The largest year-round patches of ice are in Greenland and Antarctica.
Antarctica. Further information: Whilst it is true that you can see icebergs in Antarctica all year long, Antarctica is a continent, not a country. Iceland has ice all year round, and icebergs are evident even in Summer.
No. But there is a volcano in Ireland and it erupted last year! That volcano was in Iceland. Regarding the sugarloaf, there are a number of sugarloaf mountains in Ireland. Only 1 is a volcano which is extinct. Ireland has many volcanos all of which are extinct.
The loch was as deep as it is long. The loch is as cold as ice water all year long. Many people enjoy driving round the loch at this time of year.
It is no colder or wetter in Ireland than it is in the west of Scotland, so that is not the answer. In the last ice age all of Ireland was covered, but the south of England escaped. It is likely that the ice killed off the the moles in Ireland but not the ones in the south of England, who were able to recolonise the mainland. There are also no moles on the Scottish island of Arran, which is similarly isolated from mainland Britain.
It's year-round, as long as the ice rink is indoors.
There are 3 rinks in Ireland which are suitable for ice hockey: Dundalk Ice Dome in Dundalk, County Louth (Republic of Ireland), Dundonald International Ice Bowl on the eastern outskirts of Belfast (Northern Ireland) and the Odyssey Arena in Belfast (Northern Ireland). The Odyssey Arena is a multi-purpose arena and is normally only configured for ice hockey when the Belfast Giants Elite League team are playing there.
pacific
Ice. It was during the ice age.
Year long cold.
at the end of the ice age
it is on the south east