Cape Clear Island Cork
Cape Clear Island, known in Irish as Oileán Chléire, is the most southerly inhabited island in Ireland, a small and dramatically scenic island off the southwest Cork coast accessible by ferry from Baltimore and Schull that combines one of the most important bird observatories in Britain and Ireland with the character of a Gaeltacht island community maintaining Irish as its everyday language. The combination of the extraordinary bird migration that makes Cape Clear one of the best seabird and migration watching sites in the British Isles, the island landscape and the authentic Irish-speaking community creates a destination of exceptional distinctiveness.
The Cape Clear Bird Observatory has operated continuously since 1959 and the island's position at the extreme southwestern tip of Ireland makes it one of the most important landfall points for migrating birds crossing the Atlantic from North America and for European migrants moving along the Atlantic coast. The autumn seabird passage off the south point of the island, when shearwaters, petrels, skuas and other oceanic birds move in large numbers past the headland, is one of the most exciting and most sought-after wildlife watching events in Ireland.
The island supports a small permanent population of Irish speakers, the culture of the Gaeltacht community including traditional music, storytelling and a summer language school that brings students from across Ireland to study Irish in its natural spoken environment. The three-sided harbour at North Harbour, the dramatic sea cliffs on the south and west coasts and the wild landscape of the island interior provide an island experience of authentic and rewarding character.