Clondalkin

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Clondalkin GAZET TE FREE

JULY 12, 2012

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C L O N DA L K I N • R OW L AG H • B AW N O G U E • N E I L STOW N • D E A N S R AT H • K I N G SWO O D • TA L L AG H T

IINSIDE: NS Great summer holiday h ideas for the whole family P19

BRUSHING UP: New school set to put you in touch with artistic side P7

Motoring along nicely: Enjoying the festival fun ABBEY and Callum Boland

Gymnastics: Clon’s Taylor and Toomey in medals again Page 30

thought that events were motoring along nicely when they hopped into a classic car at the recent Clondalkin Village Festival. The youngsters joined thousands of other locals for the great event, which had something for everybody to enjoy, and which showed the kind of community spirit that has made Clondalkin one of the best places to live in the country. Picture: Ian Fleming

Full Gallery on Pages 8-9

Hurling: Community centre plays host to Feile Page 31

ALSOINSIDE: GALLERIES ......................8 BEAUTY .........................16 BUSINESS .................... 18 TRAVEL..........................19 ENTERTAINMENT ........ 24 CLASSIFIEDS ............... 26

Councillor objects to fast food plan Raise standards for new shops for village – Delaney

I PAUL HOSFORD

A LOCAL councillor has said that the “bar needs to be raised when it comes to filling vacant premises in Clondalkin”. Councillor Tony Delaney (FG) has lodged an objection to a planning application that looks to turn the old Bank of

Scotland building into a fastfood takeaway. His objection says: “Clondalkin village would benefit from a wider variation of shops, and another takeaway would not contribute to the commercial or social structure of the local environment.” Cllr Delaney also stated that,

while empty premises were a problem, “another takeaway we certainly don’t need”. In addition, he added: “the bar needs to be raised regarding standards in the village by all parties, including business people, the public and authorities” . Full Story on Page 5


2 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 12 July 2012

FETE: BIG DAY OUT

SCHOOLS Special musical guests at St Peter Apostle JS

National Play Day a success SOUTH Dublin County Council staff and volunteers have been praised for ensuring last weekend’s Play Day celebrations in Corkagh Park were a success. Fine Gael Councillor Emer Higgins congratulated the “massive efforts” of staff. “Thousands of families descended on Corkagh Park this weekend to avail of the fantastic array of activities on offer to children of all ages. The festivities were a celebration of National Play Day and there was a great turn out and everyone seemed to really enjoy the event,” said Cllr Higgins. “With everything from face painting to finger

painting, story-telling to bouncy castles, reptiles and sandpits; there certainly was something for every child. “A huge amount of organisation goes into celebrations like this and I’d like to pay tribute to the council staff who put in such effort to ensure the day was a success. Volunteers from right across the county rolled up their sleeves and helped out on the day and I know a lot of the organisers went above and beyond. Council staff were setting up the park from 6am, and by 11, as the crowds started to descend, it was obvious that their efforts had paid off,” continued Cllr Higgins.

Parents, staff and pupils alike were delighted by the combined efforts of the school’s musicians and the Garda Band

Garda Band joins end-of-year fun T HE Garda Band made for an arresting sight when it added a fun feeling to the end-of-year celebrations at St Peter Apostle Junior School, Neilstown recently. The accomplished players used their expertise to help the school stage its first orchestral performance – as well as having lots of fun, too. Comprising 40 pupils from junior and senior school,

the school’s musicians played along with the Garda Band, as delighted parents, staff and fellow pupils listened and joined in with the celebrations. Orla Healy, music co-ordinator, said it was a great event, and a wonderful way not only to wrap things up for the end of the school year, but to inspire the school’s musicians to play on, and be as good as the Garda Band, one day.

450 wds

It takes years of gruelling, punishing practice to The pupils were invited to sing along with some fun favourites

master the whistle, but this garda has done it


12 July 2012 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 3

ADAMSTOWN Sharing immigrant experiences

Locals meet on integration strategy ty Integration Strategy: 2013 – 2017. Last week’s gathering was just one of many of its kind that have taken place throughout South County Dublin in the past two months. The Integration Centre is currently working with South Dublin County Council, on behalf of the County Development Board, to create an Integration Strategy for the region, complementing the County Development Plan (2010 – 2016). Aoife Breheny, head of development for The Integration Centre said: “Attendance levels and input from participants have been extremely pos-

itive throughout phase one of the integration planning sessions. Those who have contributed to the development of actions for the strategy demonstrate a clear commitment to the process of integration and the realisation of actions within their own communities.” The series of integration planning sessions, which have included service providers and community organisations as well as community members, serves to inform the strategy’s development by affording The Integration Centre an on-the-ground understanding of the

YOUR

MEMBERS of the local community met in Adamstown Castle Educate Together National School last week to help with the development of the strategy being created by The Integration Centre, a non-governmental organisation which is committed to the integration and inclusion of people from immigrant backgrounds in Ireland. The session provided an opportunity for community members with an immigrant background, or an interest in integration, to share their experiences with representatives from the Integration Centre and help develop the South Dublin Coun-

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Members of the local community meet in Adamstown Castle Educate Together National School

issues surrounding inclusion and integration in a number of key areas of South County Dublin. This should allow for the development of a number of realistic actions to be developed as part of the strategy to address the issues raised. The next phase of this process will see a comprehensive analysis of the data gathered from the sessions, coupled with continued interviews

with key stakeholders and service providers, before all participants are invited back for a final session in September to focus on the actions to be implemented as part of the strategy. The centre specialises in planning, monitoring and advocacy at city, local, national and international levels and provides regionalised information, advice and training services, and

they have more than 250 affiliated organisations as part of their network. For further information on the Integration Strategy, or to keep up-to-date with any developments, contact Aoife Breheny at aoife.breheny@integrationcentre.ie or 01 645 3070.

RECYCLING WEEE has free event WEEE Ireland, the Irish compliance scheme for electrical appliances and battery recycling, is holding a free recycling event in Clondalkin this weekend in association with the SDCC. The collection will take place on Saturday July 14, from 10am to 4pm in The Mill Centre, Clondalkin. This free WEEE Ireland event allows people to get rid of any household electrical equipment in a safe manner. Anything in the home with a battery or a plug can be recycled at these collections. Waste collection specialists from WEEE Ireland will be present on the day. For further information on all future recycling events in Dublin, or to find your nearest civic amenity site, log on to the website: www.recyclefree.ie.


A GOLDEN GETAWAY

Catalonia’s Costa Daurada – ‘ golden coast’ – has a superb range of family-friendly hotels, resorts, beaches and attractions, making it a perfect place to escape from the Irish ‘summer’.

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4 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 12 July 2012

TRAVEL, PAGE 19

TOURISM: ROUND TOWER ONE-OFF OPENING A HIT

More regular access needed at tower I PAUL HOSFORD

phosford@gazettegroup.com

CLONDA LK IN’S iconic Rou nd Tower should be open more frequently after the success of its opening for the Clondalkin Village Festival last week. That is the opinion of local Labour TD, Robert Dowds, who made the call after 600 people turned out in just three hours to gain access to the ground floor of the local landmark. Deputy Dowds said that efforts to get the Office of Public Works (OPW) to consent to the opening had taken some time, but that he was hopeful the huge tur nout would boost the chances of a further opening. “After working hard to get the OPW to open the Round Tower for the Clondalkin Festival, I was absolutely delighted that more than 600 people showed up in just over three hours to get the chance to stand inside. “ T he OP W were themselves ver y surprised at the size of the crowd and the number of people who wished to go inside the tower. “This has proven two

point s which I have long been arguing – the first of which is that the people of Clondalkin are very proud of the Round Tower and value it greatly, and, secondly, that more should be done to improve access to it for the public. “After all, it is a public building which is owned by the people and in the care of the OPW,” said Deput y Dowds, who committed to keeping the issue on the agenda in the coming months.

Access “I will be pressing the OPW, the council and other relevant bodies to start making access to the tower a more regular occurrence, and we will certainly be looking for the tower to be opened up for the Clondalkin Festival in years to come. “The huge numbers show that there is a big demand from people wishing to go inside the Round Tower. “I f i r m ly believe that the area around the tower should be i mproved, a nd I a m hopeful that work to that effect will begin s o one r r a t he r t h a n later,” added Deputy Dowds.

Flagging an achievement: Minister helps to celebrate a great day for Scoil Aine MINISTER for Children Frances Fitzgerald (left) joined

principal Marie Beattie, Green School Coordinator Triona Kilbride, and the board of management at Scoil Aine to help celebrate the school’s achievement of being awarded a second Green Flag recently. After watching the Green Flag being hoisted into place for all to see, Minister Fitzgerald praised the principal, staff, Green School coordinator and, of course, the pupils

for their environmentally-friendly and -aware activities. She added: “I was delighted to celebrate this important achievement for Scoil Aine. A lot of work went into achieving this second flag, with the students learning how to reduce, reuse and recycle. “As well as fostering an understanding of their environment, the Green Flag programme helps the school community bond together and reduce energy bills, too.”

