containing over 2.7 km (1.7 mi) of passages, is the longest-known marine cave in Ireland. Exploration of the cave can only be undertaken after a prolonged period of calm and stable conditions to avoid becoming trapped.[26][27]

Shore angling

Looking south through a small zawn into Ailladie's Falla Uaigneach cliff-section, with the southerly ledges used for shore-angling.

The limestone ledges at the base of Ailladie's cliffs (at the far north and far south ends), are regarded for their shore-angling and are described as providing "superb bottom fishing".[28] Anglers know the area as Ballyreen-south of Fanore, and several of the rocks have numbers painted on them for shore-angling competitions.[28] Ballyreen is noted as one of the few shore-angling locations in Clare where sharks (porbeagle and blue), and conger eels have been successfully landed.[29]

Because of the proximity of these low limestone ledges to deep Atlantic waters, the ledges have seen several fatalities over the years of anglers who were caught by sudden swells or large waves, and were carried out to sea.[5][30][31]

Accidents

As well as accidents from rock-climbing activities (there are no recorded rock climbing fatalities at Ailladie), and accidents and fatalities from shore-angling activities,[5][30][31] Ailladie has also seen a number of accidents and fatalities from tourist activities as a result of falls at the cliffs.[32]

Filmography

  • Ricky Bell in Ailladie and Fair Head (Antrim): Egner, Jamie (director) (2007). Underdeveloped (Motion picture). Posing Productions. Retrieved 3 June 2022.[33]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Torrans, Calvin; Sheridan, Clare (1997). Climbing guide to the Burren. Mountaineering Council of Ireland. ISBN 978-0-902940-12-3.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Owens, Peter (2008). Climbs in the Burren and Aran Islands. Mountaineering Ireland. ISBN 978-0-902940-21-5. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Aill an Daill (Irish), Ailladie (English)". Placenames Database of Ireland. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  4. ^ a b "Ballyryan Townland, Co. Clare". Townland.ie. 2018. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  5. ^ a b c "Ballyreen Point". Doolin Coast Guard. 7 November 2009. Archived from the original on 22 April 2019. Retrieved 24 March 2020. A person had fallen into the sea from the rocks at Ballyreen Point while sea fishing, the sea was quite rough at the time with high waves and strong winds
  6. ^ "Cliffs of Moher, Aran Islands, Wild Atlantic Way from Galway". Lonely Planet. Retrieved 24 March 2020. Turning right at Ballyvaughan, your local, driver guide will take you south following the Wild Atlantic Way along the coast of Clare, via Black Head, Fanore Strand, and the baby cliffs of Ballyreen.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ "Ballyran Townland, Co. Clare". Townland.ie. 2018. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  8. ^ "Crumlin Townland, Co. Clare". Townland.ie. 2018. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Rob Greenwood (27 June 2017). "Ailladie, the Burren – Ireland". UKClimbing.com. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  10. ^ a b Michael Reardon (9 July 2007). "IRISH VISIT: Ailladie (Burren, Co. Clare)". climbing.com. Retrieved 24 March 2020. The following day brought me to one of my favorite climbing areas on the planet — the great sea cliffs of Ailladie.
  11. ^ "Ailladie (Burren, Co. Clare)". UKClimbing.com. 2018. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  12. ^ Dan McCarthy (July 2011). "Feel on top of the world". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 24 March 2020. The mecca for rock climbing in Ireland is Ailladie, Co Clare. It sounds like a lost Himalayan kingdom but in fact it is a rural townland just outside Doolin in the Burren, Co Clare.
  13. ^ Dan McCarthy (29 April 2017). "Cycle series: Ride the roads around Lisdoonvarna". Irish Times. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  14. ^ O'Donovan, Barry (4 July 2014). "Remembering the extraordinary life of free climber Michael Reardon". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  15. ^ Greenwood, Rob (24 July 2019). "The Five Best E6 Routes in the UK and Ireland". UK Climbing. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  16. ^ Rob Greenwood (10 June 2017). "Outline of Ailladie's 5 Sectors: Dancing Ledges, Aran Wall, Mirror Wall, Stone Wall, An Falla Uaigneach and Boulder Wall". UKClimbing.com. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  17. ^ "Ailladie: Climber's Descent and O'Connors Corner (Dancing Ledges Sector)". climbing.ie. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  18. ^ a b "Ailladie DWS Routes". Irish Climbing Wiki. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  19. ^ a b "Colm Shannon's Deserted DWS Heaven – Irish West Coast's Ailladie". UKClimbing.com. 7 August 2016. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  20. ^ a b c "Ailladie". Irish Climbing Wiki. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  21. ^ a b c d Paddy O'Leary (March 2015). The Way That We Climbed. The Collins Press. ISBN 978-1-84889-242-2.
