As Promised: Time to Construct Plans and Attempt to Find a “Bookable Visitor Experience,”for Thurles.
Thurles Tourism Debate: Part IV. Concerns over Tipperary’s ability to sustain and grow tourism have intensified following a recent council presentation on our tourism performance and marketing activity; but then in the words of T.C. Haliburton and later P.T. Barnum, “Talk is Cheap” and the words of councillors and officials come easier than their actions.
Thurles ‘A Sellable Product’.
“Thurles: Cathedral, Liberty Square & Local Stories, Lár na Páirce.” (90–120 mins)
The promise: (what the visitor gets.) A guided, easy walking loop that explains Thurles through three stops foreigners can understand instantly:
Cathedral of the Assumption: Big visuals + a clear “why it matters” story: architecture, stained glass, music/choir tradition, and key moments that root the town in Irish life.
Perfect as an add-on stop between other major routes.
Why Irish Rail is a big advantage for Thurles. Thurles has a very strong practical selling point; it’s a rail town with visitor basics already in place. From Irish Rail’s station information, Thurles station is 0.5 miles to the town centre, has toilets, passenger shelters, an enclosed waiting room, and strong accessibility (lifts to platforms, accessible toilet, ramps). It’s also on key intercity routes including Dublin Heuston – Cork (directs and intermediate), plus services connecting towards Limerick/Ennis and Tralee.
That means we can pitch Thurles as: “Arrive by train, walk the town, back on the train.” Ideal for weekend/day-trip groups who dislike motorway fatigue, parking stress, or long coach days.
In Part V, of our Thurles Tourism Debate, in the coming days we will assist in where to contact/sell and will provide a short, copy/paste social media advert.
Note: Since two paid tour guides with proper temperament, will be required to undertake this work, (yes we already have two knowledgable individuals, trained by myself), thus creating two jobs, which is more than our Tipperary public reps. have created in the past 20 years.
Time to increase failed footfall and reverse the deliberate destruction of our town centre, (Liberty Square), as a centre for business.
Learn how to make a St Brigid’s Cross – Tuesday next @2.30pm.
Please do remember: As with previous years, places are strictly limited. Advance booking is therefore essential for this free event and places will be allocated strictly on a first-come, first-served basis. Bookings Please to Tel: No. 062 63825.
Visitors attending this informative event can locate the Cashel Library building; situated on Friar Street, Lady’s Well, Cashel, Co. Tipperary, HERE. (Eircode E25 K798).
Community groups across Tipperary are being invited to celebrate and showcase their local wetlands, following the appointment of Mr Darragh Kelly as Tipperary’s new Community Water Officer.
Mr Kelly has spent the past number of years working in the Environment Section of Kilkenny County Council and has said he is delighted to take on this new role, supporting communities to protect and enhance local waters and wetlands.
Coming from a farming background, Mr Kelly said he has a strong interest in the outdoors, including fishing and hiking, and is particularly fond of exploring Slievenamon.
World Wetlands Day — 2 February 2026. This year’s World Wetlands Day will be marked on Monday, 2nd February 2026, the International Day that commemorates the signing of the Ramsar Convention♦ on Wetlands.
♦ The Ramsar Convention(or Convention on Wetlands) is an International Treaty for wetland conservation, signed in Ramsar, Iran, in 1971, promoting the “wise use” of wetlands for sustainable development, especially for waterfowl habitats.
The 2026 theme is: “Wetlands and traditional knowledge: Celebrating cultural heritage”, highlighting the links between wetlands, communities, and the knowledge passed down through generations.
Funding now open for World Wetlands Day promotions. Mr Kelly has confirmed that the Small Grants and Events Scheme 2026 portal opened for applications on Monday, 19th January at 11.00am, specifically for World Wetlands Day promotion.
Groups and organisations are encouraged to make contact if they would like to organise an event to celebrate a local wetland — from guided walks and talks to school visits, clean-ups, wildlife sessions or community information events. Revised scheme guidelines for 2026 are also available.
How to apply. The information portal is now available HERE, so do get in touch. Anyone wishing to organise an event or looking for support is invited to contact Mr Kelly directly @ Darragh Kelly, Community Water Officer (Tipperary), Mobile: 085 8333383.
A series of upbeat tourism announcements and investment-led press releases in County Tipperary are landing against a stark national backdrop, after Eurostat reported that Ireland was one of only two EU member states to record a fall in tourist accommodation nights in 2025.
Eurostat’s early estimates show EU tourism nights hit a record 3.08 billion in 2025, up 2% year-on-year, while Ireland recorded a -2% decline (with Romania the only other country in negative territory).
Irish coverage of the figures has put the Republic’s total at 41.3 million tourist bed nights in 2025 (-1.8%), describing it as the weakest performance in the EU. The same reports note that the peak summer quarter (Q3 2025) fell 4.1%, with hotel nights down 8.4% and camping nights down 27%, while “holiday and other short-stay accommodation” rose 15.4%.