SCHOOLS: EOIN O’BROIN (SF) WARNS OF IMPACT OF REDUCTIONS

Cuts ‘will affect our children’s education’ CUTS at Scoil Mochua in Clondalkin will lead to a teacher being lost and a new charge of €30 per child being imposed on families that will “hurt children’s education,” according to Sinn Fein Dublin Mid-West representative, Eoin O’Broin. O’Broin called for the funding cuts to schools such as Scoil Mochua to be reversed, considering what he said would be the adverse effect that they would have. The call comes after parents at Scoil Mochua

were informed by the principal of cuts taking effect from September which will entail the loss of a teacher and a new €30 charge per child per year taking effect. Speaking to The Gazette, O’Broin said that the new school term will severely affect local residents. “Funding cuts will hurt our children’s education. Across Dublin Mid-West, parents are receiving letters from school principals outlining the impact of cuts to the coming

year’s school term. “In one instance – Scoil Mochua in Clondalkin – parents have been informed of the loss of a teacher and the introduction of a new charge of €30 per pupil to cover the cost of materials such as paper, photocopying and art materials. “The loss of a teacher at this school will have a particular impact on children with special needs. “The school believes that the loss will be detrimental to [their

pupil’s] education,” said O’Broin. The Sinn Fein representative added that cutting education funding at this time made little sense. “It simply makes no sense to cut vital funding to schools. Not only will these cuts damage children’s education, it will also hurt the economy. “Any long-term economic recover y will depend on the quality of our education system. “Cuts today will lead to all sorts of social and

economic problems tomorrow. “I am calling on the Minister for Education, Ruairi Quinn, to reverse these cuts. “I am also appealing to the four Government TDs in Dublin Mid-West to publically support my call and to demand the restoration of this funding before the start of the coming school year,” he said. Scoil Mochua was not available for comment at the time of going to press.


12 July 2012 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 5

STATISTICS

PLANNING: CLLR DELANEY (FG) LODGES OBJECTION TO TOWER ROAD OUTLET

Local jobless up by 2%

‘We don’t need a new takeaway’ I PAUL HOSFORD phosford@gazettegroup.com

THE bar needs to be raised when it comes to filling vacant premises in Clondalkin. So says local Fine Gael councillor, Tony Delaney, who this week lodged an appeal against a plan to open a takeaway on Tower Road. The planning application calls for a “change of use from retail banking to a ‘takeaway and delivery of food’ for consumption off the premises with associated internal alterations to the existing ground floor unit only at Tower Road, Clondalkin”and would see the former Bank of Scotland premises on the street become a takeaway. However, Cllr Delaney, has lodged an appeal with South Dublin County

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Council, saying that the local area would in no way benefit from another takeaway, with the town already boasting a large number of takeaways in the village centre alone. The document lodged by Cllr Delaney, who has long been an advocate of more litter control in the town, says: “I wish to lodge an objection to planning application reg ref SD12A/0116. “There is already an excessive number of takeaway outlets in the central area of Clondalkin village. “This evening I counted 17 within a very small area (Tower Road/Orchard Road/Main St and Monastery Road as far as Castle Shops).” Cllr Delaney points out that the town as a whole would benefit from a more varied commercial

structure. “This very high number of existing fast food outlets is a major contributory factor to the issue of litter in the village, and can be witnessed most mornings, but particularly at weekends. “Clondalkin village would benefit from a wider variation of shops, and another takeaway would not contribute to the commercial or social structure of the local environment,” said Cllr Delaney, adding that, while empty stores were a problem, another takeaway wasn’t the solution. “Another takeaway we certainly don’t need, although I’m very conscious of vacant premises and associated issues, but the bar needs to be raised regarding standards in the village by all parties,” he said.

Standing tall: Derek’s delighted to present Katie with her certificate LOCAL Fine Gael TD Derek Keating had to stoop a little to present

nine-year-old Quarryvale girl Katie Nolan with an award recently. However, Katie was standing tall, as she was collecting her graduation certificate after completing the Get Ahead Programme in Neilstown Community Centre, with Deputy Keating one of the first to congratulate the young graduate on her hard work and dedication.

UNEMPLOYMENT in Dublin Mid-West has risen by almost 2%, from 9,261 to 9,431 persons signing on. Councillor Trevor Gilligan (FF) said that the figures were worrying. “The more worrying figure is the number of unemployed females over 25 years old. I’m calling on the Minister for Jobs to establish a task force, including the relevant local bodies. “Local groups such as the CPLN Area Partnership, are facing even more cuts, which will make matters worse. As a voluntary director of the South Dublin County Enterprise Board, my biggest challenge is job creation. “I would ask anyone who has an idea to get in contact with the board in order to start a mentoring process, with a view to getting a priming grant from the board,” said Cllr Gilligan.


6 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 12 July 2012

CHALLENGE Public urged to try new travel options

Promoting alternative ways to travel

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Summer Getaways: Check out our guide to the best spots TRAVEL PAGES 19-23

South Dublin County Council will hold events to encourage residents to use more sustainable options of travel

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SOUTH Dublin County Council, funded by the N a t i o n a l Tr a n s p o r t Authority, is urging people to think about how they travel. The council, along with the NTA, are set to host a series of events t i t l e d Tr ave l S m a r t Communities over the coming months. The aim of the programme is to encourage residents to think more about their travel options and to encourage use of more sustainable travel options, such as walking, cycling, public transport and car sharing.

Challenge T h e Tr ave l S m a r t Communities challenge series will run between July and September 2012 and SDCC is calling on locals to challenge themselves to try out sustainable travel options in their area to see how they can be integrated as part of everyday journeys. The organisers say that Travel Smart Communities is about “you having the power to make a real difference to the environment, your health, your pock-

et and your quality of life”. They also ask people to look at some alternatives to the car. The council will run three sets of Pedometer; Journey Logger; and 10 minute+ Cycle challenges over the summer period. T hey have named each monthly challenge by local area to coincide with Smarter Travel initiatives in each area, but residents are urged to take part in any of the monthly challenges. The Ballyowen challenge runs from July 9 to August 5, the Griffeen challenge goes from August 6 to September 2 and the Bawnogue challenge from September 3 to September 30. The Pedometer challenge is a walking challenge where par ticipants will log their steps over four weeks using a pedometer. All entries that accrue over 10,000 steps over the four week challenge period will be entered into a draw for a One4All voucher to the value of €150. In the cycle challenge, participants will be asked to log any

cycle journey of over 10 minutes over a fourweek period.

Prize Draw All entries with eight or more 10-minute or more cycles over the four-week challenge period will be entered into a prize draw for a bicycle, helmet, lights and puncture repair kit. In the Journey Logger Challenge, residents will be asked to take part in a sustainable transport challenge. The challenge will ask residents to log all the car trips they swap for more sustainable modes of transport over four weeks. All entries with eight or more non-car journeys over the four-week challenge period will be entered into a draw for a One4All voucher to the value of €150. To enter any of the challenges, you will simply have to log your bus, train, cycle or walking journeys via the online survey at sdcc. ie; or post your challenge card back to Travel Smart Communities Team, County Hall, Tallaght, Dublin 24.

Youth body seeks new members

COMHAIRLE na nOg, a formal gathering of young people from 12 to 18 years who meet at county level to discuss the issues that affect their daily lives, is encouraging new members to get involved. The group, managed by South Dublin County Council in partnership with Foroige and Catholic Youth Care, aims to give young people a voice on issues affecting them at a community level. They currently have 25 members representing the views of young peo-

ple countywide and eight of their members represented South Dublin County Council at Dail na nOg in November 2011. In May, they hosted a Wellbeing Festival in Chamber Square, Tallaght, with music, workshops, keynote speakers in County Library and a food fair to encourage all young people in the county to look after their wellbeing. For further information on how to join, contact Niamh Carton at ncarton@sdublincoco.ie or follow South Dublin Comhairle on Facebook.


12 July 2012 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 7

ART Clondalkin Village gets creative juices flowing

Colourful start to new drop-in school I PAUL HOSFORD

A N EW bu si ness i s looking to help the people of Clondalkin get in touch with their artistic sides this summer and beyond. T he A r t School opened in Clondalkin V i l l a ge C e nt r e l a s t month and has already been warmly received by local residents. “We opened with the aim of providing a space within the village centre for children and adults to come in and relax and be creative,” says store ow ner, Pamela O’Malley, who says that the weekends are family-friendly times for the

shop. “We open all day on Fridays and Saturdays from 10.30am to 5pm where you can drop the kids in, head off for a nice deserved break, or stay with them. “ T he k id s c a n do some decopatch, paint some pottery and bring home their creations with them. There is no need to book and people can just drop in. Messy

“This is for kids of all ages, the little ones can use stencils, and sponges and get messy, but we cater for adults too. “We also offer a variety of classes, from jun-

ior art classes, to adult eveni ng cla sses a nd people can check our website for details.” Decopatch is a similar technique to paper mache we have all done as children, but with beautiful papers that allow you to decorate and transform all sorts of items around the home. It is considered ideal for kids as it’s easy to do and it doesn’t take too long. For ladies, the shop has special decopatch evenings, the first one already having been a huge success and Pamela says it is an ideal girls’ night out. “Come along with the

The school hosts children’s parties and is an ideal place for the young people in your life to spend a Saturday morning

girls, beverages are supplied and no experience is required. “We host children’s birthday parties where the kids can choose if they want a decopatch or pottery painting party, then everyone goes home w ith

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their creation and the bi r t hday ch i ld a l s o gets a gift from the Art School,” said Pamela, who encouraged locals to come have a look at what the Art School can teach them. “Drop in to us, just ring the buzzer, come in

and have a look around, a sk for a decopatch demonstration, it is a great way to entertain everyone on these rainy summer days.” For bookings or further enquiries contact Pamela at 087 9530724 or visit www.pamart.ie.

