Hidden Ireland’s Wild Atlantic Son
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Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. The only way to do great work is to love what you do.” -Steve Jobs
As a young boy living in the Gap of Dunloe in Kerry, Ireland Con Moriarty knew he had been born into an incredibly powerful place. An innately restless lad, he raced home from school each day intent on exploring the wild, primal land and jagged mountains that were his backyard. 9,000 years of human habitation surrounded his home where he explored the McGillicuddy Reeks, kicked footballs off ancient headstones, and played amongst primordial tombs. A student of his homeland, young Con was keenly aware that the cultural imprint and spiritual resonance on the land where he grew up was as visceral as the air he breathed.
Con also knew at an early age that he had found his calling. His passion lay in sharing his native land and the complex history that accompanied it. When Con was a teenager, visitors to Kerry called on him to guide them on hikes and adventures. They came from various socio-economic levels and corners of the globe. Yet regardless of status, all were profoundly moved and inspired by the organic experience that the curiously adventurous teen shared with them. Con Moriarty had found his voice and in doing so, began sharing his belief that the precious ability to experience the intimate joy and peace in being with the land is something anyone can enjoy. The seed of his deeply satisfying and impassioned career as a guide had been planted.
Fate intervened in 1984 when Con assisted a much older man who was guide for Binky Oswalt, a travel agent from Mobile, Alabama who had Irish family connections. The two struck up an organic friendship based on an aligned enthusiasm for Ireland: their desire to share its spectacular geography and intrinsic cultural appeal with travelers. Con Moriarty’s Hidden Ireland Tours was launched in 1986, and the kindred friendship between he and Binky eventually fostered a business partnership in 1989. A committed handshake sealed the deal; no corporate attorneys were needed.
30 years later, Con and Binky, along with a staff of passionate coordinators and guides continue to customize trips for discerning and varied clients. Drawing upon their profound knowedge, imagination and the magical allure of Ireland, each tour weaves a spectacular tapestry of the historic and spiritual lore, wildly breathtaking nature, and the Gaelic cultural elements that are woven into their island home. Con stresses that the mission of Hidden Ireland Tours is to share all facets of Ireland with their clients. “We want people to not just feel Ireland on their calf muscles. We want it to go up their nose and into their ears. We want it to go into their souls. We want it to go down their throat. We want them to taste the cheese that comes from that small cheesery with six cows whose owner combs their hair and kisses them each morning.”
Throughout his lifelong journey as an adventure guide Con has viewed himself as the conduit that fosters an emotional connection between his clients and the rich complexity of Ireland. The man is larger than life. Standing 6’5” with piercing blue eyes and a smile that will surely illuminate any room, Con ebulliently (and often humorously) articulates Ireland’s rich spiritual and geographic history while walking with his guests through the country’s hidden gems. Later, over a pint of Guinness, warm conversation and an evening meal at a nearby pub, they collectively immerse themselves in the local culture. His guests see and experience extraordinary things, then go home and write incredible letters – even poems sharing their emotional experience. Something moves in them. Con feels extremely blessed and maintains a deep desire to be present with his guests in those moments when they have that awakening – that personal connection with the land.
A true mountaineer, Con has spent his adult life climbing throughout the world including Patagonia, Kenya, Peru, Nepal, Scotland, Australia, New Zealand, and the United States. A keen observer of world affairs, he feels an underlying tension about how tourism is profoundly changing the nature of many lands and the people who inhabit them. For Con, Nepal is forever changed and not necessarily for the better. He asserted, “There are only so many times you can say, ‘This is the last unspoiled place.’” He remains expressly interested in working with people who are deeply conscious about how many trips they bring to a place before it changes the landscape and the people. Hosting one to four trips of select clients seems far more responsible to Con Moriarty than the dozens of trips that many tour companies who are primarily interested in building the bottom line often bring.
Although he feels there is massive ambiguity about the concept of responsible tourism, Con also feels that the difficult but much needed conversations on that topic as well as conservation awareness and education are slowly beginning to take hold. He spent the month of November last year on an Antarctic expedition with an extraordinary group of scholars, environmentalists and scientists. 100 years after Ernest Shackelton and his team’s 1914-1917 transcontinental journey to the South Pole and their improbable story of survival, environmenal scientist Tim Jarvis, Blue Ocean Institute founder, author and TED speaker Carl Safina, Dutch nature photographer Frans Lanting, Wilderness Travel’s Bill and Barbara Abbott and Barbara Banks, and several dozen others revisited Shackleton’s Antarctic journey. The month-long adventure produced a bevy of incredible memories with long-time friends. It also produced powerful discussions on the Antarctic Treaty, climate change, elevated carbon levels in glacial ice, the oceans, green technology, and related topics. Having explored the world and worked with some of its most brilliant environmental scholars, Con is cautiously optimistic that on a global level we are slowly moving in the right direction.
40 years ago a restlessly adventurous Gaelic boy knew that he wanted to share his wild Irish landscape with the world. He is now a testament that success is measured by far more than the bottom line of a ledger. Con Moriarty has shared with all who’ve met and explored with him that the only way to do great work is to love what you do. And each of us is richer for it.
CON MORIARTY’S HIDDEN IRELAND TOURS
Gap of Dunloe, Killarney, Co. Kerry, Ireland
Ireland: +353 64 6644733
USA & Rest of the World: +1 251 478 7519
Email: info@hiddenirelandtours.com