Love at first sight

St. Colman’s Cathedral

What is it about tall church spires that make me weak in the knees? When I first saw the Salisbury Cathedral spire in England six years ago, I couldn’t get it out of my head. I had the eeriest feeling that I had seen (dreamt of?) it before. It inspired me to read The Spire, a dark little novel by William Golding about the building of the cathedral—not the uplifting paean to Early English architecture I was hoping for, but then again he also wrote Lord of the Flies.… 

The day we arrived in Cobh, we crested a hill, descended into the heart of the town, and there it was: the ridiculously tall and blatantly gothic spire of St. Colman’s Cathedral, perfectly framed by the buildings on either side of the street and the water of Cork Harbor as a backdrop. As luck would have it, our apartment is right around the corner, with a balcony and double French doors that look out over the cathedral and harbor.

Salisbury’s spire rises 404 feet above flat marshland. The vertical rise is astonishing, but you get that perspective best from a distance.

In Cobh, the spire is a mere 325 feet high, but the cathedral is built on the side of a hill. Its foundation is another 121 feet above sea level. So the spire looms 446 feet above the harbor just beyond it.

And (did I mention?) it’s right outside my window!

St. Colman’s is the first thing I look for each morning—even before my first sip of coffee (there’s not much I look for before coffee)—and the last thing I gaze upon each night. We leave the lights off in our apartment at night and watch the sky darken and the cathedral illuminate itself. What is handsome and regal by daylight becomes drop-dead gorgeous at night. I’m besotted!

Cóbh

view of Cork Harbour from our apartment

For our third week in Ireland, I wanted to stay in Cork: second largest city in the Republic of Ireland, seat of the largest county, culinary capital of the country, vibrant university town, active pub scene, and home to many fine craft breweries. But Airbnb wasn’t coming up with anything I was willing to rent. There was, however, a very fine self-catering apartment in a hotel in nearby Cóbh….

Victorian gazebo on the waterfront in Cóbh

Cobb? Never heard of it. My Fodor’s guidebook doesn’t even have it. It wasn’t until we were watching a documentary on Ireland several months ago that I heard the name said aloud; it’s pronounced Cove. And it wasn’t until a couple of days ago that I learned that Fodor’s does have it, but they call it Cork Harbour. It is, indeed, at the mouth of the River Lee, about 10 miles downriver from Cork.

crescent houses on the hillside

Cóbh went by several different Irish names before the British started calling it Cove, short for Cove of Cork. When Queen Victoria visited in 1849 to check in on the famine victims, Cove was renamed Queenstown, which I find ironic. She didn’t even get off the royal yacht while she was here, but chose to stay on board so she could sketch and paint. 

the Titanic tender carried passengers from this pier to the ship just outside the harbor

If you’ve ever read any books about Irish emigration, you’ve probably heard of Queenstown. Many ships, even if they originated in other Irish cities, called in at Queenstown as the last port of call before heading out to North and South America or Australia. Queenstown was the final port of call for the Titanic, too, in 1912. When the Free State of Ireland was created in 1918, the Irish went back to using the name Cove, although with the Irish spelling. The word cóbh has no meaning in Irish.

Belvelly Castle

This city has so many aliases, it’s amazing we found it at all! But we are glad we did. It is a beautiful little seaside resort, and we have a spectacular view of the harbor from our apartment up here on Spy Hill. And should we feel the need, Cork is only a 20-minute drive away.