COUNCIL

Care of cemetery defended SOUTH Dublin County Council has said that the standard of grave maintenance in the county has improved, despite criticism from locals. The Gazette recently reported that Esker Cemetery was severely overgrown, but the council this week responded to a similar question from Cllr Tony Delaney by saying the service has improved. “T he maintenance schedule for burial grounds during the period between May and September is based on the timetable for annual masses in each of the cemeteries. “The sale of the refuse service has meant that the full complement of burial grounds staff can be deployed for burial grounds maintenance where previously staff from this section were used allocated to refuse collection duties when the need arose,” said the council.


8 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 12 July 2012

COMMUNITY Clondalkin Village Festival had something for

Mark Dalton makes a furry nice new friend at the pet farm. Pictures: Ian Fleming

Plenty of festival fun for everyone HOWING the kind of community spirit that recently saw Clondalkin shortlisted as one of the best places to live in the country, there was a great atmosphere and turn-out at the recent Clondalkin Village Festival. The village centre was thronged with

S

locals, onlookers and participants for the heart of the festival, which saw a large section of the centre pedestrianised on Sunday, July 1 for a wide range of fun family activities. With a main stage acting as a hub for the afternoon’s entertainment, lots of local groups and entertainers were

Sean Boland’s dulcet tones were a hit

Getting a great view ... Ben, Ian and Zara Gentleman

joined by street performers, with a wide range of activities including face painting, a pet farm, magic shows, gymnastics, a classic car show and much more keeping everyone entertained. With so much going on, it was a great way of showing the vibrant heart and community spirit in Clondalkin.

Dara O Murchu feeds a Ella, Lauren, Megan and Eva McGuinness

goat at the pet farm

Una O’Connor and Jack McMahon


12 July 2012 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 9

everyone, with lots of activities based around a main stage

Shannon and Carly Cureton with Ryan Kearns

Members of Clondalkin Gymnastics Club

Abbey and Callum Boland

Ronan Connolly and Alpha Gassama

A hair-raising moment for Paul the Magician, Holly Sophia and Lucy Madden

Part of the large crowd that was in attendance

Jack Epstein, Derek Carroll and Niall Callery stand by with their classic cars

Ryan Daly gets to grips with a vintage car

Bebop meets Lorraine and Aimee Adams


10 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 12 July 2012

CELEBRATIONS The Phoenix Park Pirates take on the Dublin 8’s

Birthday bash for the USA

N July 4, US Ambassador to Ireland Dan Rooney and his wife Patricia celebrated American Independence Day by hosting the Third Irish American Flag Football Classic. Over 2,500 guests were in attendance for the Independence Day celebrations. The football was delivered by professionals who sky dived from a plane overhead. Then it was time for The Phoenix Park Pirates to take on the Dublin 8’s. The Dublin 8’s took the title this year winning 44 to 37. Guests of all ages enjoyed hamburgers, hotdogs, red, white and blue cupcakes and other traditional American treats. The Kids Zone was a huge success with face painting, story-telling, science demonstrations and the giant inflatable slide.

O

William Cummins, Eddie Goggins, Ref Tony Rivers, Dan Rooney and Barry Bolton. Pictures: Peter Doyle Peter and Mary Tiernan

Dublin 8’s Youth with Martin Kane, head coach, and Heather Sanchez, team manager

Dave Duffy approaches and then lands with Uncle Sam with Avril and Nathan Byrne

The game featured plenty of end-to-end action

the Steelers’ Flag


12 July 2012 GAZETTE 11

in American football game to mark USA’s birthday

Phoenix Park Pirates Youth with head coach Gerry Bourke and team manager Elizabeth Morrisson

Jimmy Kloda, Zoe Gibson, Karen Doyle, Alan Munnelly, Justyna Kloda and David Vincent French

Katrina Morrisson, US Ambassador to Ireland Dan Rooney, and Aidan Kelly

Zoe Gibson, Karen Doyle and Justyna Kloda

Louise McKiernan, Margaret McKiernan, Mairead Butler, Dylan

Blaithin Ruadh, Sinead O’Neill and Sarah Daly

Butler and Conor Butler with Snap, Crackle and Pop

Peter Killalea

Little Caoimhe McDonald, Lee Gibson was a favourite with all those red, white and blue cup cakes

Hadar Levy from the Israeli Embassy

three months old, on her first

enjoying the celebrations

Independence Day

Derek Byrne and Andrew Bradford


12 GAZETTE 12 July 2012

INDEPENDENCE DAY Over 2,000 get together to mark July 4

Letting celebrate I PAUL HOSFORD

US Ambassador Dan Rooney with Taoiseach Enda Kenny and Aidan Prendergast of the Mayoman’s Association (top) and with Social Protection Minister, Joan Burton

OVER 2,000 people gathered at the residence of the American Ambassador to Ireland, Dan Rooney, last week, to celebrate the birth of the USA. The residence featured a taste of everything American on the day, with hotdogs, burgers and American Football taking centre stage. The residence, on 62 acres of ground was completed in 1776. Built by Col John Blaquiere, chief secretary of the British government and bailiff of the Phoenix Park, it has been the home of the American ambassador to Ireland since 1928. Extensive renovations to the house and property were made by the U.S. Government in 1952. T he proper ty now consists of orchards and gardens on which are located three cottages and a gate lodge. T he lower ground floor of the residence has a ballroom, reception and dining room, library, office, kitchen’s pantry, staff room and laundry. Six suites which each have a bedroom, bathroom and dressing room, plus a sitting room are located on the upper floor. The residence has furniture and equipment obtained in Ireland, the United States and many other countries. This year, the staff of the American embassy in Ballsbridge, their families and assorted guests, American, Irish and other wise, were in attendance for the American national day. Since Ambassador Rooney owns the most successful team in American Football history, the Pittsburgh

Steelers, it is hardly surprising that the showpiece event of the day should be a gridiron game. The third Irish American Flag Football classic was played on a specially constructed pitch in what is, essentially, the ambassadors back yard. The pitch, complete with American Football goalposts, two big screens, bleachers and impressive pitch markings that included a 4-metre wide ambassador’s seal at midfield. Patrick McKenna and Alan Gallagher from Croke Park both put immense work, with their team. They made sure the pitch was ready and up to the standard a man whose team plays in a $300 million, 65,000 seater stadium would expect. There was much joking that the Rooneys could pay Croke Park back by securing a Steelers game for HQ in the future, as has long been rumoured, but official word on such a move is still not forthcoming. The game itself is a non-contact version of the gridiron game. Many players on both the defending Phoenix Park Pirates and challenging Dublin 8’s had never played the game before at all. Not everyone, however, was a pigskin neophyte. Taking the reins at quarterback for the 8’s was a young man by the name of Dan Rooney. T h e a m b a s s a d o r ’s grandson has just finished a stint as the backup quarterback at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire and was coached on the 8’s by his uncle, Dan Rooney Jr. Along with some US Marines and other

embassy staff, both teams had a mix of newcomers and vets, with some Irish American Football players thrown into the mix as well. The game itself started with the arrivals of the teams as announced by Today FM spor ts reporter Paul Collins. Then followed armed forces from both Ireland and the US marching the colour (or, on this day, color) before the singing of the national anthems. Then, the game ball was delivered by --------------------------

‘The relationship between our two countries is stronger than ever...we never stopped imagining a brighter future’

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US Ambassdor Dan Rooney

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members of the Irish Parachute Club, who jumped from high over the residence. A typically low-key arrival for such an event as this, then.

Game on The game itself was a thriller, with the young Rooney leading his team into an early lead by finding Joe Grey for an early touchdown, before finding Danny Ferens Jr, whose father is a member of the Steelers’ front office. T he Phoenix Park Pirates, led by Eddie Goggins, were struggling to get into the rhythm as they sought to defend the crown which they wrestled


12 July 2012 GAZETTE 13

the American way - with football and hotdogs

freedom ring to a special friendship from the 8’s last year. Just before half time, Shaun Douglas, a player with Castleknock’s own West Dublin Rhinos, caught a pass before weaving his way through the despairing reaches of the 8’s defence and in for a touchdown. That left the score at 23-14 at the break. At half-time, a group of youngsters from both Ireland and America took part in a smallsided game, thrilling the crowd in a 14-7 win for the 8’s. T he Pirates would receive the ball to start the second period and after one play, Douglas had hauled his team back into the game.

The victorious Dublin 8’s team

The teams would go back and forth before the Pirates would level things with just under two minutes to go. With consummate calmness, Rooney

showed why the family business was American Football and led his team into the endzone with just seconds to go. In the end, joint-Most Valuable Player Ferens

would show why he is being highly touted for some major colleges in the States with a stunning interception to end the game. With a presidential

election this year, it is unclear if this will be the last year of this event or whether Mr Rooney will be returned to the Chief Secretary’s Lodge by Barack Obama or Mitt Romney. It is clear, however, that Rooney has the appetite to stay in the Phoenix Park, praising the strong relationship between the country of his birth and the nation of his heritage. “Our relationship is stronger than ever,” he said before echoing the words of Barack Obama who, during his visit to Ireland last year, spoke of countries that have “never stopped imagining a brighter future”

“I have travelled all over Ireland and visited every county. US confidence in Ireland’s economy has never wavered and our investment in Ireland’s future remains strong,” Mr Rooney said. In the end, all that was left to do was sit back and look at how well puttogether the day was. Embassy staff had worked long and hard at producing a special day and they certainly succeeded. Many in attendance, particularly those from this side of the pond, remarked at how over the top it all seemed, but were reminded swiftly that over the top is what America does.

