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Cork  The Rebel Country

Cork is the second largest city in the Republic of Ireland and the island of Ireland's third most populous city. It is the main city and authoritative centre of County Cork. It started on an island in the muddy estuary of the River Lee and gradually climbed up the hilly banks on either side. Today the river flows through Cork city in two main channels, and you find yourself constantly crossing bridges. Some of the main streets are built over channels where ships nested their anchor-chains a century ago. Cork has a population of 119,143, while the addition of the suburban areas contained in the county brings the total to 190,384. The city has many local traditions in food. Traditional Cork foods include crubeens, tripe and drisheen.

Climate

The winter is wetter than the summer, and the western part of the island gets more rain than the eastern part, the southeast is the driest part of the country. The best part is that, in spite of its northerly latitude, Ireland rarely gets very cold, and snow and ice are relatively rare. When the sun shines, Ireland's magnificent coastline and beaches can be enjoyed at their best. Summer temperatures average between 15 to 20 degrees Celsius. Also winter is mediocre and even in January and February the average temperature is between six and seven degrees.

Places to visit
Cork  The Rebel Country


Red Abbey, St. Patrick's Street, County Hall, The Elysian, church tower of Shandon, City Hall, Elizabeth Fort, Cork Opera House, English Market, Bantry house & gardens, Blarney Castle Estate, Charles Fort Kinsale, Cobh Heritage Centre, Cork City Gaol, Cork Vision Centre, Desmond castle, Donerale Park, FOTA Wildlife Park, Jameson Heritage Centre, Michael Collins Centre, Millstreet Country park, Mizen Head, Gunpowder Mill and West Cork Model railway are the places one can visit in cork.

Airport

Cork Airport is one of the three principal international airports of Ireland, along with Dublin and Shannon. It second busiest airport on basis of passenger numbers, after Dublin, and third busiest on the island of Ireland, after Dublin and Belfast. With an elevation of 502 ft (153 m) above sea level, Cork Airport is sometimes likely to fog and a low cloud ceiling. The new terminal at Cork Airport contains several shopping and eating facilities both before and after the security screening area, a bank with bureau de change service and an executive lounge. The various car rentals provided at the airport are Avis, Budget, Hertz, Alamo, National, 353, Dooley, enterprise, thrift and Sixt.

Transport

The city's bus operator is called Bus Eireann and it runs from 7am to 11pm all week. Just keep in mind that on Sundays it starts running later, and stops running earlier. Most of the time, bus service is timely and efficient, but there are times when the system can get a little confusing. Hence if you visit cork for a vacation or business trip, save your time and hire a car which will take you around and show you all the desired places you want to see. For cheap car hire, contact:

cheapcarhirecorkairport.com

by: hiddenwork




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