Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts

Saturday, April 15, 2006

You can't escape the Irish...

...even if they are Polish, like this one was.



Even at the Guinness Brewery, they didn't have barmen who pulled pints on the move, as he did...

And the wolfhound and the mascot were also Irish...*



(*You can decide which one is the real dog and which is the man dressed up...)

...and that's because London Irish were playing Leeds at the Madejski** Stadium in Reading.

(**You can also decide how you say that out loud...)

Now, I know nothing about rugby, but I'm a quick learner. Here we see a pass...



...a scrum...



...and a line out...



Another first for me as have never been to a rugby match before and much better than watching it all on the TV, although you could do that too...



...and that was the final score, so "Come on you IRISH!!!"
(as everyone was supposed to shout...)

Friday, April 07, 2006

"Maybe I LIKE the misery..."

...© Mrs Doyle, Father Ted.

Couldn't pass this...



...without thinking that it would be the perfect place for her!

Thursday, April 06, 2006

Thursday: A Drop of the Black Stuff*

(*Have totally given up on the rhyming now)

I actually don't like Guinness.

I can say that now, but obviously didn't say it (loudly) while going round the brewery. Last time I managed my free (half) pint at the top of the Guinness Storehouse, but this time opted for Coke.



The exhibition has changed a bit, and has lots of new videos of the master brewer bloke explaining the ins-and-outs of how they make the stuff. I'll short-cut it for you - it's barley and hops and yeast and water and they basically mush it up and swirl it around a lot. It's what makes it taste vile.

Much more interesting are the other bits:

You can webcam yourself to friends and relatives...



You can leave a message about Guinness for others to read. Here's one in Italian which proves I did do some revision during the Easter break...



You can avoid getting wet and slipping on the tiles near the big waterfall...



You can look at the Guinness advertising exhibition, which is great - all sorts of bizarre things with toucans and harps and white horses and that funny dancing bloke and, most bizarre of all, Clannad...



(Scary 80s hair. Perhaps that's what Guinness does to you.)

You can see for miles from the Gravity Bar...



...even getting high enough up to see the whole 64 acres of the brewery spread out before you!* Arthur Guinness took a 9000 year lease on the site, so they will be brewing for some time to come, I imagine...



(*not really)

If you can prove you know loads about Guinness, the master brewer bloke from the videos sends you a certificate...



...which I shall keep in case I don't get my Italian GCSE and have a frame spare...

Thursday: The Snail on The Rail

A big change in Dublin from my last visit was the fact that they have finally finished the tram lines. There are two, but there's a ten minute walk between them. Considering it cost €1.5 billion, it doesn't smack of much joined-up thinking in the planning process. Never mind joined-up tram lines.

(Viz. also, Tunnels which are too small for lorries...)



The green line ran four stops from the city centre right in front of the hotel and only cost €4.50 a day for unlimited travel.



It's called the LUAS, which is Irish for "Speed". I hate to think what would happen if Sandra Bullock was driving. However, the tram combined with the Dublin Bus Tour 24 hour ticket meant that it was dead easy to get around, and we avoided some of the problems of car ownership.

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Wednesday: The Mission with The Apparitions*

(*OK, so I'm clutching at straws with the rhyming titles now...)

Any historical touristy city worth its salt now has some kind of tour after dark which tells you some of the less authenticated stories about spooky and (not really)unreal goings-on of yore. Or possibly of yesteryear, which is another term people use to try and make the past sound more interesting. These usually involve some out-of-work actor, possibly a student, dressing up all funny-like and being dramatic.

In Dublin, it's the Ghost Bus Tour!



Ghost-Bus-Tour... Do you see what they did there? I have to confess that I hadn't until about half way through...

Anyway, we toured round the city on this double decker with the curtains shut and occasionally got out to tiptoe round graveyards like we were the pesky kids in Scooby Doo. The guide (Look Velma, it was the out-of-work actor all along!) took against some woman in the front row of the bus who hadn't turned her mobile phone off and demonstrated how bodysnatchers got corpses out of graves quickly using a meat hook...