CHARITY

Motor bike run for spina bifida AN annual motorbike charity run is set to take place later this month, when a group of motorcyclists will travel from Dublin to Tullamore in order to raise money for a very worthy cause. A f ter a successful charity event last year, the fundraising motorcyclists “15 to 1” are set to hit the road again, but this year in aid of spina bifida. The group is inviting any motorcyclists who wish to take part to come along and donate €20 towards the fundraiser. Any motorcyclist who would like to join in the run is asked to meet at the Mansion House in Dublin at 9.30am on Sunday, July 29. The run will officially start at 11am with refreshments available on arrival to Tullamore.


14 GAZETTE 12 July 2012

TOP 100 Author updates guide to our horticultural gems

Capital comes up roses in garden world I SUZANNE BYRNE

WICKLOW may be the Garden County – but Dublin’s gardens are still among the best in the country. That’s according to writer Shirley Lanigan, who’s just published an updated edition of her book, The 100 Best Gardens in Ireland. Airfield Garden in Dundr um, Ardgillan Demesne in Skerries and Dillon Garden in Ranelagh all make the grade

in her 100 best list, which has now been made available as a pocket guide for wandering garden enthusiasts. T he latest edition explores the history of Ireland’s gardens, their design, flora, fauna and

includes interviews with owners, curators and gardeners themselves. It’s also a great guide to practical information on fees and opening hours and quite simply bursts with information on the cornucopia of horticultural gems just waiting to be dug up. Speaking to the Gazette, Lanigan explained her idea of what made a garden truly great. “My favourite gardens are big wandering ones

Dublin’s gardens are still among the best in the country, according to writer Shirley Lanigan (left)

where you can get lost. “Where you actually have to sort of turn left and right and go down laneways and tunnels. For me, they’re the Mecca of great gardens,” she said. “There’s an untamedness about the best of Irish gardens, they always give you the feeling it sort of happened by mistake. “I think it’s because of all the rain our gardens tend to be extremely lush

and it’s easy for an Irish garden to develop a jungle-like feel – unlike British gardens where they go in for much more formality that’s more mannered and hemmed in. Ireland’s a bit scruffier,” she said. Explaining how she drew up the list, Lanigan said she initially made her selection from memor y and experience and then revisited the gardens. Some still made the grade – and

some didn’t. “What I like now is the wall-planting. There’s a lot of good design now, using the walls of a new buildings as a vertical build – it gives you the chance to let plants look as if they have the upper hand.” Of the Dublin gardens on her list, she said the Dillon garden was a particular wonder. “It’s one woman and her husband’s garden. There’s this most extraor-

dinarily beautiful garden behind their home. She really is an amazing woman with plants.” As for the ideal recipient of the book, Lanigan said: “Anyone who likes to go out for a drive. Very often, you’ll pick one or two things. Though you’d be hard pressed to reproduce them. “But we can all dream,” she said. The 100 Best Gardens in Ireland is published by Liberties Press.

Antibiotic use must be curbed, says study I SUZANNE BYRNE

SCIENTISTS are calling on the government to step up their current campaign to curb the use of antibiotics in humans and animal healthcare. According to an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)-funded report detailing new links between water quality and health, the problem of antibiotic resistant bacteria has become increasingly widespread. The study, Enhancing Human Health through Improved Water Quality, demonstrates the extent to which acquired antimicrobial resistance in E. coli and Enterococci bacteria has spread in Ireland’s water sources. Lead author of the

study Professor Martin Cormican told the Gazette the health risk lay in the fact that these bacteria, which live in humans and used to be sensitive to antibiotics – had now become resistant – primarily due to the overuse of antibiotics. These bacteria are then spread between humans and animals through contaminated water sources – as well as other inter-animal contact, and can turn up in others that have not been on courses of antibiotics – thus accelerating their spread. T he study fur ther details the potential role of intensive health care settings, such as hospitals as a focus for pharmaceutical and bacterial contaminants.

The hospital superbug MRSA is a strain of bacteria that has become resistant to conventional antibiotics. Among the report’s key findings is a connection between heavy rainfall and sudden changes in water quality – as bacterial contamination gets washed into groundwater from farm sources and septic tanks. Researchers have also stressed how poorlyprotected wells or water treatment facilities can have an adverse impact on the health of families and business owners. In light of this, the report recommends the classification of water sources to highlight those at risk. It further advises the

implementation of a total quality management systems approach to water treatment plants, where operational failure is identified as a major risk. During the period o f t h e s t u d y, s o m e rural populations were exposed to piped water that was substantially contaminated with faeces all of the time, with the additional problem of exposure to E. coli that had an array of acquired antimicrobial resistance mechanisms. It noted in this regard however, that overall improvement in drinking water quality was reported in the recent EPA report The Provision and Quality of Drinking Water in Ireland – a Report for the Year 2010.


12 July 2012 GAZETTE 15

CHAMPIONSHIPS 350 sailors set compass for title success

Sailing elite to drop anchor in Dun Laoghaire I SUZANNE BYRNE

THE cream of the world’s young sailors are set to drop anchor in Dun Laoghaire this week as the borough plays host to the International Sailing Federation’s (ISAF) World Youth Sailing Championships. Dubbed the Youth Olympics of Sailing, the event is taking place in Ireland for the first time in its 42-year history at locations across Dun Laoghaire Harbour and Dublin Bay between July 13 and 20. The 350 budding seafarers, all aged between 16 and 19, are representing 63 flags from across

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six continents. Accompanied by 120 coaches, they will sail 250 boats across five classes in their race for the eight available world titles. Brian Craig, who’s chairing the event, told the Gazette the organising committee first made its application to host the championships back in 2008 and faced stiff competition from six other countries. T he key factor in their successful bid, he believes, was that Dun Laoghaire “had it all”: “A marina, plenty of hotels, a yacht club – all within short walking distance – while other venues may have had two of these,

but not a third.” Organisers hope the championships will bring €5 million into the local economy with 100,000 visitors expected to attend over the duration. Along with the competitive events, the weeklong championships, sponsored by Four Star Pizza, will double up as a music and cultural festival, offering visitors the chance to peruse market stalls, enjoy street music and take in the bracing sea air on a trip around Dublin Bay. The opening ceremony takes place on July 13 at 7.30pm and will be addressed by Tanaiste

The cream of the world’s young sailors are set to drop anchor in Dun Laoghaire for the International Sailing Federation’s (ISAF) World Youth Sailing Championships

and local TD Eamon Gilmore (Lab), Cathaoirleach Cllr Tom Joyce (FG) and ISAF President Goran Petersson at the Harbour.Plaza. The welcoming of the teams will be followed by the ceremonial raising of the championships flag and the mixing of the waters brought from the homelands of the 63

competing nations. The ISAF World Sailing Championships have long provided the world with its first glimpse of future sailing stars and Olympians – with 15 of the competitors who won medals at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games past medallists at the youth championships.

Expected to top the medal table this year are the French, New Zealanders, Americans, English and Spanish – although local girl Sophie Murphy from the Royal St George Yacht Club in Dun Laoghaire is thought to be in the running in her category, the Laser Radial Girls. The week’s events will

conclude with a fireworks display which will crown the closing ceremony. After the medals are awarded, the official flag will be lowered in readiness to be handed over to Cyprus who host the event next year. For further information on the events logon to http://www.dlrcoco.ie/


16 GAZETTE 12 July 2012

GazetteBEAUTY BEAUTY Getting the perfect smile in just a day GETTING the perfect smile could take just one day, thanks to a revolutionary treatment by a Blackrock clinic. Seapoint Clinic launched a brand new product that will revolutionise treatment for denture wearers or those with broken or missing teeth. Teeth in a Day is a clinically proven product that allows patients to have their smile transformed in one day. This clinic is the only clinic in Ireland offering this treatment, which is proving quite popular in the UK and USA. Typically, when a patient decides to have implants to replace missing or decayed teeth they could be waiting six months, and have to wear temporary dentures in the interim, causing discomfort and unease. This new procedure means that appointments which normally take place over a six month period are condensed into one visit. For further information and prices at Seapoint Clinic check out on www.seapointclinic.ie or phone 1800 92 7770.

