Summer is anything between 18-24 degrees Celsius.
In the winter it gets cold.
People seem to think it rains all the time but it really doesn't. The temperature hardly ever goes to extremes. It is quite a nice climate.
Best months are March April & May. The rest of the year be prepared for RAIN, RAIN AND MORE RAIN. Temperatures are cooler than UK mainland. Generally similar to Scotland. Wetter in the western part of the province - semi maritime climate, and can be windy in spring and autumn. Can have all seasons in one day but when the sun shines there is no better place to be.
The Irish Sea is known for being quite rough at times with high winds and high waves. Although the crossing is only 60 miles, ferries from Dublin to Holyhead in Wales are sometimes cancelled due to bad weather.
Ireland's is very green, due to the amount of rain. There are lots of mountains, lakes, rivers, valleys, forests, parks, cliffs, beaches, bays, bogs and flat areas. The highest mountains are along the western side of the country. Ireland has lots of cities and large towns, but much of the country is rural. There is pollution, like in any modern country, but the environment is generally quite good and unspoilt.
It is usually very mild with temperatures ranging from single figures to the mid teens (Celsius). In winter, it can get as low as minus five and in the summer can sometimes reach the mid-twenties, but that would be unusual.
Ireland's weather is very unpredictable. So while it is winter, so not very warm, sometimes it can be very cold, sometimes it is milder, sometimes it is raining, sometimes it is dry, sometimes it is stormy, sometimes it is calm. Every year can be different.
Ireland has a relatively mild sea climate so you will hardly ever see TV News flashes of Irish villages being snowed in. On the other hand, Ireland is called the "Green" island because of its lush vegetation. And places that are very green usually get that color as a result of plenty of rain.
So before you have your vacation there, check the internet for the months that are relatively dry and sunny.
Max temp about 24C but warmer in the South East. Try www.met.ie
It is very sunny and maybe sometimes light rain
Ireland is not hot enough. It is too far north of the equator to have the kind of climate for a desert. It gets a lot of rain and can get some cold weather, so there aren't the conditions for deserts to form.
Hotish.
The sea current (also called the Gulf Stream) transports warm tropical seawater to the shores of Ireland and Britain making them have warmer and wetter weather than they would normally have for their latitude.
Ireland is in the northern hemisphere, so it is winter. The weather is cold and might be snowy.
Ireland is not a particularly cold country, mainly due to the Gulf Stream. Places further south than Ireland, such as parts of Canada and the USA get worse winter weather than Ireland does. You will get ice at times, but not very much and it is' not a permanent feature, like in countries closer to the north or south poles. Ireland can get bad winters, as it did in the winters of 2009/2010 and 2010/2011. Some winters are not bad, like the winter of 2011/2012 has been. So Ireland would not be regarded as being an icy country.
Believe me, cold.
Ireland's weather is mixed, but July is usually good. As you get nearer tot the Caribbean, as it is hurricane season at that time of the year, there is a small chance of hurricanes, but a cruise would avoid them and keep to where the weather was best.
Check the weather site at the link below which gives up to date detail on the weather in Ireland.
the weather up in jupiter is so cold you can not dream, its like the north pole.it also looks like a spunky monkey!
Probably because the majority of our weather comes to us across the Atlantic. Since there is nothing in the path of Atlantic weather systems, the west coast of Ireland and the north-west of Scotland bear the brunt of any bad weather that heads our way.
I'd say it's in the North-East of Ireland.