Courtesy Tourism Ireland
Great Blasket, Kerry: The Blaskets, like many of Ireland's islands, have the kind of dazzling white sand beaches that wouldn't look out of place in the Caribbean.
Courtesy Tourism Ireland
Great Blasket, Kerry: The largest, Great Blasket Island, is the most commonly visited, and is a hiker's paradise -- bring a picnic and explore the trails around the island. Click through to see more of Ireland's most beautiful islands.
Tourism Ireland
Skellig Michael, Kerry: After starring in "Star Wars: Episode VII -- The Force Awakens," Ireland's Skellig Michael island is a hot property.
Tourism Ireland
Skellig Michael, Kerry: It hosts a UNESCO World Heritage Site, an ancient Christian monastery famous for its architecture consisting of stone "beehive" huts built without mortar.
Courtesy Tourism Ireland
Rathlin Island, Antrim: Your best chance of spotting puffins on Rathlin is from April to July, but at other times you can see seals in Mill Bay or spot gannets dive-bombing into the sea.
Tom O'Hare
Rathin Island, Antrim: Rathlin is a place shrouded in myth and legend, from tales of banished kings to the shipwrecks surrounding its shores.
Courtesy Tourism Ireland
Clare Island, Mayo: Though only a 25-minute ferry from the mainland's western coast, Clare is the kind of island that feels a million miles away from the everyday world.
Courtesy Tourism Ireland
Clare Island, Mayo: You can rent a bike and head out to explore the island's mountains, cliffs and bays -- the swimming cove on the east of the island will take your breath away (both with its beauty and its staggeringly cold waters).
Tourism Ireland
Achill Island, Mayo: The largest island off the Irish coast, there's a wealth of gorgeous spots to discover in Achill, such as the crumbling stone cottages in the Deserted Village, or the cute little Lynott's Pub.
Courtesy Sean Molloy/Achill Tourism
Achill Island, Mayo: In April 2017 at Dooagh, a beach that was washed away by storms more than 30 years before reappeared. The Atlantic returned what it had stolen, depositing thousands of tons of sand.
Courtesy Tourism Ireland
Inis Oírr, Galway: The three Aran Islands -- Inis Mór, Inis Meáin and Inis Oírr -- all share a distinctive, otherworldly look, with honeycombs of stone walls, swathes of limestone and teeny beaches.
Courtesy Tourism Ireland
Inis Oírr, Galway: The smallest of the three, Inis Oírr, has an unparalleled charm. It even has its own ale, Inis Beer, and a feisty island dolphin, Dusty, who swims into the bay almost every day.
Courtesy Tourism Ireland
Cape Clear, Cork: Because of its status as one of Ireland's most southernmost islands, Cape Clear is blessed with fairer weather than most of the destinations on this list.
Courtesy Tourism Ireland
Cape Clear, Cork: It's a Gaeltacht island, meaning the inhabitants speak Irish, so learning a cúpla focal (couple of words) in the native tongue will be sure to earn a few smiles.
Peter Martin
Innisfree, Sligo: Nobel Prize-winning poet W. B. Yeats made this tiny lake-bound island famous with the lines, "I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree."
Millie Baring
Lambay Island, Dublin: On this private island off the east coast you can stay in a 16th-century castle and a 20th-century addition by legendary English architect Edwin Lutyens.
Greg Marsh
Lambay Island, Dublin: Wallabies are Lambay's most surprising animal residents, but there are also seals to be spotted.
Courtesy Tourism Ireland
Tory Island, Donegal: One of the most remote islands off the Irish coast, Tory is a magnet for creatives, with its own art gallery -- and some impressive sea cliffs.
CNN  — 

If your sweetheart turns to you tonight and whispers “shall we try for a little one?”, don’t dismiss them out of hand.

It could be they’re talking about an Irish island.

Great Blasket, on Europe’s Atlantic fringes, is seeking a couple to become summer caretakers and sole full-time residents of this unoccupied island off Ireland’s west coast.

As long as you’re not sticklers for electricity or hot running water, you’ll embrace the majestic 1,100 acres (4 1/2 square kilometers) of emerald isle as your domain.

As well as sublime views, the generous rain keeps the landscape lush and those stiff Atlantic breezes power the wind turbine that generates enough electricity to charge up your phone.

The roles, suited to a couple or two friends, involves the management of the island’s coffee shop and three vacation cottages from April to October this year. Accommodation and food are provided and wages discussed on application.

Candidates should be aware they’ll be facing some tough competition.

“We’ve had about 7,000 applications,” Alice Hayes tells CNN Travel on January 16, having posted the job vacancy online just six days earlier.

Hayes and her partner, Billy O’Connor, live on the nearby Dingle Peninsula and O’Connor runs regular boat tours to the island in summertime.

Together, the couple refurbished the islands’ cottages, one of which was home to legendary storyteller Peig Sayers, whose Irish-language autobiography “Peig,” published 1936, has been a standard text for generations of Irish students.

Sayers had “a very tough and difficult life on the island,” says Hayes, and her famously bleak book documented “the hardship she went through.”

The island’s 2019 caretakers were Lesley Kehoe and Gordon Bond. Like Sayers, they shared their Great Blasket experiences with the world – although their Instagram and Twitter accounts presented a rosier view of Atlantic living.

However, Kehoe tells CNN Travel, wannabe caretakers should take note: “What you see on social media isn’t what it’s all about.”

While she posted “pictures of bonfires, fields and sunsets,” what you didn’t see is Kehoe “running round the cottages making beds” or “queues coming out of the coffee shop.”

“You can easily forget that it gets up to 400 visitors a day,” she adds. “it can be incredibly busy.”

As for off-the-grid living, Kehoe says that while you can use your cottage’s kettle to boil water for showers, after a few days she steeled herself and got used to showering cold.

Start your morning that way, she says, and “at least you know that’s the coldest you’ll be that day.”

The water is fed by an island spring and that pure water and fresh air has its benefits. “My skin, my hair, my general health was incredible,” says Kehoe.

There’s no electricity or Wi-Fi on the island, but, surprisingly, the mobile internet reception is excellent, thanks to a mast a few miles away on the mainland.

Of those 7,000 – and counting – applications Hayes and O’Connor are now sifting through, there will no doubt be a large number of people with a romanticized view of what the job entails.

However, Kehoe says that those who know they’re the person for the task will have the “gut instinct” that they are a Blasket Islander in waiting.

She says that she and Bond were unable to return this year “for practical reasons,” but “if we could do it again, we would.”

Not only has the experience been a powerful one for her and her partner, they’ve also made lifelong friends with Hayes and O’Connor. She and Bond are now back home in Kildare, near Dublin, but plan plenty of repeat visits.

While there are those who criticize the “commercialization” of Great Blasket and its neighboring Blasket Islands, Kehoe thinks the global attention the island is receiving is ultimately beneficial.

“I think that the work Billy and Alice do to keep the island alive is so much more important than leaving it out there fossilizing. If that [industry] wasn’t there, it’d just be ruins.”

For more information about Great Blasket Boat Tours, island accommodation and Blasket Island trips, visit greatblasketisland.net.