Edited by Laura Webb

Fashion week celebrates four unknown stylists

HE finale of eBay Online Fashion Week ended on a high thanks to four unknown stylists who were chosen to style the end of week catwalk show, Ireland’s first eBay fashion show at Smock Alley Theatre. L e a n n e Wo o d f u l l , Gavin Norton, Laura O’Brien and Roisin Flanagan were handpicked by TV personality fashion guru Darren Kennedy, founder of helpmystyle. ie. The four young stylists were given the chance to showcase their style ideas by creating three of this summer’s hottest trends for the catwalk show. The trends included sport luxe, printastic and tea party. Each stylist used clothes from eBay’s fashion gallery. Gavin Norton’s take on preppy chic for men combined varsity jackets with bow-tie suits and mixed a patterned slim fitting trouser (€31) with a cardigan (€22) – adding a leather varsity jacket to prep up this look (€46). Laura O’Brien nailed the tea party look keep-

T

ing it feminine and sweet. One of her looks showcased a cute yet stylish peter pan-collared, orange polka dot dress (€22) teamed perfectly with a flower headband (€7) to give it that summer chic feel. A printastic themed look by Leanne Woodfull stuck to the brief by highlighting a Versace print shirt (€42). She themed the amazing summer printed shirt with retro denim shorts (€12) and a simple black belt (€65). The printed scarf used as a headband, added to the look giving it a real 80s feel. Roisin Flanagan made sports clothes look luxurious. One of her looks teamed a baseball vest (€31) with a black leather skirt (€22), turning a top usually associated with lounging around into a sport luxe statement piece. Over 300 fashionista’s took to their seats at the finale show recently including make-up artist Joanne Larby and Kellie Dalton of Burberry. Not only did the show delight the Irish audience, but it was viewed

Trendsetters Gavin Norton, Leanne Woodfull, Laura O’Brien and Roisin Flanagan (top) and their creations

by thousands who watched through a live stream online from areas like Singapore, USA and Italy. Commenting on the event, eBay’s Laura Wilkinson said “eBay.

ie’s Online Fashion Week celebrated everything about Irish fashion and enabled everyone to be involved. The fashion talks engaged the live and online audience with over 500 Twitter interac-

tions and questions posted to the industry insiders. Showcasing emerging talent of Ireland’s upcoming stylists was a great end to the week.” The upcoming stylists were applauded for

their work and looked like they were having the time of their life. To watch any of the talks or the fashion show go to: http://www. youtube.com/user/ eBayIEofficial

Always be ‘photo ready’ with Revlon’s affordable foundation BE photo ready with Revlon’s affordable foundation that is light enough, yet tough enough, to stay intact all day and night. Whether you plan to stay in, or enjoy a night out on the town, Revlon’s PhotoReady make-up (€19.40) will stay on skin through even the hottest summer days and nights. ColorBurst Lip Butter in Tested under the harshest lights Lollipop and high-definition camera lenses, PhotoReady Makeup the make-up provides poreless, airin Shell brushed skin in any light. According to its makers, the PhotoReady foundation contains “photochromatic pigments that bend and PhotoReady Eye Primer reflect light to help erase any flaw”. and Brightener

It also contains SPF 20, protecting the skin from sun damage. This product is also extremely easy to apply, so anyone who doesn’t have a foundation brush will love this foundation. Just press the pump to disperse formula – two to three times is enough – then apply with fingertips. Start at the center of the face and blend outwards. Once applied, users immediately notice the soft luminous finish. It’s fragrance and oil free. This product is available in four colours – Shell, Nude, Natural Beige and Cool Beige. For anyone who might need a little help with a more even and

smooth complexion, then try Revlon’s PhotoReady primers. The Perfecting Primer (€19) is for anyone who thinks pores and fine lines are an issue. It can be used alone for a more even and smooth complexion or as a great surface area for make-up application under Revlon’s PhotoReady foundation. Anyone who wants to reduce the appearance of lines and creases on lids and under eyes should try the Revlon PhotoReady Eye Primer and Brightener (€14.80). It brightens the entire eye area and ensures eye shadows and concealers stay in place. Meanwhile, Revlon are giving lips a burst of colour with their lip

butter. The ColourBurst lip butter (€11.25) softens and hydrates lips, which is a much needed ingredient during warm weather and cold weather periods. This lip butter glides on easily and leaves lips with the great long-lasting colour. There are seven shades available including: Peach Parfait, Cotton Candy, Candy Apple, Tutti Frutti, Lollipop, Strawberry Shortcake and Sweet Tart. Test out the whole range and find the perfect colour to make the perfect pout. For the month of July, this product is reduced to €7 at participating stores. Revlon products are available at pharmacies nationwide.


12 July 2012 GAZETTE 17

SNAPSHOT The local stories of the day

Tall Ships are coming TO mark the first day of the International Tall Ships Races, “First Mate” Keith Duffy was joined recently at Grand Canal Square by Minister for Tourism Leo Varadkar and Dublin’s newly elected Lord Mayor Naoise O Muiri (FG). The Bugle Babes, a 1940s-style vocal trio, provided the music as details were announced of the line-up for the capital’s free four-day festival this August 23-26. The fleet of 50 ships, which sets sail from St Malo, France, for the first race in the series, arrives into Dublin – final host port in the race – for what promises to be this summer’s biggest floating festival. One of the most anticipated nautical events of the year, the Tall Ships Races 2012, which is supported by the Polish city of Szczecin and organised by Sail Train-

ing International, docks in Dublin on Thursday, August 23, when the city is expected to come alive with a festival atmosphere both on and off the water. Local organisers, Dublin City Council and Dublin Port Company, are delighted that Dublin was chosen as the final host port for this year ’s race and have programmed an impressive entertainment line-up to cater for all tastes. Minister Leo Varadkar commented: “It’s great to see the Tall Ships Races back in Ireland again, following a highly successful visit last year. This fantastic event is set to attract thousands of people into the capital. “It’s a rare opportunity to see so many of these great ships against Dublin’s striking city skyline. Events like this are very important for tourism

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Lord Mayor of Dublin Naoise O Muiri (FG), Minister for Transport, Tourism and Sport, Leo Varadkar, and ‘First Mate’ Keith Duffy at Grand Canal Square in Dublin as they announce details of the The Tall Ships Races 2012

companies and I’d like to congratulate everyone involved in bringing it to Dublin. It’s fun, it’s free of charge and open to everyone.” Over the week, there

will be music with Ash and the Undertones set to perform on the Bulmers Music Stage along with other high-profile music acts as part of the spectacular free four-day

line-up. The Bulmer’s Music Stage will host a jam-packed line-up of performances from some of Ireland’s hottest upcoming acts to musical stalwarts.

Reserve the right to omit or suspend or alter any advertisement(s) in any of its publications. We also decline any responsibility in the event of one or more of a series of advertisements being omitted for any reason whatever, nor do we accept liability for any loss or damage caused by an error or inaccuracy in the printing of any advertisement. If your advertisement appears incorrectly, contact the Advertising Department immediately, as responsibility cannot be accepted for more than one week’s incorrect insertion. Responsibility cannot be accepted if the complaint is made more than two weeks after insertion. If one places an advertisement for more than one week and then cancels it after the first week, no refund or credit will be given for weeks cancelled. The advertiser undertakes to indemnify the Proprietors against any liability for any civil action arising out of the publication of the advertisement or any other matter printed or published in the Blanchardstown Gazette, Castleknock Gazette, Clondalkin Gazette, Dundrum Gazette, Dun Laoghaire Gazette, Lucan Gazette, Malahide Gazette and Swords Gazette. The placing of an order or contract will be deemed an acceptance of these conditions.


18 GAZETTE 12 July 2012

R1

GazetteBUSINESS BUSINESS Listening to what the client wants Supported by AIB

Interview: David ‘Warren’ Venter, owner, David Warren Hair And Beauty, Kinsealy

THE COMPLEX WORLD OF INVESTMENT: PART 2

Continued from last week’s Gazette Business

Keeping it simple therefore, uncluttered and easy to understand is the key for the average investor. What is also key is that changing nature of investment. Currently government bonds have been the star performers over the last few volatile years. However, they cannot continue to perform as they have and therefore having the flexibility to be able to swap into a different investment vehicle without cost and without fuss is essential. First things first – work out what is your attitude to risk. On a scale of one to five, where one is lower risk and five is higher risk, where are you ? Once you have established this risk attitude, then the choices become a little clearer. One option launched recently is Standard Life’s MyFolio funds where you simply choose between one of the five funds that match five risk levels. Each fund is designed to maximise potential returns within the investor’s chosen risk level and is then monitored, reviewed and actively managed by the investment team in Standard Life. Based on the same scale of one to five, each MyFolio of multi-asset funds is risk based. Originally launched in Britain over 20 months ago, the fund has so far attracted over €1b with 40% invested in the MyFolio 3 (the balanced choice) and c. 20% each in the MyFolio 2 (lower to medium risk) and MyFolio 4 (medium to higher risk). Annual management charges range from 1.15% for model 1 to 1.35% for model 5 and for those wanting to see precisely the make up of every investment in these models, you can access the factsheets on www.standardlife.ie or email me for the factsheets. This type of investment is not suitable for those investors who do not wish to take any risk on their money. Contact John with your money questions at

jlowe@moneydoctor.ie or visit his website at www.moneydoctor.ie. John Lowe, Fellow of the Institute of Bankers, is founder and managing director of Money Doctor

DAVID “Warren” Venter has been in love with hairdressing since 1985, and says that the one thing he loves the best is the everchanging trends and interesting people he meets. He says: “It never gets boring. Over the years, I have worked on photo shoots, fashion shows and TV productions. I have worked for a leading hair care company as an educator. “If I had to sum up all my experience in one word, it would be the word that I start all my training with, and that word is: Listen.” David adds: “When you listen to the wants and needs of the client – and I mean really listen – the client will tell you all you need to know to meet all of her or his requirements.” On building up an extremely successful business and name, he says: “I have been in Ireland for 11 years now, and I have embraced this opportunity [to establish my business] with both hands. “[For our clients], a good experience and advice is what I base my career on. “As well as good hairdressing, I will be offering a range of beauty services.”

