Description of the Guest House in Roscommon, Ireland
Guest House in Roscommon, Ireland:
Rosdarrig, located on the edge of Boyle Town, is a modern home offering genuine Irish hospitality and quality accommodation. It is easily accessible to Boyle town's various restaurants & pubs.
Rosdarrig offers scenic views of the Curlieu Mountains and of livestock grazing the surrounding farmland. Rosdarrig, bed and breakfast is approved by the Irish Tourist Board.
Rosdarrig has five individually and beautifully decorated bedrooms, which can accommodate 2 to 5 people. All our rooms have the following facilities: Central Heating, En-Suite Facilities, Television, Tea Making, Hair Dryer.
Rosdarrig's dining and sitting room are luxurious
and spacious and a fitting setting to enjoy Brenda's breakfasts, noted for their quality and choice.
Rosdarrig's gardens, which are for the guests use, are a riot of colour all summer long and feature an ornamental pond and waterfall.
Nearby the Guest House in Roscommon, Ireland
Rosdarrig is nestled at the foot of the Curlieu mountains and is a centre of great beauty and of immense historical interest for visitors. Two golf courses within a five minute drive, angling, traditional Irish music, Tennis Court, quiet countryside walks. Swimming pools, gymnasiums and seaside sports are all within a 30 minute drive.
Amenities of the Guest House in Roscommon, Ireland
Property Type
Guest House, sleeps 10, 5 Bedrooms, 5 Bathrooms, 200 m² floor area
children welcome, suitable for elderly, unsuitable for wheelchairs, no pets, no smoking
Notes: * RTA Member
* Private Car Parking
* Babysitting Service
* Town & Country, TC Home & Farmhouse Vouchers available.
Information about the Guest House in Roscommon, Ireland
Holiday in Boyle, Roscommon: Boyle with its pleasant river and ruined Abbey, is a thriving Town. It is situated on the N4 route linking Dublin to Sligo. Nestling at the foot of the Curliew mountains, it is a centre of great beauty and of immense historical Archaelogical interest for visitors. Situated between the great lakes: Lough Gara, Lough Key & Lough Arrow, it is a renowned centre for fishermen, whether they are interested in Trout or Course fishing. Rosdarrig is on the doorstep of the picturesque Lough Key Forest Park offering Idyllic woodland and countryside walks.
Local Attractions: King House - built by Sir Henry King about 1730, and is a house of unique architectural and historical importance. Situated beside the Boyle River, it occupies land formerly controlled by the MacDermot clan and is the most important provincial town house in Ireland. With the aid of exciting special effects and life size models in recreated scenes you are taken back through the long history of the house and the people who lived in the area. Every opportunity has been taken, with the use of interactive displays, to ensure that visitors, children and adults alike, are able to experience life as it was for the people who occupied the house and lived and work locally.
Boyle Abbey - magnificent restored ruins of the Cistercian Abbey founded in 1161 by Maurice O’Duffy, it is the sister house to the first Cistercian monastery in Mellifont, Co. Louth. Despite many mutilations due to several wars, it is still regarded as the finest of the Cistercian churches to survive in Ireland.
Roscommon Castle: Roscommon Castle - Now in ruins this dramatic and imposing 13th Century Norman Castle later to pass into the hands of Hugh O' Connor, King of Connaught is quadrangular in plan with rounded bastions at the corners and a double-towered entrance gate. The whole castle was surrounded by outer walls defended at the angles with low circular towers.
Strokestown House - was seat of the Parkenham-Mahons since the 1660's. The guided tour of the house includes all the main reception rooms, the first floor bedrooms, the children's nurseries and the galleried kitchen, complete with their original furnishings. Located in the stable yards of Strokestown Park, is the Famine Museum which commemorates the Great Irish Famine of the 1840's. The museum uses the extensive Strokestown archive to explain the significance of the Famine nationally and to reflect critically on the ongoing spectacle of contemporary world hunger.
Rental Rates of the Guest House in Roscommon, Ireland
The rental rates for this property are quoted in EUR per room per day.
Period
Rental Rates and Exchange
Jan 01, 2006 - Dec 31, 2006
EUR
USD
GBP
Notes to the Rates of the Guest House in Roscommon, Ireland
€ 65 for 2 - double room including breakfast. Other room prices available on request.
Packed lunches are available to fishermen, in addition to drying facilities and a bait fridge.