Six Waymarked Ways We Love: Our Pick of Ireland's Long-Distance Trails
Discover Ireland's most spectacular hiking trails from Wicklow to Donegal. Our complete guide covers 50+ walks with distance, difficulty, and WHI tour...
Read article →The full Barrow Way — Lowtown to St. Mullins, six days down Ireland's loveliest river
This is the proper Barrow trip — the entire waymarked trail walked end-to-end over six unhurried walking days. You start at Lowtown on the Grand Canal, where the Barrow Line branches south, and you finish at St. Mullins where the river meets tidal water and a 7th-century monastery sits in a graveyard that's been in continuous use for over 1,400 years.
Six walking days, two travel days, one of the most peaceful long-distance walks in Ireland. Every step is on flat ground. No climbs, no scrambling, no descent damage — just slow water on your right hand for the better part of a week, working locks, lifting bridges, and the kind of riverside countryside that makes you want to stop every twenty minutes to take another photograph.
The route is quietly remarkable. You walk through four counties of quiet Irish countryside — Kildare, Laois, Carlow and Kilkenny — passing the dramatic ruins of the Rock of Dunamase rising from the plains, the Norman castle of Carlow, the Georgian quayside at Bagenalstown, the elegant village street of Borris, the magnificent Cistercian abbey at Graiguenamanagh, and finally the early-Christian ruins at St. Mullins. It's a thousand years of Irish history laid out in a straight line beside the river.
The villages along the way are some of the most welcoming in the country. Bagenalstown, Borris, Graiguenamanagh — places where the pub, the bakery, and the bookshop on the main street all still belong to families who've run them for generations. We've picked the B&Bs personally and we know the owners by name. If a kettle isn't working in your room I hear about it the same day.
This is the trip for guests who want a real long-distance walk in Ireland but without the punishment of mountain weeks. By the second morning you have the rhythm of the river. By the fourth day, the Barrow feels partly yours. By the eighth, you'll be talking about coming back.
Six walking days from Lowtown on the Grand Canal to St. Mullins where the Barrow meets the tide. Every working lock, every elegant lifting bridge, every river town — the full Barrow Way as it should be walked.
Six walking days on level towpath through Kildare, Laois, Carlow and Kilkenny. No climbs, no scrambling — just slow water and unhurried countryside. Ireland''s most welcoming long-distance trail.
From the medieval Anglo-Norman castle at Carlow and the 13th-century Dominican priory at Athy, through Georgian Bagenalstown and Borris House, to 7th-century St. Mullins — you walk through history in a straight line beside the river.
Kildare, Athy, Carlow, Bagenalstown, Borris, and Graiguenamanagh — six hand-picked B&Bs and small guesthouses, every host known to us by name. Warm rooms, full Irish breakfasts, real local advice.
Six walking days at 16–22.5 km on flat ground gives you a genuine long-distance achievement — over 117 km from canal to tidal river — without the joint damage of mountain weeks. The Barrow rewards persistence rather than fitness extremes.
This is the trip you can do at 70 and still feel proud at the end. The towpath is flat, the surface is forgiving, and the daily distances are evenly paced. Many of our 8-day Barrow guests are walking with us for the third or fourth time.
You'll walk for hours some days hearing only your footsteps, the occasional heron, and the breeze through the willows. The Barrow Way is one of the least-walked of Ireland's waymarked trails — and one of the most rewarding because of it.
Make your way to Kildare town, where your walking holiday begins. Kildare is a beautiful introduction to Ireland''s Ancient East — home to the famous Curragh racecourse, the Japanese Gardens, and the Irish National Stud, all within easy reach.
Settle in to your accommodation, get your gear ready, and enjoy a relaxed dinner. Tomorrow, the Barrow begins.
An easy first walking day. After breakfast we transfer you the short distance to Lowtown — where the Grand Canal branches south for the Barrow Line — and you set off through quiet canal country to Monasterevin.
This is a flat, contemplative day along the towpath: lifting bridges, lock-keeper''s cottages, swans on the still water. Monasterevin itself is sometimes called ''the Venice of Ireland'' for the way the canal, the Barrow and the railway weave through it on aqueducts and bridges.
From Monasterevin we collect you and bring you back to Kildare for a second night.