Q: When you were a kid, what did you want to be? A: A postman, because postmen could ride on the bus for free

African army I started hairdressing

All of your latest local news, sport, features and pictures are now just a click away

.com

www.

group

hairdressing and is also diversifying into beauty services too

Q&A

Q: What was your first job? A: After two years in the South

gazette

Known as ‘Warren’, South African David Venter has established himself as a leading name in

Q: And your first firs pay cheque? A: Although it’s all relative,

look good

Q: What part of your working day do you delegate? A: Where possible, answering the phone

Q: What sport do you follow? A: What’s that? Q: What sport can you play? A: As a challenge, I was told

cheque was €6 a my first pay ch month

to bounce a golf ball off a tree on the other side of the field, which I did on the first swing. I think I am a natural.

Q: Have you ev ever done a job you loathed? A: No.

Q: What is your guilty music/ TV or movie pleasure? A: Classical music, and horror

Q: When did you yo start your present job? A: I started hair hairdressing in 1985

Q: What is the best thing about your job? A: Making a client feel and

movies, all the way

Q: Who best represents modern Ireland – David Norris or Jedward? A: David Norris, of course Q: What music/pictures/mov-

ies do you have on your iPod/ iPad? A: A serious mixture of music for me: Rory Gallagher, Lady Gaga, Madonna, Tony Bennett – you name it, I’ve got it

Q: Who do you follow on Twitter/Facebook? A: Lady Gaga. I love the looks. Proof that changing the way you look and dress changes the way people see you.

Q: What was your last Tweet/ status update? A: Sanctuary Hair and Beauty all the way

Q: Describe your dream meal? A: Pasta all the way Q: Who would you rather have dinner with – Enda Kenny or Dame Edna? A: Dame Edna – because she is real

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Q: Where do you enjoy spending money frivolously? A: Shoe and stationery shops Q: How many pairs of shoes do you own? A: Last count, including slippers – about 106. (I have a thing...)

Q: What was your worst holiday experience? A: None at all. I try to make the best of every situation.

Q: Describe your dream holiday? A: Going to South Africa to see my family, who I haven’t seen for about eight years

Q: What would be your dream job? A: I have my dream job Q: What do you plan to do when you retire? A: Look for a job ...

LOCAL

MATTERS


12 July 2012 GAZETTE 19

TIPP HAS IT ALL P20

UNIQUE PILGRIMAGES P22

SUMMER HOME & ABROAD.....FOR ALL THE FAMILY

TOP CLASS DESTINATIONS P22

GETAWAYS!

JULY 2012

FastTravel Summer sale offers even more reasons for a car-cation

Whether travelling alone or with your loved ones, the Costa Daurada – “the golden coast” – is an increasingly popular Spanish treasure

SPAIN: THE DELIGHTFUL COSTA DAURADA IS A FAMILY FAVOURITE

Make golden memories HOL I DAY M A K E R S have been flocking to Spain from Dublin, and the island of Ireland, for many years now, with a holiday in Spain still delighting families and holidaymakers of all ages. With so many sundrenched beaches, historic cities, cultural sites and remarkable scenery to take in, some holidaymakers might almost fear they have too much choice when trying to find a great holiday in Spain. However, one thing is for certain – with so many

wonderful resorts and regions to visit, you’re virtually guaranteed of having a wonderful holiday, whatever part of Spain you visit. Catalonia remains one of Spain’s most popular regions for Irish holidaymakers – and with good reason, given the area’s mixture of sights and resorts. Catalonia’s Costa Daurada (literally,“the golden coast”) is a particularly family-friendly destination that has become increasingly popular with Irish holidaymakers, with families comprising 60%

of visitors to the region. Hotels there are particularly in tune with family needs, with hotels and restaurants offering high chairs and nappychanging tables. T he area’s leisure options are endless, and include a wide range of facilities to help visitors enjoy the perfect day at the beach, from children’s play areas to the sand itself, with such delights as outdoor libraries to relax with a good book, or shops renting equipment for water sports. The Costa Daurada’s natural resources mean

visitors can go for relaxing strolls or bring the kids for one of the area’s many exciting excursions. There are also a wide range of activities and adventure sports for young people, helping to cement the area’s appeal for visitors of all ages. All services are designed with families in mind, meaning that the resulting accommodation venues, restaurants, infrastructure and theme parks will guarantee that a family stay in Costa Daurada is set to be the most pleasurable family

experience of the year. So, for golden memories, and for a wonderful holiday in Spain, whether for a first-time or experienced visitor alike, the Costa Daurada promises you a wonderful holiday. For further information on the Costa Daurada, and on one of Spain’s most enchanting regions, as well as information on hotels and activities, see www.costadaurada.info, w w w.costadauradaevents.com or www.terresdelebre.travel (selecting the English language site versions, where necessary).

KIDS will go half-price this summer with Stena Line, which have launched a summer sale offering families even more reasons to enjoy a carcation this summer. This latest offer is available on all crossings with Ireland’s leading ferry company, from both Dublin Port to Holyhead and Rosslare to Fishguard, with children travelling from only €8.50 for a single fare. Children apply to 15 years and younger, while infants travel for free. This offer is available on travel up until August 31 when booked by July 12, and fares are subject to availability. For further information on the latest sale offers, click on www.stenaline.ie, call 01 204 7777, or visit your local travel agent.

Enjoy a weekend of wellbeing and escape to County Carlow IF THERE has ever been an excuse to escape the daily duties of everyday life, it appears Sandbrook House in Co Carlow may be just that. The period country home has come up with the ideal break away with a weekend of well-being this August, where you are invited to stretch, strengthen and meditate your way to pure relaxation with sessions of yoga, pilates and meditation in the stunning Carlow setting. From August 17 to 19, Sandbrook House are hosting a Wellness Retreat in the tranquil and picturesque surroundings. Set on 25 acres of mature parkland, it is the ideal place to forget the stresses of daily life. As well as classes given by talented instructor Rachel Gaffey, founder of MyWellbeing. ie, guests will also enjoy breakfast, lunch and evening meals packed with home-cooked, local, organic vegetarian food and a cookery demonstration full of delicious recipes that will help you to maintain your healthy lifestyle at home. To take a proper weekend break and retreat to Sandbrook House, call Rachel Gaffey on 086 845 3864 or visit www.sandbrook.ie


20 GAZETTE 12 July 2012

SUMMER GETAWAYS! Enjoy a couple’s break away in magnificent Cavan ENJOY a child free zone with a Couple’s Retreat at Radisson Blu Farnham Estate, Cavan, this summer. Located in the heart of a magnificent estate just 3km from Cavan town, the Radisson Blu Farnham Estate is a contemporary and stylish hotel, full of country charm and character, surrounded by natural beauty among acres of rolling countryside. To enjoy a break away this summer, the Radisson Blu is offering the Ultimate Couple’s Package with spa treatments and lunch as well as one night’s accommodation. Start the experience with a gommage marine scrub on the hamman table before a relaxing hydrotherapy bath to leave you refreshed and relaxed. Next, you will both enjoy the serial mud chamber, where you are covered in mud as the chamber gradually warms. As the mud dries, it removes toxins from the skin. Steam then gently fills the chamber to soften the mud, before a warm shower is dispensed from the ceiling to wash away the mud, leaving your skin feeling luxuriously soft and smooth. Complete this wonderful experience with a massage each side by side. The Couple’s Retreat includes overnight luxury accommodation and super buffet breakfast from €210 per person sharing midweek/€235.00 per person sharing at weekends. For more information or to book, visit www.farnhamestate.ie or call 049 4377700.

Tipperary’s Glen of Aherlow offers stunning views and fantastic walking trails and the Aherlow House Hotel (right)

GLEN OF AHERLOW: ENJOY THE FRIENDLY AND INVITING ATMOSPHERE

Tipp has it all for a top trip away from the city I DAVE PHILLIPS

THERE seems to be a predisposition towards heading for the sea when

looking for an escape from the city. Perhaps the attraction is part and parcel of being an island nation; or maybe it is down to the fact that for many people, the quaint coastal towns and villages of the West offer the kind of low-key, slow-living comforts that can’t be found in the city. Until recently, I was part of the drove that left the inland counties largely unexplored in my quest for a country break, but after stumbling upon Tipperary’s Glen of Aherlow, I’m a card-carrying convert. Set between the Galtee Mountains and Slievenamuch in South Tipperary, the Glen of Aherlow is just a short trip off the M8, making it a relatively painless journey from Dublin. We’d arranged to stay at the Aherlow House Hotel, which with its ivy-laden exterior and overflowing flower bas-

kets, comfortably melds into the lush green surrounds. As well as a large restaurant and bar, the hotel offers self-catering options in purpose-built lodges, making it a popular wedding venue. Located on the cusp of the Glen of Aherlow Natural Park, it’s also a top spot for walkers, acting as a great base for the more challenging peaks of the Galtees, as well as for the multitude of gentler loop walks. If putting your feet up is more appealing than putting them into boots, you won’t be disappointed. The hotel is charming and the abundant little touches – freshly baked cakes along with the newspapers in the room – go to show that real effort has been made to facilitate a relaxing experience. Gastronomically, Aherlow House Hotel is special. The recently recruited head chef, Jose Vega,

has brought culinary flair honed in his native France to locally procured produce. The result is an amazing menu that is simultaneously elegant and earthy. Particularly tasty was the braised fillet of Aherlow river trout, served with vegetables in a Sancerre butter sauce; and a wonderfully tender fillet of beef from the nearby Lewis farm. After dinner we traded the mountain views of the Treetop Restaurant for the open fire and cosy confines of the Hunting Lodge Bar, which serves as a watering spot for both guests and the surrounding community. As it was a Friday night, some of the locals were set up next to us for a small seisun. The relaxed atmosphere (and a Bulmers or two) had us pitching in on a few songs, after which we got talking to Michael Moroney, the Glen’s resident walking guide. Having taken in an

early morning walk, we discovered the hotel can arrange plenty more activities, including fishing, golf trips, equestrian outings, heritage tours, or a trip to Mandy Parslow, the local potter. Aherlow House Hotel is full of character and characters. Outdoor enthusiasts will be in their element; food-lovers will be intensely satisfied; history and heritage buffs will enjoy its close proximity to Cashel and Cahir castle, as well as the multitude of smaller glimpses of history that can be gleaned from the area. Maybe it’s down to the stunning location, or perhaps it’s that sense of community pride seeping into everything that happens at Aherlow House Hotel – whatever the cause, you’re bound to enjoy the honest, friendly and inviting atmosphere. For rates and specials see: www.aherlowhouse. ie


12 July 2012 GAZETTE 21


22 GAZETTE 12 July 2012

SUMMER GETAWAYS!

