No. Ireland and England are in the same time zone.
Boat, Eurostar or plane. You can take the eurostar or a boat to cross the channel into England and then another boat to Ireland. Or a boat directly to Ireland, which would make much mre sense. But in the eurostar case it only crosses the channel. Or a plane straight to any of the airports all over Ireland, which makes most sense as it would be cheeper, quicker and less hassel.
Ireland is west of England. Sailing from England to Ireland is relatively short, though it will depend on where you are sailing from in England and where you are sailing to. Depending on that it could take anything from a few hours to a few days. If you are sailing using an actual sailboat, this would be longer than if using a boat with an engine. There are scheduled sailings between England and Ireland by ferry, and more commonly from Wales to Ireland, as Wales is closer than England.
England and Scotland share a land border, so you can travel between them by road or rail or you could fly. Ireland is on a separate island, so to go from England or Scotland to Ireland you would have to fly or go by boat.
depends on the boat, a long time!
England did not unite with Northern Ireland. Ireland was at one time part of the British empire. Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales became the United Kingdom in 1801. In 1922, the Republic of Ireland became independent and Northern Ireland was formed and remained in the United Kingdom.
The Vikings were great boat builders. They got to Ireland by boat.
Portugal and Ireland
Ireland was never part of England. Northern Ireland is part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. It is not part of England. Great Britain is made up of England, Wales and Scotland. The United Kingdom includes Northern Ireland. The Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland are on the island of Ireland, so they do not even share a border with England and have never been part of it. The Republic of Ireland is not part of the United Kingdom.
Northern Ireland is part of the United Kingdom and on the island of Ireland. You can travel from the Republic of Ireland by driving across the border. The rest of the United Kingdom is across the Irish Sea, so you would travel by boat or plane to get to England, Scotland or Wales from Ireland.
No. Ireland is west of England.
boat