For
B&Bs
around town try
Mullac Na Si
, Bishop St (tel 072/52702; £33-40/¬41.90-50.79),
Carrickboy House
(tel 072/51278; £33-40/¬41.90-50.79), across the roundabout in East Port, or
Channel View
(tel 072/51713; £33-40/¬41.90-50.79), a little way down the road to Abbey Assaroe; others are mostly further along here or out on the Bundoran road. More luxurious accommodation can be found at
Dorrian's Imperial Hotel
(tel 072/51147; £70-90/¬88.88-114.28) on Main Street, a recently refurbished eighteenth-century building whose facilities include a leisure centre and jacuzzi. The small but welcoming
Duffy's
hostel
, a couple of hundred yards up the Donegal Road (March-Sept; tel 072/51535) has its own secondhand bookshop and
camping
facilities. Waterside camping is available at the
Assaroe Lakeside Centre
(tel 072/52822) off the R230 Belleek road.
Bikes
can be rented from the Erne Cycle Shop, An Mál, off Main Street.
There are several reasonably priced
restaurants
for daytime eating, including
Cúchulainn's
on Castle Street, with its healthy portions of fast food, and the popular upstairs coffee rooms at
Grimes Kitchen Bake
on Main Street, where you can get marvellous fresh cakes and pastries. In the evening, check out
Embers Restaurant
, above
Paddy's Bar
, on Castle Street for seafood, pasta and vegetarian dishes, or try
Shannon's Corner Bistro
, at the top of Main Street, for reasonably-priced French-style cuisine. For something more exotic, head across the bridge for Mexican specialities at
El Gringo
. The best
pubs
in town are
Seán Óg's
, with rock music at weekends, the modern
Dicey Reilly's
opposite,
The Thatch
pub on Bishop Street, with thatched roof and cottage-kitchen interior and
traditional music
most nights in summer, and the
Old Distillery
, on the bridge opposite the bus station. Most pubs have music on Sundays and you'll find folk song and ballads at the
Corner Bar
on Main Street. The hub of
disco
life is
Dino's
nightclub in the
Assaroe Hotel
, Main Street.
As well as its August
music festival
, Ballyshannon has a number of other festivities worth investigating. An amateur
drama festival
of mainly Irish plays is held during the week of March 17 (St Patrick's Day); the
Allingham Arts Festival for Writers
takes place over a weekend at the end of November; and the town's traditional
harvest fair
celebrations around the middle of September draw crowds from the surrounding countryside. The rest of the time you can fill your evenings at the two-screen Abbey
cinema
in the Community Arts Centre, at the north end of town by the Donegal road. At
BALLINTRA
, four miles along the Donegal road, there's
horse racing
in the open fields on the first Monday in August.