Get more from your pilgrimage I NATALIE BURKE

FOR anyone interested in adding a little extra to the run-of-the-mill pilgrimage, Joe Walsh Tours Pilgrimage and Sun Holidays are offering you the chance to not only soak up the unique atmosphere and spirituality found in the ever popular shrines of Italy’s San Giovanni Rotondo and Benevento, Portugal’s Fatima or Medjugorje in Bosnia Herzegovina, but also to embrace the sunshine and

St James’s Church, Medjugorje

local cultures in the idyllic coastal settings of Alba Adriatica, Sorrento, Lisbon Coast or Dubrovnik. The unique combination of a religious and sun holiday allows you to spend three or four days

on a peaceful pilgrimage before moving on to a calming holiday by sandy, sun soaked beaches. Departures from Dublin this summer include a four-night pilgrimage in Fatima, followed by three nights in Estoril at €649 per person, leaving Dublin on July 26, August 23 or August 30 for seven nights. The pilgrimage from Dublin departing on August 31 includes a one night stay at Benevento, three nights in San Giovanni Rotondo and three

nights in Sorrento, priced at €824 per person plus tax, while the pilgrimage departing on September 17 will take you to Alba Adriatica for four nights and to San Giovanni Rotondo for three nights. The seven night trip is €784 per person plus tax. All prices include direct flights with Aer Lingus from Dublin, one standard piece of check-in luggage subject to airline’s conditions, all transfers and tours by luxury airconditioned coach, a full religious programme and services of a Joe Walsh Tours representative throughout the tour. For further information, visit www.joewalshtours. ie or call 01 241 0800.

Kevin’s class gets him to top: New head chef at Herbert Park Hotel KEVIN Ramen, has been recently promoted to head chef at the

four-star Herbert Park Hotel, Ballsbridge. Kevin is originally from Mauritius and has worked at Herbert Park Hotel since 2006. He had previously worked in various hotels in Mauritius before moving to Ireland.

TRAVELMOOD: BEAUTIFUL LOCATIONS WORLDWIDE

Top class destinations

I NATALIE BURKE

FROM the tropical sands of Thailand to exclusive shopping in Dubai, Travelmood are giving you the chance to explore some of the world’s most beautiful locations this summer while staying in top class resorts around the globe. Stay in the three-star Golden Sands Apartments in Dubai for five nights from only €693 per person. Placed at the heart of fashionable Bur Dubai, visit the exclusive shopping malls, the Dubai Museum, the fashionable night spots and the new Metro Junction. Departing from Dublin on September 7, the price includes return f l i g h t s , f i ve n i g h t s ’ accommodation on a B&B basis, taxes and charges. Visit the four-star Viva Wyndham Maya resort in Mexico for seven nights on an all

inclusive basis from just €935 per person. Be immersed in pristine beaches and coral reefs while being just five minutes from bars, restaurants and the shops of Playa del Carmen. Departing from Dublin on December 6, prices include return f lights, seven nights’ accommodation, taxes and charges. Relax at the five-star Anantara Resort and Spa in T hailand for seven nights on a B&B basis, followed by the four-star Bel-Aire Princess for three nights on a B&B basis from only €999 per person. The luxurious seclusion of the Anantara Hua Hin Resort is reminiscent of an ancient Thai village, surrounded by tropical gardens and private beaches as well as being just a short distance from Hua Hin’s best golf courses and the lively town centre.

Antara Resort and Spa

Departing from Dublin on September 6, prices include return flights, 10 nights’ accommodation, taxes and charges. The final offer invites you to stay at the fourstar Cape Town Ritz Hotel for seven nights B&B for just €999 per person. The price also includes return flights, taxes and charges and departs from Dublin on November 2.

Stay at the modern Ritz resort, just 300m from the beach. Dine at The Top of the Ritz, Cape Town’s only revolving restaurant and consider the option of adding a unique Safari experience to your trip. For more information on these offers or to book, visit www.travelmood.ie, call their team on 01 4331020 or visit the Travelmood store in Duke Street, Dublin 2.


12 July 2012 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 23

Commercial Feature

Summer Family Holidays at The 5*Heritage Golf & Spa Resort LOTS of FREE 5* Family Fun. Pack your bags & head to The Heritage Resort for your family Staycation Vacation! Book your August 3 night Family break with The Resort by July 20th and stay a 4th night for FREE and also receive a complimentary family pass to The National Stud & Gardens. (T&C apply). The resort offers a picturesque setting, comfortable surroundings and spacious family & interconnecting guestrooms, self catering apartments, Kids Club Fun Club, health club with leisure

pool, a choice of restaurants, championship golf course, world class spa and an abundance of onsite & nearby activities. With a variety of Summer Breaks to choose from your will be sure to find what you are looking for. A three night stay with breakfast in a family gue-

stroom with family dinner in the Arlington restaurants on one evening starts from only €290per adult sharing (based on two adults & 2 children sharing). A two night self catering break in a two-bedroom penthouse apartment overlooking the championship golf course with

access to all resort facilities start from €540 per apartment per stay (maximum 2 adults & 3 children per apartment). Your family will be spoilt for choice with the selection of on site activities. The popular Kids Club Fun Club runs each week (Mon to Sat) up to the 28th August 2012 where the little ones can enjoy Arts & Crafts Classes, Fun Fit, Giant Games, Basketball, Table Tennis, Bouncy Castle & Hip Hop Dance. Tennis Court, Family Movies, Fishing, wii room, walking track & much more! Just a short drive from

the Resort, families can explore a range of funfilled days out including; the National Stud & Japanese Gardens, Outlet Shopping at Kildare Village, Lullymore Heritage Park, Emo Court, Pet Farm along with exploring the wild & wonderful Laois Countryside and nearby horse-riding. Nestled in the beautiful countryside of Co. Laois, the Resort is only an hours drive from Dublin City and 45 minutes from the M50 making it’s a hassle free staycation! To book & enquire please call 057 8645500, www. theheritage.com


24 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 12 July 2012

GazetteENTERTAINMENT ENTERTAINMENT

GoingOUT THE PAVILION THEATRE 01 231 2929 Singing Nina

SINGING Nina is the fabulous new show brought to you by the Chicago Jazz Queen, Karen Underwood and her band. Karen brings to you in narration and song the engrossing life story of the great legend Nina Simone, from her struggle against racism and exile from her homeland to her flamboyant and troubled relationships and her poignant life. Karen sings all the classic Nina songs, Mississippi Goddamn, Sinnerman and My Baby supported by a live band. For one show only, July 13 at 8pm, tickets are priced at €18/16.

MILL THEATRE 01 296 9340 Somewhere under the Rainbow THIS award winning, one woman, musical theatre extravaganza has captured audiences around the country. Now, in preparation for the prestigious Edinburgh Fringe Festival, Biscuits for Breakfast are delighted to bring “Liza” to the Mill Theatre for one more performance before she leaves these shores. Sharon Sexton’s Liza recounts stories, memories and secrets that make up a fascinating career and an even more intriguing personal life. As she belts her way through Minnelli’s infamous song book, the audience are invited beyond the footlights. July 14 at 8pm. Admission: €20.

CIVIC THEATRE 01 462 7477 Johnnie’s Britches BEEZNEEZ, the popular company that brought you Tuesdays with Morrie and Don’t Dress for Dinner return to the Civic with a lovely old Irish comedy, Johnnie’s Britches. A runaway, nationwide hit when first produced in the 1940s, Beezneez bring their distinctive production values to this gentle comedy of another time. Anxious to be rid of their accident prone servant girl, Ned and Bridget are willing to allow her to be married to almost anybody, including Johnnie. July 13 and 14 at 8pm. Admission: €20/16.

DRAIOCHT 01 885 2622 The Connect Club 2012 THIS July, Draíocht is delighted to be back, once again, working with the Daughters of Charity’s Summer Camp The Connect Club in Laurel Lodge. The summer camp is filled with social and recreational activities catering for young people with varying degrees of intellectual disability, with the aim of providing an outlet that is fun and focused on the individual’s likes and interests.

Jack (Mark Duplass) learns a harsh lesson when the two ladies say that they are “fine”.

