Press Articles
Tatler Magazine November 2006
Las Vegas Review Journal 19
November 2006
Evening Herald 20 March 2006
Sunday Tribune 27 August 2006
First International Wedding
at Crom Castle, Belfast Telegraph, 8 September 2006
The Independent on Sunday, 14
May 2006, A Taste of the Upper Crust
Impartial Reporter Newspaper,
24 February 2005
Newsletter, 28 April 2005
Ulster Tatler Magazine, May
2005
Belfast Telegraph, January 2005
CGA's Country Magazine, Oct/Nov
2005
A Taste of the Upper Crust
At Crom Castle in Co Fermanagh your family can live like aristocrats.
Bill Tuckey worried his clan might get a little too used to it
all...
Published: 14 May 2006
The last time I crossed the Irish Sea on a family holiday was 30
years ago, on a heaving rustbucket of an overnight ferry, awash
with the
vomit of a hundred drunken navvies. We went to stay in a tiny rented
house on an unmade track, with no hot water or electricity; the
only
luxury was sampling the tasty local cheese and onion crisps.
At Easter, with three children of my own in tow, things could
not have been more different. Our two-hour super-fast crossing
from
Holyhead to Dublin was all table service, soft-play areas and even
softer armchairs. Another two hours along country roads dotted
with
new bungalows and we found ourselves staring awestruck at our destination:
a huge stately home at the end of a long, tree-lined drive.
Crom Castle is an early Victorian, turreted pile set in a 2,000-acre
estate in the sleepy, green depths of the border county of
Fermanagh, Northern Ireland's own lake district. And it can be
yours for the price of a week's high-season self-catering in Newquay.
At
least the West Wing can. From this year its owner, the Earl of
Erne, is offering it for hire to help to pay for the upkeep of
his monumental
abode. Unless you've got blue-blooded buddies, it is about as close
as you could get to a slice of authentic aristocratic living.
As we approached Crom, the children began whispering nervously
about cobwebs and ghosts. But their fears quickly vanished once
we'd stepped inside. The West Wing's rooms include a great, barrel-vaulted
dining room, complete with huge pass-the-salt-please
table, and a vast yellow drawing room dominated by ancestral oils.
Yet the place still retains the atmosphere of a happy family home.
Slightly outdated checked upholstery, family photos, boating memorabilia
and a cosy telly room all seem to urge you to put your feet up
and stop worrying about the children breaking that priceless-looking
Chinese porcelain in the hall cabinet. Ours loved the sheer scale
of
the place: running up and down the endless corridors (shouting
a lot) and playing hide and seek with the unexpected gusto of
characters from an Edwardian children's novel.
There are six enormous, en-suite bedrooms, all with their own
endearing decorative theme, including the outrageously floral Rose
Room, and the Buff Room, with a fairytale four-poster.
Two or three families could stay here for a week and never feel
they were on top of one another, even if it did rain non-stop.
But you really wouldn't want to be stuck inside for too long.
The castle lies on the upper part of Lough Erne, a lovely 300-square-mile
stretch of water with a shoreline of fjord-like complexity, surrounded
by gentle hills and speckled with wooded islands. The castle itself
has sweeping lawns, its own deer park and tennis court, and the
wider Crom Estate, now managed by the National Trust, is ideal
for
Swallows and Amazons adventures. Especially since, when you rent
Crom, you get the Earl's motorboat too, moored by a Victorian
boathouse.
Casting off, we nosed past the wildly romantic Crichton Tower,
an island folly built by the family in 1848 when Crom was home
to the
Lough Erne Yacht Club and the epicentre of Fermanagh high society.
Then on, along a shoreline dense with reed swamp and wildfowl
to the jagged ruins of the original Crom Castle, built by 17th-century
Scottish planters and burnt to the ground by a careless maid with
a
candle. Beside the old battlements are giant twin yews, thought
to be the oldest trees in Ireland.
We took a picnic with us and could have kept on going up the lough
all the way to Fermanagh's pretty county town, Enniskillen, a name
that for most is linked to a Remembrance Day bombing nearly 20
years ago. Today, it has a thriving high street, lots of good food
shops, and an oddly 1970s feel.
On our return to the castle, Noel the charming, Crom-born-and-bred
estate manager, had made a fire for us in the drawing room; his
mother Violet had cleaned the bedrooms. One could get used to this.
In fact, it would be easy to spend a whole week at Crom without
venturing beyond the estate gates.
The children passed another happy day with fishing rods and worms,
not catching anything on the lough. There are miles of nature trails
around the estate, and we could have spent a night in the estate's
wildlife hide, trying to spot one of Ireland's rarest mammals,
the pine
marten.
