Short run today from Larne to Belfast. Cycled past the roundabout in Larne with a large golden crown as a centrepiece. A very sharp and not so short hill out of Glynn made us breath a bit heavily, and someone behind me sounding as if it was their very last breath ever. A bit of undulation in cow country lead us to a very long descent to the A2 at Eden by the Kilroot power station. A brew was taken at the clock tower cafe in Carrickfergus before moving on to Belfast. Bill made a visit to the recently refurbished Norman Carrickfergus Castle which has been besieged by the Scots, English, Irish and French over the centuries. Belfast was approached using a very pleasant cycleway for several miles to the city centre from Whiteabbey. The city bus tour is a great way to see the city and also to see the many murals around many streets. The Titanic museum is well worth a visit with displays of the movement of people to Belfast from the country from the mid 1800s. Initially they were employed in the conversion of flax to linen cloth and then making the spinning and weaving machines. Mass migration following the famine of 1850S lead to the ship building industry flourishing and creating a large workforce. The Titanic, and its sister ship Olympic,were built by Harland and Wolf for the White Star Line in Belfast only for it to sink in 1912 in its way to America after hitting an iceberg. The museum takes you through the manufacture of the vessel, its history and the final hours of the voyage where over 1,500 people lost their lives and 705 miraculously survived. The grand piano was also lost to the deep along with everything on that dreadful, cold February evening in 1912.