Animate On Scroll.
Valentia Island is an irish island situated in the County Kerry. After my experience spent in this amazing place I can say that Valentia Island is as a great natural stage, where the clouds create a curtain, a 'waiting times of anguish... but once dropped the show is nothing short of outstanding.
The Skellig Islands (Na Scealaga in irish), once known as the Skellocks, are two small, steep, and rocky islands in County Kerry. The smaller island is Little Skellig whereas the Skellig Michael is the larger of the two islands, with a peak over 230 m above sea level. This island is famous for his thriving puffin (Fratercula arctica) and razorbill (Arca torda) populations and for an early Christian monastery that is a Unesco World Heritage Site. The only one island where you can dock is the Great Skellig and this docking allows only three boats per day with a maximum 12 people. Little Skellig is closed to the public because this island represents one of the most important breeding sites for the Gannet (Sula bassana) in the world, with almost 30000 pairs. Many Gannets visit this island, which from far away, looks like a snowy mountain on the Ocean. It was really difficult for me to explain this view... too difficult even through the photograph.
This is the Wild Atlantic Way, which can tell a lot of herself, but only if we see, hear and smell the green meadows, cliffs and sound of the extraordinary Atlantic Ocean. The waves break in the present but it brings to light a past long gone and a future that we won't exist.
The Skellig Islands (Na Scealaga in irish), once known as the Skellocks, are two small, steep, and rocky islands in County Kerry. The smaller island is Little Skellig whereas the Skellig Michael is the larger of the two islands, with a peak over 230 m above sea level. This island is famous for his thriving puffin (Fratercula arctica) and razorbill (Arca torda) populations and for an early Christian monastery that is a Unesco World Heritage Site. The only one island where you can dock is the Great Skellig and this docking allows only three boats per day with a maximum 12 people. Little Skellig is closed to the public because this island represents one of the most important breeding sites for the Gannet (Sula bassana) in the world, with almost 30000 pairs. Many Gannets visit this island, which from far away, looks like a snowy mountain on the Ocean. It was really difficult for me to explain this view... too difficult even through the photograph.
This is the Wild Atlantic Way, which can tell a lot of herself, but only if we see, hear and smell the green meadows, cliffs and sound of the extraordinary Atlantic Ocean. The waves break in the present but it brings to light a past long gone and a future that we won't exist.