Back to Monasterevin after breakfast — where the Grand Canal meets the River Barrow — and on along the towpath south to the heritage town of Athy.
The walking is flat and rhythmic. Early on, you''ll see the dramatic ruins of the Rock of Dunamase rising from the plains to your east, and on a clear day the Wicklow Mountains in the distance. The countryside here feels unspoilt and calm. You''ll pass lifting bridges, old lock-keeper''s cottages, and the occasional narrowboat moored for the season.
Athy itself is worth exploring — an Anglo-Norman town established in the 13th century to control the river crossing, with its castle, Dominican church and excellent heritage centre.
Leaving Athy you join the river properly — the canal towpath gives way to the riverbank, and the character of the walk shifts. The Barrow widens and slows here, flanked by reeds and willows.
You''ll pass old mills and traditional lifting bridges along the way. Carlow is the largest town on the Barrow, and arriving on foot along the riverside feels like the right way to come in. Carlow Castle is remarkably intact considering its age — well worth a visit, along with the cathedral, before dinner.
Out of Carlow on the towpath and back into the rhythm of the river. About 7 km south of town you reach Milford — three elegant bridges over the Barrow beside the shell of an old mill, surrounded by woodland. One of the prettiest spots on the entire route, and a perfect place to stop for lunch.
The walking continues south through pastoral countryside to Bagenalstown — locally Muinebheag — a quiet Georgian village with good food and a warm welcome.
A slightly shorter day, which means time to linger. The towpath here briefly joins the Leinster Way, Ireland''s second-longest waymarked trail. Near Ballytiglea Bridge you turn off the river for the final 2 km into Borris.
Borris is a village to savour — a wide stone-built main street, the grand gates of Borris House at the far end, rolling Carlow hills rising behind. This is a pleasant evening to sit outside with a pint and feel five days of walking in your legs.
Your final walking day, and one of the loveliest of the whole route. South of Borris the valley narrows and the wooded hillsides close in on both sides of the river — this is the section guests remember most clearly.
You finish at St. Mullins, one of Ireland''s oldest and most atmospheric ecclesiastical settlements. Founded by St Moling in the 7th century, it sits where the Barrow meets the Duiske, surrounded by monastic ruins, a round tower stump and a graveyard that has been in continuous use for over 1,400 years. The peace here is real. You''ll feel it.
Tonight you stay just upstream in Graiguenamanagh — a handsome stone-built town where Duiske Abbey still stands complete on the main street, one of the finest Cistercian abbey churches in Ireland. A good final evening: river, abbey, a proper meal, and the satisfaction of the miles behind you.
A leisurely morning. A last full Irish breakfast. A last look at the river.
Make your way onward — Dublin Airport is around 1 hour 45 minutes by road, and Kilkenny is just 40 minutes away if you fancy adding a night in one of Ireland''s prettiest medieval cities before heading home.
Seven nights in carefully chosen B&Bs and small guesthouses — two nights in Kildare town to make the early canal section easy, then Athy, Carlow, Bagenalstown, Borris, and Graiguenamanagh or St. Mullins. Every room is en-suite, every breakfast is the full Irish, every host is someone we know personally.
Your main luggage is transferred door-to-door each walking day, so you carry only a light daypack — water, layers, lunch, your camera. Two trail transfers are included — on Day 2 we take you out to Lowtown so you can walk to Monasterevin, then back to Kildare for a second night; on Day 3 we run you back to Monasterevin so you can pick up the trail south to Athy.
The houses we use are family-run for the most part, and several of them have been hosting our walkers for over a decade. You'll get warm welcomes, dinner recommendations, and the kind of casual local knowledge that turns a long walk into a proper week away.
May offers long bright evenings, fresh wildflowers and bright green foliage.
June provides the longest daylight hours.
July and August are busiest; book three to four months ahead.
September is the finest: bracken turns gold and rust, light on the water is clear and beautiful, wildflowers remain, and accommodation books more easily.
October brings autumn colours and is very walkable.
The trail is accessible year-round, but winter sections can be muddy with shorter daylight.
Time your visit with a festival. Many trails host walking festivals throughout the season — see our complete 2026 walking festivals calendar to plan around one.
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