Fermanagh: Wilde Dining and Fishing
- Joan Scales
- Sep 16, 2021
- 3 min read
Updated: Mar 4, 2025
This week I was in Fermanagh for a short visit to preview the Festival Lough ErneĀ that is taking place all this week and over the weekend. The highlight of the visit was a feast in the forest of Castle Caldwell, the home of the minerals used to make Belleek China. The town of Belleek is nearby and has a beautiful visitor centre for the rare China.Ā
Though the castle is nowĀ anĀ ivy-coveredĀ ruin, the grounds provide lots of walking and hiking trails.Ā After a walk with two local guides, we arrived at a magical gladeĀ in the forest to the tinkling of a gentlemanĀ harpist.Ā Ā Ā
Here a table made from the trunk of a tree was festooned and garlanded in moss and trailing ivy leaves.Ā Platters made from slices of fallen trees were our placemats for an extraordinaryĀ dinner.Ā This was the setting of Wilde Dining with Festival Lough Erne one of the events being showcased for this week.Ā

Candlelight,Ā crystalĀ glasses,Ā linen napkins,Ā bonfires and twinkling fairy lightsĀ were the accompaniments to provide a stunning meal by celebrity chef Paula McIntyre. She cooked some of the foodĀ offsite and finished it on the wood fire.Ā
The ingredients used were from food producers in Ulster.Ā They included Fermanagh Sika venison,Ā pork and black puddingĀ fromĀ OāDohertysĀ of Enniskillen,Ā BallyliskĀ cheese, Boatyard gin in the raspberry truffles, and apples from her own garden.Ā See menu.Ā
It was a fantastic experience to sit in a forest glade, eating beautiful food. The weather was lovely, dry and cool and no midges. There was a lot of chatter and laughter; sitting out under fairy lights in a forest will bring out the excitedĀ child in anyone.Ā Ā
After dinner there was a cocktail from the local gin distillery, the Boatyard DistilleryĀ based atĀ TullybayĀ Marina.Ā Three of the guests took part in a blind tasting of the botanicals that go into making the Boatyard Gin.Ā Ā
The mealĀ event was organised by local designer and stylistĀ Cathy McGovern, and no detail was left undone. There wereĀ PortaloosĀ hidden among the trees, too.Ā This event was quite an achievement when you are a business woman with two young children. At the end of the evening Cathy and her husband Geoff entertained us with music and guitar-playing. Another string to Cathyās bow, is that she is a fine singer too.Ā

The Feast in the Forest will be recreated next weekend, see details here.Ā
The Lakelands of Fermanagh areĀ aptly named as more than a third of the landmass of the county is covered in water. There are 154 islands to explore in this green county. Set in the north west midlandsĀ of Ireland,Ā Fermanagh has developed tourism aroundĀ itsĀ natural resources.Ā
Here you will find lakesĀ and riversĀ stocked with wild trout, salmon and pike. On Monday morning we watched enthralled from our fishing boat as a fisherman caught an eight-kilo pike nearby.Ā Soon after he caught yet another one, maybe not as big, but still substantial.Ā Ā Ā
It was a sunny autumn morning on Lower Lough Erne where we were trying our hand at fishing, a first for me and my two friends.Ā ThoughĀ the ghillie told us women were often lucky at fishing, we caught naught. Just as well, I probably would have screamed with fright.
We stayed inĀ DulrushĀ LodgeĀ five minutes from Belleek and next door to Castle Caldwell. Though primarily a fishing venue with its own harbour and boatsĀ DulrushĀ has great facilities for all kinds of trips to Fermanagh.Ā Ā Ā

Women will love the outdoor hot tubs, there are three big ones. There is a outdoor lane swimming pool, sauna and steam room, andĀ lovely grounds to explore. DulrushĀ is also a working farm and loved by families, see website here.Ā




Comments