- Keel Camping on Achill Island, an expansive coastal site right beside the stunning Keel Strand. It offers direct access to sandy beaches, Atlantic views, and a peaceful setting surrounded by dramatic cliffs and mountains, ideal for beach walks, surfing, and island exploration.
- Seal Caves Campsite (also on Achill Island in Dugort), a well-established park with sea views over a Blue Flag beach, mature grounds, and facilities for tents, caravans, and camper vans—perfect for those wanting panoramic coastal scenery and proximity to seal caves and walking routes.
- Cong Camping, Caravan & Glamping Park, situated in scenic Joyce Country near the village of Cong, providing sheltered pitches in a beautiful lakeside area with easy access to woodland walks, historic sites, and touring the west.
- Mayo Glamping near Castlebar, a whimsical site featuring creative accommodations such as hobbit huts, Nordic cabins, and even a converted railway carriage. It offers a magical, family-friendly escape with cosy comforts, gardens, and a convenient base for exploring the county’s attractions.
- Cong Camping’s glamping (bell tents with electricity and furnishings), combining the park’s peaceful location with ready-set luxury for groups or families wanting comfort amid nature.
- Belmullet Glamping in the remote northwest, often praised for its pods in a wild, scenic setting near rugged coastlines and recognised as a top spot for immersion in untouched landscapes.
Mayo:
Mayo offers dramatic scenery and ancient heritage, with the Cliffs of Moher’s rugged beauty and Croagh Patrick’s pilgrimage trail providing stunning vistas. The town of Westport features Georgian architecture and access to Clew Bay’s islands, while the Ceide Fields showcase a prehistoric farming landscape. Other attractions include the celebrity beaches of Achill Island. Mayo is Ireland’s third largest county by size (5,398 square km) and 18th largest by population (137,970). Population peaked at 388,887 in 1841 and reached its lowest point, 109,525 in 1971. In terms of hospitality, Mayo is Ireland’s tenth most visited tourist county with around 218,000 international visitors per year.
Introduction – Adventure – Anthem – Archaeology – Attractions – Awards – Birdwatching – Camping – Castles – Churches – Contact list – Cycling – Dining – Equestrian – Festivals – Fishing – Folklore – Gardens – Golf – Graveyards – Happening – Haunted – Highest – Hiking – History – Holy Wells – Hotels – Hotels8 – Instagrammable – Itineraries – Largest town – Luxury – MICE – Movies – Musicians – Name – New – Novelists – Off the beaten track – Poets – Pubs – Quotes – Random Facts – Restaurant Awards – Saints – Spas – Sports – Sunsets – Sustainable –Things to do – Towns – Video – Villages – Walking – Wanderlist – Weddings – Wild swimming – Writers – 1837 – 1846 – 1852 – 1909 – 1955 – 1980 –
