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What is the best time of year to visit Dublin, Ireland, and why?

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What is the best time of year to visit Dublin, Ireland, and why?

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The peak months of the tourist season are July and August, so consider visiting in May, June or September if you can. The weather is likely to be at least as good and hotels are less busy. Spring flowers are at their best in April and May, and October offers many arts festivals. Winter days have their own sort of atmosphere but darkness falls early, and many sites and attractions are closed, as are a lot of the hotels in holiday areas. You can have magnificent beaches like Rosses Point near Sligo Town all to yourself, but it may be too cold to swim.n the path of moist Atlantic air and the moderating effect of the Gulf Stream, Ireland is rarely hot or very cold. You might be lucky enough to encounter a warm dry spell in summer, but showers and bright intervals are far more likely. Take raincoats and umbrellas and be prepared for what the locals call ‘soft’ days, which are warm with fine misty rain that goes on for hours, keeping the Emerald Isle green. The west, where it rains on at lea

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The peak months of the tourist season are July and August, so consider visiting in May, June or September if you can. The weather is likely to be at least as good and hotels are less busy. Spring flowers are at their best in April and May, and October offers many arts festivals. Winter days have their own sort of atmosphere but darkness falls early, and many sites and attractions are closed, as are a lot of the hotels in holiday areas. You can have magnificent beaches like Rosses Point near Sligo Town all to yourself, but it may be too cold to swim.n the path of moist Atlantic air and the moderating effect of the Gulf Stream, Ireland is rarely hot or very cold. You might be lucky enough to encounter a warm dry spell in summer, but showers and bright intervals are far more likely. Take raincoats and umbrellas and be prepared for what the locals call ‘soft’ days, which are warm with fine misty rain that goes on for hours, keeping the Emerald Isle green. The west, where it rains on at lea

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