Dingle Peninsula Conor Pass to Slea Head Track
Ancient stones meet Atlantic fury on the Dingle.
The Conor Pass descent drops you into one of Ireland’s most storied landscapes, where 1,500-year-old stone beehive huts dot clifftops and ancient Irish echoes off every weathered wall. This route threads narrow mountain roads from Ireland’s second-highest pass down through Dingle town, then follows the wild Slea Head Drive past the Blasket Islands — uninhabited since 1953 but still haunting the horizon like sleeping whales.
Moderate difficulty demands respect for single-track sections and sudden weather changes off the Atlantic. Any high-clearance vehicle handles the sealed portions, but take it slow on the narrow mountain descents where tour buses play chicken with oncoming traffic. Spring through autumn offers the best visibility, though winter storms create their own dramatic beauty. What you get: millennia of Irish history, some of the country’s most photographed coastal scenery, and the kind of pub conversations that stretch past closing time.
Trail Specs
| Difficulty | Moderate |
|---|---|
| Trail Type | Scenic Drive |
| Surface | Mixed |
| Features | Historic, Remote, Scenic |
| Length (miles) | 32 mi / 51.5 km |
| Duration | 1 day |
| Max elevation (ft) | 1496 ft |
| Best season | April-October |
| Minimum vehicle | Any vehicle |
| Nearest town | Dingle, County Kerry |
| Land manager | Kerry County Council |
| Permit required | No |
| Cell service | Spotty |
| Water crossings | No |
| Dispersed camping | No |
| Start coordinates | |
| End coordinates | |
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| Find on Google | Search on Google → |
Location
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