Kinsale: For great natural produce, accommodation and fun things to do
People sitting out in the sunshine and enjoying lunch in Kinsale, Co Cork. Picture Dan Linehan






From the world of high fashion publishing to the green fields of Kinsale, Ciara Hunt’s career has taken her to London, Toronto, Boston and Munich.
But a return to Kinsale, the favourite place of her childhood, has been the catalyst for a new chapter in an extraordinary life.

In May, Ciara co-founded a new festival, Fashion & Farming, with her mother, Mareta Doyle, a familiar face behind Kinsale Arts Week. The festival aimed to kick-start a conversation around where these two seemingly disparate topics converge — the soil.
The festival drew in a diverse array of big-name speakers. U2’s Adam Clayton, MEP Mairead McGuinness, former TD Simon Coveney, and Farming for Nature Ambassador Darina Allen, and activists from the worlds of farming and fashion, political and not, all gathered at Kinsale Community School’s new theatre.
But where did the idea germinate?
Seven years ago, Ciara and her husband Richard, purchased a dilapidated farmhouse which came with 60 acres of land. While the house was what drew them and their three children to this pastoral scene, it was an unnatural silence in a natural place that became a revelatory and life changing moment.
“I was super excited about the house,” says Ciara. “It’s nestled among trees, deep set and cocooned. The setting is beautifully serene. I had been walking the land when I began to wonder why it was so quiet. There was no sound; the landscape was dead around us — no birds, no bees, no buzzing, nothing. I became obsessed about it; I couldn’t understand why I wasn’t hearing anything?
“The first thing I did was to stop all farming. I realised we had to bring fertility back into the soil because it was dead after years of intensive farming. We planted lots of grasses and clovers, thousands of trees, and restored the hedgerows by going back to the original field maps.
“By creating hedgerows, cultivating shrubs, trees, edges, margins, building ponds and restoring dry-stone walls it has brought the wildlife back. The Dawn Chorus wakes me every morning now. It’s so loud, but exciting because we created that. There was nothing there and now there’s so much life.”
The two worlds of fashion and farming do not naturally connect in the mind, but the big picture is — clothes or food — it all starts with the soil.
“Mum brought these two worlds together, stemmed from my background in fashion and my realisation that we all buy and consume too much fashion, and my work on this land.
“The farm-to-table conversations happened, but fashion has not been discussed as broadly as it should be. It’s one of the world’s greatest pollutants and it really needs to be addressed, particularly fast fashion and the disposal of fashion — it’s shocking what it’s doing to the environment.
“It was a massive success, and we have received a fantastic response from our audience and speakers — many have said they want to come back next year.”
Fashion & Farming Festival returns to Kinsale May 9-10, 2026. In the meantime, be sure to seek out Kinsale’s sustainable makers and creators in both fashion and food on your next visit.
www.fashionandfarming.com
You’ll find something to entertain you in Kinsale throughout the year.
Here is just a small sample of the festivals that await you in the coming months.
This year’s theme is Ninth Wave: “Cliodhna, Queen of the Banshees, rides The Ninth Wave, crashing through from the deep, spiriting mortal souls along the seabed to Hy Breasil, her island in the West Sea… Kinsale Arts Weekend has the power to take you into the unknown. To experience the excitement and terror of The Ninth Wave.” Now in its ninth year, and with another wonderfully curated programme, events span music and poetry to film and documentary, dance and theatre, sculpture and painting, comedy and writing.
www.kinsaleartsweekend.com
The oldest running regatta in Ireland, Kinsale Regatta celebrates the maritime culture and heritage of the town. Watch vessels racing in open water from ocean yachts to dinghies, and a thrilling long-distance swim around Sandycove Island. Plenty of action on land too, plus all Kinsale food and drink to delight in when the boats are resting.
www.kinsale.ie
Long before it became world famous for food and sailing, Kinsale was an important trading and fishing port and it also held strategic military importance.
Much of that built heritage is preserved in the town and Heritage Week connects people, places and history through events as diverse as historical walks, talks and tours, poetry, music, art and architecture.

A weekend devoted to celebrating good writing, the festival programme appeals to readers of all ages and interests with events showcasing literary fiction to sport, poetry to the short story and much more in between. Full programme and tickets available online.
www.wordsbywater.ie
One of the most anticipated events in the Kinsale calendar! Gather in your finery and follow Alice, the Queen of Hearts, March Hare and the infamous Mad Hatter on a walking food tour with delicious fayre. Tickets sell fast, so don’t be late!
www.kinsalegoodfoodcircle.ie



