There are no ferries direct from Dublin to London. You would get a ferry from Dublin to either Holyhead in Wales or Liverpool in England and then drive, get a bus or get a train to London. You could also fly from Dublin to London.
Given their geographic locations in relation to each other, there are no direct ferries between London and Dublin. You would either fly between the two cities or drive from London to Liverpool or Holyhead and get a ferry from there to Dublin, or drive to Fishguard and get a ferry from there to Rosslare and then drive to Dublin. Going by land and ferry, the whole journey would be done in about 8 hours. It is much faster to fly.
There is no ferry from Newcastle in England to Dublin in Ireland. You would have to get a ferry from Liverpool or Holyhead. Liverpool is about 160 miles from Dublin and Holyhead is about 60 miles. Liverpool is about 163 miles from Newcastle and Holyhead about 263 miles from it.
There are no ferries direct from Dublin to London. You would get a ferry from Dublin to either Holyhead in Wales or Liverpool in England and then drive, get a bus or get a train to London. You could also fly from Dublin to London.
Given their geographic locations in relation to each other, there are no direct ferries between London and Dublin. You would either fly between the two cities or drive from London to Liverpool or Holyhead and get a ferry from there to Dublin, or drive to Fishguard and get a ferry from there to Rosslare and then drive to Dublin. Going by land and ferry, the whole journey would be done in about 8 hours. It is much faster to fly.
Between 2 and 3 hours, depending on the particular ferry taken and weather conditions.
between 2 and 4 hours - depending on the type of ferry etc
3 hours by ferry
7.5hours
Not directly, you can take the Dublin Ferry to Holyhead Wales or Liverpool England then take a Train to Newcastle.
There are no direct ferries from Northern Ireland to France. So to do this would involve travelling from Northern Ireland to another Ferry Port, such as Rosslare in the Republic of Ireland and going from there. The ferry journey is between 17 and 20 hours, depending on weather conditions. Driving to Rosslare from Northern Ireland would be at least 2 hours, depending on your start point.
Dublin Ferry Port Alexandra Road Dublin 1 Ireland.
no, there is a ferry from Cork to Swansea
Bristol is nearer to Dublin. There are no standard ferries operating between the two. You would need to go to the town of Holyhead in Wales to get a direct ferry to Dublin, or go to Fishguard and get a ferry to Ireland and then drive to Dublin.
No.
No. You can get a ferry from Liverpool, close to Birkenhead, to Dublin. There is no ferry between Liverpool and Dún Laoghaire.
you cannot travel from London to Dublin by ferry - you must go to Holyhead in Wales and then take the ferry to Dublin/Dun Laoghaire. High speed ferry is about 1hr 40 mins, conventional is about 3 hours, depending on weather conditions
The Ulysses.
The two main places to sail from are Dublin and nearby D
Dublin and Newcastle.
Newcastle is near the suburban village of Rathcoole on the N7 Naas Road just past Citywest.