Japanese tourists looked on...



And he then proceeded to tell a highly improbable story, which he said (more probably) that he got off someone in a pub, about this gravestone and why the stonemason hadn't finished carving the last letters of the name at the bottom.



This involved several supernatural events and so I prefer to consider more rational options. Perhaps he died. Or didn't get paid. Or perhaps it was a good episode of Coronation Street that night.

Wednesday: The Panda on the Veranda

Went to the Dublin Zoo in Phoenix Park today. You can play spot the animal below...





The wilder and more impressive animals (lions, gorillas etc) were particularly shy and hid behind stuff when you tried to take photos. I suppose I would too if I were locked up for people to gawp at. (There's my "right-on" zoo comment for today.)

More amusing was the feeding of the sea lions...



...which was accomplished by two very French-and-Saunders zoo keepers in front of this sign...

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

Tuesday: The Vacation with The Narration

Back to the fair city of Dublin and three years later, the journey from the airport (all of 6 miles) still takes nearly an hour because they* are still building the Dublin Port Tunnel...



* They being Mowlem, who have a talent for delivering major projects on time, having also built The Spinnaker Tower in Portsmouth for the Millennium in 2005. The scenic lift there now does work apparently, after a further five months delay, due to the addition of a small magnet.

This is due to open later this year and all HGVs will be forced to use it (apart from the ones which won't fit, 'cos they built it too small), taking them out of the city centre. So when the guide on the Dublin Tour Bus says "T'be sure, if ye look te yer right now, dat'll be da Ha'penny Bridge..."** you won't take a photo like this...



** Authentic Irish © Liz Meehan Texting Services

Anyway, lots to get done, only here for three days.

Saw Molly Malone again...



..and was reminded by the all-knowledgeable tour guide that she's also called "The Tart with The Cart", and she also sang the song this time, badly, (the tour guide, not the statue) and gave us further nicknames for her...
  • The Trollop with The Scallops
  • The Dish with The Fish
  • The Dolly with The Trolley etc...

These nicknames are a peculiarly Dublin thing, so I'll thread them in as I go and you can try and spot any I've made up...

The Old Jameson Distillery was definitely worth a second visit, as you get free whiskey (with an "e"; I obviously wasn't paying enough attention three years ago), and you get a really good look over the city from the Smithfield Viewing Chimney (The Flue with The View).

In the "Other Tall Things in Dublin" category comes The Spire. (Can't get it on one picture, so here's two and you'll have to Photoshop them. Or just cleverly use your mind and imagine what it would look like...)


You will notice that I have made ( *** insert own favourite from below ) look taller than it really is by including the same cloud twice.

  • The Stiletto in The Ghetto
  • The Spire in The Mire
  • The Rod to God
  • The Stiffy by the Liffey

Fisnished the day with a return visit to Kilmainham Gaol...

  • The Jail in The Dale
  • The Clink in The Stink

...which is where they tell you that under British rule, hundreds of Irish people were killed (which is what they tell you everywhere you go in Dublin...)

...and where they filmed bits of Michael Collins, The Italian Job and In The Name of The Father...

That's Tuesday...

Wednesday...? We're all going to the zoo tomorrow... (for Roger!)

Monday, April 03, 2006

Eireann go Brach!



Attracted by the Irish Tourist Board's exhortations, I am off to Dublin tomorrow morning.

Did the Guinness Experience, the Whisky (or should that be Whiskey?) Experience and the Ballykissangel Experience (albeit by accident...) last time, so this time doing the Zoo Experience, the Viking World Experience, the Phoenix Park Experience, and the Bram Stoker Dracula Experience (the last one is actually called that...)

Three years ago, we also had the Entire-City-Centre-Being-Completely-Dug-Up-To-Lay-Tram-Lines Experience, but I am reliably informed that's all finished now...