We did venture out again, driving an hour west, for a blast of
Atlantic air on the spectacular beaches of Donegal Bay - until
rain came
down like an upturned bucket. In high summer Crom's magic will
be even stronger. The only snag is once your children get a taste
of it,
they'll never be happy with anything less again.
A week at Crom Castle (028-6773 8004; cromcastle.com) costs from œ210
per person based on 12 sharing. Stena Line (08705
707070; stena line.co.uk) has return ferry crossing from œ130
per car plus passengers
The last time I crossed the Irish Sea on a family holiday was
30 years ago, on a heaving rustbucket of an overnight ferry, awash
with the
vomit of a hundred drunken navvies. We went to stay in a tiny rented
house on an unmade track, with no hot water or electricity; the
only
luxury was sampling the tasty local cheese and onion crisps.
At Easter, with three children of my own in tow, things could
not have been more different. Our two-hour super-fast crossing
from
Holyhead to Dublin was all table service, soft-play areas and even
softer armchairs. Another two hours along country roads dotted
with
new bungalows and we found ourselves staring awestruck at our destination:
a huge stately home at the end of a long, tree-lined drive.
Crom Castle is an early Victorian, turreted pile set in a 2,000-acre
estate in the sleepy, green depths of the border county of
Fermanagh, Northern Ireland's own lake district. And it can be
yours for the price of a week's high-season self-catering in Newquay.
At
least the West Wing can. From this year its owner, the Earl of
Erne, is offering it for hire to help to pay for the upkeep of
his monumental
abode. Unless you've got blue-blooded buddies, it is about as close
as you could get to a slice of authentic aristocratic living.
As we approached Crom, the children began whispering nervously
about cobwebs and ghosts. But their fears quickly vanished once
we'd stepped inside. The West Wing's rooms include a great, barrel-vaulted
dining room, complete with huge pass-the-salt-please
table, and a vast yellow drawing room dominated by ancestral oils.
Yet the place still retains the atmosphere of a happy family home.
Slightly outdated checked upholstery, family photos, boating memorabilia
and a cosy telly room all seem to urge you to put your feet up
and stop worrying about the children breaking that priceless-looking
Chinese porcelain in the hall cabinet. Ours loved the sheer scale
of
the place: running up and down the endless corridors (shouting
a lot) and playing hide and seek with the unexpected gusto of
characters from an Edwardian children's novel.
There are six enormous, en-suite bedrooms, all with their own
endearing decorative theme, including the outrageously floral Rose
Room, and the Buff Room, with a fairytale four-poster.
Two or three families could stay here for a week and never feel
they were on top of one another, even if it did rain non-stop.
But you really wouldn't want to be stuck inside for too long.
The castle lies on the upper part of Lough Erne, a lovely 300-square-mile
stretch of water with a shoreline of fjord-like complexity, surrounded
by gentle hills and speckled with wooded islands. The castle itself
has sweeping lawns, its own deer park and tennis court, and the
wider Crom Estate, now managed by the National Trust, is ideal
for
Swallows and Amazons adventures. Especially since, when you rent
Crom, you get the Earl's motorboat too, moored by a Victorian
boathouse.
Casting off, we nosed past the wildly romantic Crichton Tower,
an island folly built by the family in 1848 when Crom was home
to the
Lough Erne Yacht Club and the epicentre of Fermanagh high society.
Then on, along a shoreline dense with reed swamp and wildfowl
to the jagged ruins of the original Crom Castle, built by 17th-century
Scottish planters and burnt to the ground by a careless maid with
a
candle. Beside the old battlements are giant twin yews, thought
to be the oldest trees in Ireland.
We took a picnic with us and could have kept on going up the lough
all the way to Fermanagh's pretty county town, Enniskillen, a name
that for most is linked to a Remembrance Day bombing nearly 20
years ago. Today, it has a thriving high street, lots of good food
shops, and an oddly 1970s feel.
On our return to the castle, Noel the charming, Crom-born-and-bred
estate manager, had made a fire for us in the drawing room; his
mother Violet had cleaned the bedrooms. One could get used to this.
In fact, it would be easy to spend a whole week at Crom without
venturing beyond the estate gates.
The children passed another happy day with fishing rods and worms,
not catching anything on the lough. There are miles of nature trails
around the estate, and we could have spent a night in the estate's
wildlife hide, trying to spot one of Ireland's rarest mammals,
the pine
marten.
We did venture out again, driving an hour west, for a blast of
Atlantic air on the spectacular beaches of Donegal Bay - until
rain came
down like an upturned bucket. In high summer Crom's magic will
be even stronger. The only snag is once your children get a taste
of it,
they'll never be happy with anything less again.
A week at Crom Castle (028-6773 8004; cromcastle.com) costs from œ210
per person based on 12 sharing. Stena Line (08705
707070; stena line.co.uk) has return ferry crossing from œ130
per car plus passengers
|