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Read article →Cross the Mournes and finish at Saint Patrick's grave.
The 6-Day Part B Saint Patrick's Way picks up where Part A leaves off — at the upland village of Hilltown — and carries you across the high Mournes to Newcastle, then along the coast to Downpatrick and the final stamp at Saint Patrick's grave.
Three walking days with a built-in rest day in Newcastle. Day 2 is the signature mountain crossing — Hilltown to Newcastle via the Mourne Way, with the granite peaks of Slieve Donard, Slieve Commedagh and Slieve Bearnagh dominating the eastern horizon. Day 3 you stay put: Newcastle is built where the Mountains of Mourne sweep down to the sea, and a rest day there is no rest at all — the beach, the harbour, the climb up Slieve Donard if you have the legs. Day 4 is a short, easy coastal stretch through Murlough National Nature Reserve to Dundrum Castle. Day 5 — the final pilgrimage day — takes you north past Saul Church and Struell Wells to Down Cathedral, where Saint Patrick is buried.
Three walking days, five nights, luggage transfers, Pilgrim Passport and Certificate of Achievement at the Saint Patrick Centre. The mountain-and-pilgrimage half of Ireland's Camino.
Day 2 is the headline: 26km from Hilltown across the western Mournes to Newcastle. Heather moorland, granite peaks, Tollymore Forest Park, and a finish where the mountains sweep down to the sea. It is the signature day of the entire Saint Patrick's Way.
A full day in Newcastle below Slieve Donard — Northern Ireland's highest peak. Beach, harbour, Victorian promenade. Climb Slieve Donard if you have the legs, or just sit by the sea and watch the Mournes you crossed yesterday.
Day 4 threads through Murlough National Nature Reserve — Ireland's first nature reserve, a 6,000-year-old sand-dune system managed by the National Trust. Marram grass, wading birds, views back to the Mournes. A gentle recovery walk to Dundrum.
The final day finishes at Down Cathedral and the boulder marking Saint Patrick's grave. Present your stamped Pilgrim Passport at the Saint Patrick Centre for your Certificate of Achievement. You have completed Ireland's Camino.
Your fitness level
Moderate, with one demanding mountain day. Day 2 — Hilltown to Newcastle — is 26km across exposed Mourne foothills with 743m of cumulative ascent. You need proper hiking boots, waterproofs and the experience to walk in mountain terrain for a full day. The other two walking days are shorter and easier.
The right kind of traveller
You want the mountain stage and the pilgrim finish without committing to the full 9 days from Armagh. You may have already walked Part A (Armagh to Hilltown) on a previous trip — or you simply want the most dramatic half of the route.
Solo, couples, groups
Strong solo walkers love the Mournes crossing. Couples motivate each other through the big day. Small groups share the mountain experience.
Arrive in Hilltown, the upland gateway to the Mournes — eight pubs on the main street and the high peaks rising to the east. Settle into your B&B, collect your route notes and Pilgrim Passport, and walk down to the River Bann if there's daylight. Quiet evening, early night — tomorrow is the Mourne crossing.
26 km · 7–9 hours · Mourne foothills + Tollymore Forest
The big day. From Hilltown the trail follows the Mourne Way along the northern foothills of the high Mournes — Slieve Bearnagh, Slieve Commedagh, Slieve Donard rising in the distance. The route contours rather than summits, but the exposure and the views are real. The second half drops into Tollymore Forest Park, an 18th-century demesne of stone bridges, ancient oaks and stepping-stone river crossings (a Game of Thrones filming location). Down through the park to Newcastle — where the Mountains of Mourne sweep down to the sea.
A built-in rest day under Slieve Donard. The beach is yours. Walk the Victorian promenade, visit the harbour, eat well. If your legs are willing, the trail up Slieve Donard (850m, Northern Ireland's highest peak) starts from the seafront — 9km return, the finest view in Ulster. If not, sit and let the Mournes sit with you.
6.7 km · 2 hours · Coast and dunes
A short, easy recovery day. Past Royal County Down Golf Club and into Murlough National Nature Reserve — Ireland's first nature reserve, an ancient sand-dune system. Boardwalks thread between marram-grass dunes with views back to the Mournes. Into Dundrum village under the ruins of a 12th-century Norman castle; the village is known for its oyster and mussel beds, so eat seafood.
24.5 km · 6–7 hours · Heritage trail through Patrician sites
The final pilgrimage day. Out of Dundrum past the Norman castle ruins and back through the edge of Murlough's mudflats, then north through the Strangford & Lecale AONB. The route passes Saul Church — the site of Saint Patrick's first church in Ireland, a barn given to him by the chieftain Dichu in 432 — and Struell Wells, four ancient holy wells traditionally associated with the saint. The trail climbs into Downpatrick to Down Cathedral and the boulder marking Saint Patrick's grave. Present your stamped Passport at the Saint Patrick Centre for your Certificate of Achievement. The pilgrimage is complete.
A pilgrim's final morning. Visit Down Cathedral one more time. The Saint Patrick Centre, Struell Wells, and Inch Abbey are all worth an hour if you have it. Castle Ward — Winterfell in Game of Thrones — is 15 minutes away. Transfer to Belfast or Dublin, taking your Certificate and your memories with you.
Five nights — Hilltown, two nights in Newcastle (with the built-in rest day), Dundrum, and Downpatrick. Each stop has its own character: an upland Mourne village, a Victorian seaside town under Northern Ireland's highest peak, an oyster-harbour village, and the cathedral town where the pilgrimage ends. All en-suite, full breakfast, luggage transferred.
April to October is the walking season, with May, June, and September the ideal months. The Mournes can be misty and cool even in summer — layers and waterproofs are essential for the mountain crossing. July and August are warmest but may have more cloud on the peaks. St Patrick's Day (17 March) brings festivities to Armagh and Downpatrick but the trail is not yet in season. Late spring and early autumn offer quieter trails, golden light, and fewer visitors at heritage sites.
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County Armagh & Down
The complete pilgrim trail — one stage per day, finishing at Saint Patrick's grave.
County Armagh & Down