Board a specialist wildlife vessel and head out into the Celtic Sea from Cork Harbour in search of common dolphins, minke whales, and grey seals — one of Europe's most accessible and rewarding cetacean-watching coastlines.
What to expect
Your expert marine biologist guide briefs the group on the Cork coastline's remarkable biodiversity before heading out past the lighthouse into open Celtic Sea waters. Common dolphins are spotted on the majority of trips, often surfing the bow wave just metres away, while minke whales regularly surface in summer months. Grey seals haul out on rocky outcrops en route, and seabirds — gannets, razorbills, and storm petrels — provide constant aerial theatre. It is an utterly Irish, utterly wild experience that no land-based itinerary can touch.
Good to know
Departures from Cobh or Crosshaven (approx. 15–20 minutes from Ringaskiddy). Book directly via corkwhalewatch.com well in advance as the small vessel fills quickly in summer. Allow 3–3.5 hours total. Bring warm, waterproof layers regardless of season; sea conditions can be brisk. Check sailing times against your all-aboard.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Ringaskiddy — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.