Midweek Breaks
Incredible Value for your money in June & the Autumn for those who can get away Sunday to Thursday
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Whale Watching West Cork Ireland
Coastal waters off the West Cork coast are a key feeding area for a
number of whales and dolphins covering over seven months of the year.
Fin whales, humpback whales and minke whales are regularly seen along with common dolphins.
Other species frequently encountered are seals and porpoises along with a wide variety of birdlife
rarely encountered. Some of the best whale and dolphin watching in West Cork occurs during the autumn and winter months from September through December when the big baleen whales, fins and humpbacks, are present in some numbers. Whale and dolphin trips and nature tours are now a regular feature for visitors to West Cork.
Union Hall
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Whale Watching, Dolphin Watching
Close Encounters with Whales &
Dolphins, boat trips to see whales & dolphins
resident in the waters off West Cork during most of the year
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Whale Watch West Cork,
Dolphin & Whale Watching Boat Trips - whale and dolphin watching trips start when the minke
whales arrive in late April or May and then ramp right up in June when the fin whales get here. We run coastal nature tours the rest of the year. We do see seals and sea birds and anything else that is around at the time of year. We either go up towards Roaringwater Bay or the other way to Mill Cove and Tralong Bay. We go
into all the coves and creeks and there is a running commentary on the history and geology and wildlife of the area. Visit our web site for more details, photos and booking information.
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“The Boat House at Inish Beg, designed by architect Tony Cohu, has become a famous piece of modernist Irish architecture, sitting proud out on the water on the Inish Beg estate, Frank Lloyd Wright meets Glen Murcott on an island off the coast of – where else?- West Cork. Aside from the Boat House, there are lots of other superbly comfortable cottages to rent in Paul and Georgie Keane’s complex of rental properties, and there is also the terrifically delicious Inish Beg honey to be enjoyed”
- John & Sally McKenna's Bridgestone Irish Food Guide 2007
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