Lucky young couple landing in the show to take care of uninhabited Ireland island

happen7:04Lucky young couple landing in the show to take care of uninhabited Ireland island
Camille Rosenfeld and James Hayes landed in a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. The young couple was chosen as the caregiver of one of Ireland’s most remote and breathtaking locations: the Big Blue Island Island.
Rosenfield told What happened Host Neil Coxer.
“You don’t even think it’s possible…. We’re really lucky to have been selected.”
Starting in April, the couple will live on this 1,100-acre island on the west coast of the Dingle Peninsula in County Kerry, Ireland. They currently live in Tralee, about 80 km from the land and the ocean.
The island is covered by lush emerald green landscapes and has rolling hills and spectacular cliffs surrounded by bound turquoise waves.
It is filled with artifacts and ruins from past pasts, and it is also deeply rooted in rich Irish heritage and history.
Once home to a Gaelic-speaking community that speaks closely with Gaelic, the island was brought to the mainland in 1953 so that they could access what was not on the island – for an ageing population and an emergency service for the mild winter.
Since then, it has largely been left untouched, allowing nature to reclaim the land.
Rosenfield hasn’t stepped on the island yet, but on a recent hike nearby, she said it was a sight worth seeing.
“It’s so green, the greenest grass you’ve ever seen,” she said.
“These beautiful purple flowers bloom throughout the field during the summer weeks. It looks like something like the Wizard of Oz.”
The island is also full of wildlife. this Last year’s caregiver Suppose there are sharks, seals, sheep, whales, dolphins and rabbits.
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Peter O’Connor, who lives in mainland China, and his wife, Alice Hayes, promoted the position of caregiver. But they have five holiday cabins and a small cafe on Great Blasket, which new caretakers will oversee.
When the recruiting couple first released seasonal positions in January 2020, they were flooded with 80,000 applications. From then on, they limit the number they consider to be 300.
Even so, it’s a big swimming pool, and James Hayes isn’t entirely sure why they were chosen.
“They are lovely people and we’re going well,” Hayes said in the interview.
“We really don’t know why, other than that, I think they just think they can get along with us and we look like good people who work very hard.”
Hayes actually grew up elsewhere in Kerry County. He said he was fascinated by the island even before he had the opportunity to work there and visited it during college.
“At the time, it really attracted my imagination,” he said.
“It’s been on my radar…the history of the island; it’s a cultural landmark.”
For Rosenfeld, Minnesota, it didn’t take much persuasion when Hayes asked her if she wanted to apply.
“I advised Camille that she was totally doing it,” he said.
Expected excitement
The wind-wrecked island has no electricity, hot water or Wi-Fi, but it is really what Rosenfeld craves.
“In the age we live in today, just being disconnected is a luxury,” she said.
Rosenfeld said she was also happy to welcome visitors there for the same reason.
“The idea of getting to know everyone who was attracted to the island in the same way as us is really exciting.”

“It’s amazing to have the opportunity to do it where you can hear the ocean and see the stars and live in candlelight.”
As a professional artist, Hayes said he will seek inspiration for his next work.
“What better place than an island like this?”
Not surprisingly, they have considered the most difficult part of the entire experience – leaving the island when late September arrives.
“I think it’s going to be the most challenging part…I’m trying to find a place to live, I need to find a job,” Rosenfield said.
“I just don’t want to think about this part.”