Of course, local press releases paint a different story: “growth”, “season extension”, “boost tourism”.
Despite the national decline, Tipperary tourism communications over the past year have repeatedly highlighted expansion, regeneration and new visitor offerings:-
Dromineer, Lough Derg (Nenagh MD): Tipperary County Council press material describes a €1.2m watersports facility as a “best-in-class” outdoor tourism hub intended to enhance the visitor experience and support year-round activity. Roscrea (Grant’s Hotel): A Council press release on a feasibility study lists explicit objectives to “boost tourism activity” and increase footfall and dwell time in the town centre, alongside employment and night-time economy goals. Carrick-on-Suir: A Council announcement confirms award of a €2.9m Phase 2 contract under the regeneration plan, presented as part of a wider town-centre renewal drive. Thurles: Sadly the only tourism-tagged local event promotion (Feb 2025), shows a Council/MD posting highlighting for St Patrick’s Day Parade, Thurles (2025), categorised under Tourism, which pushes footfall activity in the town centre (music, attractions, participation).
Thurles it is time to wake up.
Countywide “Roadmap” messaging: The Tipperary Tourism Roadmap 2025–2030 sets out targets around economic growth, season extension and giving visitors reasons to stay longer, and was publicly launched in late November last year.
Fáilte Ireland funding (Midlands / JTF): A national press release announced €5.5m for 17 regenerative tourism projects, bringing the scheme’s announced tourism funding to almost €60m, reinforcing the wider policy message of building new and improved visitor experiences.
The core contradiction: publicity versus performance. The tension is not that Tipperary’s projects are unwelcome, it is that headline-grabbing announcements about “growth” and “visitor experience” risk sounds hollow when the national data shows Ireland moving against the EU trend.
A key question now is whether local strategies are being matched with measurable outcomes, bed capacity, occupancy, shoulder-season activity, and value-for-money delivery, or whether Tipperary is simply publishing plans, while the wider system continues to lose ground.
We will be speaking about solutions in the coming days, so do stay tuned. Update Thurles Tourism Debate: Part IV.
Concerns over Tipperary’s ability to sustain and grow tourism have intensified following a recent council presentation on tourism performance and marketing activity, a meeting where councillors again highlighted the county’s deepening shortage of visitor accommodation.
While elected members warned that a lack of “bed nights” is now actively preventing the county from hosting events, retaining tour groups and converting day-trippers into overnight stays, local stakeholders say the discussion risks becoming yet another exercise in acknowledging the obviouswithout confronting who is accountable for years of drift and under-delivery.
Thurles social media continuously sells “local life” as if it were a tourism product and that is completely failing us. Thurles tourism messaging is too often confused about its real job.
A visitor does not fly to Ireland for a post from Thurles Tourist Office wishing them a “Happy Christmas”; “Happy New Year”; Inviting Nail Bar Appointments; Selling Clothing; Local Book Launches and other generic services that exist to be found in every backward town and village in Ireland. Yes, local businesses matter, but when social tourism channels read like a community noticeboard, it dillutes the towns strongest selling points and waste the fleeting attention created by international coverage.
Right now, too much content promotes what exists here locally, rather than what a visitor would travel from North America, France & UK for. That is why tour coaches stop and then quickly go or totally avoid Thurles altogether. That is why day-trippers don’t become overnight stays and that is why international attention risks becoming little more than a headline.
What Thurles Must & Should Do Immediately.
Use the Lonely Planet moment, and immediately deliver Thurles Lions Club Signposting so Thurles stops being overlooked.
Tipperary has a rare opportunity in the fact that the county has been recognised in Lonely Planet’s Best in Travel 2026list, (a global “top 25” selection). Tourism Ireland says Tipperary is described as “best for hiking, history and fine food”, exactly the kind of international positioning counties spend years trying to win. But that attention must now be converted into overnight stays, and that requires practical, on-the-ground delivery, particularly for towns like Thurles. So here is the uncomfortable truth; ‘Likes’ on Facebook are not bed nights. If our digital content does notanswer the visitor’s basic questions, they stay on the motorway.
Thurles Lions Club have shown our town of Thurles the lead by securing €29,600 in LEADER funding for a Thurles Heritage Trail, including signage at strategic points around the town with QR codes linking visitors to digital storytelling. Thurles has been crying out for this kind of hands-on, visitor-ready infrastructure for years. It should be treated as an emergency priority, not reduced to a cosy talking-point trotted out once a month for newspaper coverage, with scarcely a single progressive tourism voice in the room.
If Tipperary County Council is serious, this is precisely what it should be funding, promoting and delivering, with councillors and officials finally partnering with those who actually understand the tourism industry.
Currently if visitors attempt to visit the Thurles Tourism Site – Oops! That page can’t be found.
We will be speaking more about failures and solutions in the coming days, so do stay tuned. SeeThurles Tourism Debate: Part III.
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