Rooska Loop
This loop walk has wonderful views over Bantry Bay and Dunmanus Bay, following both quiet roads and open hill.
Rooska Loop Details
Distance | Grade | Estimated Walking Time |
19 km | Strenuous | 8.5 hrs |
Ascent | Descent | Min. Height | Max. Height |
479 m | 479 m | 3 m | 195 m |
Rooska Loop Marker & Downloads
Rooska Loop Directions & Map
Directions: Starting at the Bantry West trailhead, walk west following the foothpath until you see the purple arrows turning into the Boatyard and West Lodge Hotel Gardens. This trail is initially on quiet country roads and farmland passing by Lady’s Well and Mass Rock before rising to Boolteenagh where the trail continues off-road, and follows the ridgeline. At Loch na Fuilla (Lake of Blood), turn right and travel down to the main public road. Here, turn right and continue approximately 3km, before turning left and returning along the same trail to Bantry town.
The Lake of Blood
By Willie Dwyer, Local Historian, Rooska, Bantry
"Those stone cairns up there on the hill are not the original cairns made by the Ordnance Survey (in the 18 30s), but they are on that the original spot, I believe, of the cairns. Some people used to go out there and knock it down, and the next party that would go up would rebuild it up again. So down through the years it has been preserved. It might have been destroyed, but it was like the phoenix - it always arose from the ashes!
I heard this story from local schoolteacher, Joe Hourihane, who is dead many years. Tradition has it that in a dry summer many, many years ago, water was very scarce and there was cattle grazing in the mountain over the lake. The water was scarce in the hole due to the demand that was on it by the cattle, and eventually, the cattle fought over the water and gored each other. There was no such thing as dehorning of cattle in those days, and the smell of blood drove the cattle mad. The result was anyway that there was nothing left in the end, only some few survivors and a pool of blood in what used to be, due to the dryness of the summer, the little lake. And that's how it got its name of "Loch na Fuilla", which when translated into English means "The Lake of the Blood".
The gap going through in the mountain there, by Loch na Fuilla, the locals always called it, that's the old people who are dead and gone now, used to call it "Barna Mhór", which means "The Big Gap", and on the right-hand side (the north-west corner) before you come to the extreme top of the track, there's a round bald rock which was known as "the Eagle's Rest". I don't know how long the eagles have been gone out of this part of the country, but it must have been a long time ago. This is a tradition now, it has been handed down as tradition, how true or false it is, I can't prove to you."Willie Dwyer, Local Historian, Rooska, Bantry