  22. ^ "Rock climbing in Ireland". climb-europe.com. 2018. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  23. ^ Gibson, Gary (May 2019). Blood, Sweat and Smears. 2QT Limited Publishing. ISBN 978-1913071097.
  24. ^ Peter Owens (2008). "Doolin Bouldering" (PDF). Mountaineering Council of Ireland. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 August 2014. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  25. ^ "West Clare Crags". UKClimbing.com. 2018. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  26. ^ Warny, Jim; Marek, Michal (October 2014). Barrie, Peter; Kennedy, Alasdair (eds.). "The exploration of Cliff Cave, Oughtdarra, Co. Clare". Irish Speleology. 21. Speleological Union of Ireland: 71–72. ISSN 0332-4907.
  27. ^ Kluj, Magdalena (2019). Barrie, Peter; Kennedy, Alasdair (eds.). "Obituary: Michał Marek". Irish Speleology. 24. Speleological Union of Ireland: 73–74. ISSN 0332-4907.
  28. ^ a b "Fishing in Ireland: Galway Bay & North Clare". Angling Ireland. Retrieved 13 November 2018. There is superb bottom fishing from the rocks at Ballyreen where ray, conger, dogfish, bull huss, and plaice are common. Garfish and wrasse can be caught while float fishing, pollack, and mackerel to spinners. Occasionally tope will take a bait here and porbeagle shark have also been landed. Ground close to the shore and rocks is very weedy and broken. However, a cast of 60 to 70 Metres will land bait on clean ground. As at Black Head, this area is a popular venue for anglers and the rocks have numbers painted on them for club competitions.
  29. ^ "Clare: Ballyreen". SEA-ANGLING-IRELAND.ORG. Retrieved 13 November 2018. Ballyreen This is yet another rock platform mark that demands care and attention. It will require a drop net to land the bigger fish. Species & Techniques: Bottom fishing onto mixed ground will produce thornback ray, dogfish, bull huss and conger eels ... and reputedly it also produces Flatfish including a fair share of plaice. The conger eel fishing in the autumn 2004 has been reported as exceptional with lots of fish over the 13 kilo (30 lbs) specimen mark. There is a very foul bottom close to shore but it moves to sand from 40-50 metres out. This is one of only two marks in Clare (the other being Green Island) from which shark (porbeagle and blue) and tope have been successfully landed, but landing large fish off the cliffs is not a simple task.
  30. ^ a b "Woman drowns after being swept out to sea in Co Clare". Irish Times. 10 July 2016. Retrieved 24 March 2020. A 53-year-old woman has drowned after being swept out to sea by a wave in north Clare on Sunday morning. [...] The woman was part of a group that had been fishing at Ballyreen, south of Fanore.
  31. ^ a b "Anglers return to Ballyreen as search continues for missing Latvian man". Clare Hearald. 8 October 2013. Retrieved 24 March 2020. The 42-year-old father-of-two from Latvia had been fishing for mackerel at an area known locally as the Fisherman's Climb at Ballyreen near Fanore.
  32. ^ "Search called off as body lost in Ballyreen is found in Salthill". Clare Champion. 26 January 2017. Retrieved 24 March 2020. Drone technology had been deployed during the week in the search for the 22-year-old who was reported missing after he failed to return to his tour bus which had stopped at Ballyreen, on the Wild Atlantic Way, between Fanore and Lisdoonvarna, at the designated time of departure.
  33. ^ Brown, Nick (1 May 2020). "Underdeveloped - Climbing in Ireland". UKClimbing. Retrieved 3 June 2022.

Climbing bibliography

  • Torrans, Calvin; Stelfox, Dawson (1984). Rock Climbing In Ireland. Constable. ISBN 978-0-09-465320-7.
  • Torrans, Calvin (1986). Rock Climbing Guide to the Burren. Mountaineering Council of Ireland. ISBN 978-0-902940-07-9.
  • Torrans, Calvin; Sheridan, Clare (1997). Climbing guide to the Burren. Mountaineering Council of Ireland. ISBN 978-0-902940-12-3.
  • Flanagan, David (2014). Rock Climbing in Ireland. Three Rock Books. ISBN 978-0-9567874-2-2.