Travelling the coastal route from Dublin to Waterford you will first arrive at Powerscourt House & Gardens. Surrounding this 18th Century Palladian House in the foothills of the Wicklow Mountains, you will find a sublime blend of formal gardens, sweeping terraces, statuary and ornamental lakes together with secret hollows, rambling walks and over 200 varieties of trees and shrubs. Shortly after this, you will arrive at the ancient monastic settlement at Glendalough. The monastic settlement has been a centre for pilgrims and visitors since its foundation by St. Kevin in the 6th century. Continue on to Avoca where you will find the Avoca Handweavers factory, the oldest working woolen mill in Ireland who is famed worldwide for the quality of its woven fabrics.
Travel onto visit the Dunbrody Famine Ship and Emigrant experience in New Ross, Wexford. This is an essential stop on your tour where you will step back in time to circa 1849 when Ireland was in crisis. With the potato crops failing and food prices at an all-time high more than one million people were forced to leave their homes for an uncertain future abroad. Many of those went on to become great success stories in America. Around this time John Fitzgerald Kennedy’s great-grand father Thomas Fitzgerald left Ireland to escape the famine and as they say the rest is history. 2013 marks the 50 year anniversary of JFK travelling to Ireland to visit his families homestead in Dunganstown, County Wexford. There is a life-sized statue of JFK that stands on Charles street dock in New Ross today so make sure to bring your camera - it’s one for the album!
From there travel your final leg to Waterford Crystal Interpretive centre where you can get an up close and personal insight into the centuries old tradition of Waterford Crystal making. This is one of Irelands most famous and recognized exports.