Sisters are doing it

Carefully constructed, tenderly performed and wellwritten, Your Sister’s Sister just never catches fire

I PAUL HOSFORD

YOU don’t get a lot for $120,000 these days. The moderate sum is barely enough to fund a purchase at a distress auction, never mind a film that would capture the imagination the week that SpiderMan swings back into action. That is the challenge set for Your Sister’s Sister, the follow-up to Lynn Shelton’s Humpday, which was one of the finest comedy dramas of recent years. I n t h a t f i l m , t wo men drunkenly agree to make an adult film together and are faced with the prospect of going through with it because of their male pride. In this film, Shelton has brought Humpday star Mark Duplass back, but left the naughtiness behind. She instead has made

FILM OF THE WEEK: Your Sister’s Sister ### (15) 90 mins Director: Lynn Shelton Starring: Emily Blunt, Mark Duplass, Rosemarie DeWitt, Mark Birbiglia

OUR VERDICT:

IT’S a good film. There is no doubt about that. But, and it’s hard to put my finger on why, it just doesn’t feel complete. It’s a welltold, interesting story and a neat look at a very complex set of relationships and some deeply flawed people. Shelton deserves credit for her writing, but the third act lets the film down.

a very similar film, but for women. Instead of pornography, male pride and machismo, the issues of sibling relationships, love and who can or cannot make a good parent. All in all, it is refreshing film-making in that it’s made for very little, but still manages to be engaging in a way that many big-budget films are not. But, coming af ter such a film as Humpday, it almost feels like a let-down. Although Humpday was not Shelton’s debut,

this film feels like the quintessential “difficult second album” in that it tries to hit the same notes as its predecessor when a unique take would be more welcome. T his is less Neon Bible than it is whatever The Darkness’ second album was called. A c t u a l l y, c o m p a ring the film with The Darkness is unfair as it is credible, likeable and put together by extremely talented people who all seem lovely. Loveliest of them all is Emily Blunt, currently stretching her main-

stream legs in The Five Year Engagement. Here, Blunt plays Iris, who in an effort to help her best friend Jack out of mourning for his brother, suggests he take a trip to her parents’ secluded cabin. There, he stumbles across Iris’s lesbian sister Hannah. A night of dr unken passion between the two triggers an unexpected entanglement of relationships when Iris suddenly arrives at the cabin the next day. From there, the film becomes an interesting and somewhat caustic look at what makes relationships tick and, honestly, whether men and women can ever be truly just friends. Although the cast is experienced and likeable, the film just fails to fire. Whereas Humpday felt like its 90 minutes sped through, there is the sense that ever y

sinew is being strained to haul Your Sister’s Sister to the finish line. When it is good, however, it is very good, and when Shelton is on form, there aren’t many directors who capture the human condition as readily. At the heart of it all, comes Shelton’s seemingly unshakable faith in people. She genuinely seems to like her characters, flaws and all. Shelton gives Duplass, star of the criminally overlooked The League, the best lines and he seems as close to a muse as the director has, but DeWitt and Blunt carry a neat three-hander to its inevitable, and welltelegraphed conclusion. It won’t change lives, but this is neatly positioned counter-pro gramming to the spandex, swinging and webshooting.


12 July 2012 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 25

GazetteGAMING GAMING Bytesandpieces A spacewalk could be a cake walk HERE’S one of those “Ronseal” IOS games – you know, they do exactly what it says on the tin or, more exactly, what the title says – in the form of Astronaut Spacewalk. Here, a deep-sea diver has 24 hours to uncover a global conspiracy involving cats, a secret Soviet undersea base, a rusty codex from 1640 and a deadly female French assassin who – Nah, only kidding – it really is just what the title suggests, as you take an astronaut on a spacewalk through a variety of orbital missions. It’s a pretty simple idea, yet executed with style and, um, precision. Precision? Yes, indeed, as precision is key to the title, as you guide an astronaut on their spacewalk by tapping to release just the right amounts of gas, while considering your direction and inertia, as well as suit power reserves. After all, one wrong tap in the wrong direction could send you drifting serenely towards, say, Madagascar on the planet below – and your certain death, helplessly following a trajectory away from the space shuttle docking bay. A neat little title executed with flair, Astronaut Spacewalk is available on iTunes.

Although Solid Snake’s adventures in the Metal Gear series have taken him around the world and through several decades, Snake – and his younger self (inset) – has always been wearily fighting what amounts to the same battle, as he has fought against Man’s casual willingness to corrupt, rule and destroy others ...

Snake keeps growing I SHANE DILLON

I NOTICED this week that one of gaming’s Grand Old Men – in the grizzled, scarred, battleweary and cynical form of Solid Snake, chief protagonist of the endlessly-reinventing, multiplatform and cross-genre Metal Gear series – is now 25 years old. Well, I mean, the series is now that old, but Snake himself is much older, as befitting someone who’s been around the block in his day.

That “day” has jumped around, with Snake’s adventures playing out in eras ranging from the 1960s to the present day, through contemporary settings with wildly different global politics at play to slightly-futuristic places with impossible tech and gadgets. A true cross-platform character, Snake’s been caught up in the coldest of Cold War realpolitik scenarios; fought fringe terrorist groups that were backed covertly by global superpowers;

tackled paranoia and rogue international agencies attempting to subvert political processes; uncovered – and buried – bizarre secrets at one hidden base or secret location after another; saved the world, lost allies and fought former comrades – you name it, Snake has wiggled his way through one high-stakes drama after another. Although largely presented as a curious blend of James Bond, Snake Plissken, Robert Fisk and a masterless samurai,

Boxing clever with a brilliantly daft camouflage idea LEST readers think that picking up any of the Metal Gear games is about as light-hearted as a three-hour lecture on Middle-East politics, the series has always had a dash of pure slapstick, such as in its brilliantly daft idea for camouflage – the cardboard box. Yes indeed, when patrolling a topsecret military base full of guards on high alert, mere hours before an illicit nuclear launch is due against the world’s main cities, every self-respecting master infiltrator needs the perfect fools-everybody disguise: an ordinary cardboard box to hide under.

Simply by slipping a cardboard box over his head, and then inching/darting around playing the old “Huh? Did something just move?” game with confused nearby guards, Snake is generally able to sneak on by. True, my attempts to sneak around, and then out of The Gazette an hour or two early in this fashion haven’t quite worked out as well, but it remains a fondlyremembered gaming sight to see, regardless.

Snake has remained one of gaming’s most complex, yet popular, characters. This, despite the Metal Gear games’ tendencies to practically slap players about the head with political commentary as the game plays out. For example, one moment could find Snake creeping through the engine room of a hijacked container ship carrying biological bombs deep into the heart of a bustling city – the next, a 20-minute cut-scene could play out, as Snake, and others, discuss over his radio link European foreign policies in the 1970s, and the complex ties between the military, commercial and political wings of, say, China. At least you can always count on regular breaks to go and make a cuppa, then. It’s all pretty farout, headscratch-

ingly complex (and, quite simply, frequently daft) stuff, and can feel more like an abstract commentary on global politics, and The Way Things Work, than being just, you know, a game. All of this heavy-hitting wackiness has largely been down to the legendary figure of Hideo Kojima, the singularly-focused figure who’s driven Snake, and sidekicks, on across the years, with each new adventure becoming increasingly out-there. Still, Snake’s adventures have remained highly popular, as Kojima-san has always driven the games along with plenty of conventional gaming tropes, from stealth sections to all-out blazing action set-pieces. While occasionally irritatingly dense to wade through, as well as covering stuff that even a conspiracy theorist would roll his eyes at, here’s hoping that Snake’s maverick adventures in the Metal Gear universe keep growing for many more years.


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26 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 12 July 2012

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GazetteSPORT

FEILE FEVER: Dublin plays host to annual U-14 festival of hurling Page 28 and 29

GOLF: DORAN BRINGS MCELROY’S IRISH SENIOR CLOSE REIGN TO AN END IN BUNCLODY

Donabate woman reaches Senior Close final four sport@gazettegroup.com

D O N A BAT E ’ S P a t Doran played superbly but was just pipped at the semi-final stage of the ILGU Irish Senior women’s close championship at Bunclody Golf and Fishing Club last week. Playing eventual winner Helen Jones, from Strabane, she was undone on the 21st hole of her final four tie last Thursday to agonisingly miss out.

Jones had earlier produced a stunning comeback. She was dormie two down against Doran but showed her true fighting spirit to win both the 17th and 18th with pars and bring the match down tie holes where she eventually won out on the 21st. A r o u n d e a r l i e r, Doran had knocked out defending champions Sheena McElroy, from Grange, who had put up a gallant defence of her title and a three in a

row record. Doran has been knocking at the door in recent years and she maintained her composure in an edgy match to win with a par on the 18th while McElroy found the water left of the home green. McElroy had earlier dismissed Killarney’s Mar y Geaney on an emphatic 6&5 scoreline to show she was in rude form. The Island’s Gertie McMullen was another

Donabate’s Pat Doran reached the semi-final of this year’s Irish Seniors’ Close championship

local golfer to traverse the competition in dramatic fashion as she reached the quarter-finals, too. There, she was one up against Portumna’s Suzanne Corcoran playing the 18th but a

par from the Galway woman was enough to take the final hole and she birdied the first tie hole to win a semi-final berth. Earlier in the comp e t i t i o n , M c Mu l l e n

had beaten Headfort’s Pauline Walsh 4&3 and Adrienne Crowley, from Woodbrook, one up. Dun Laoghaire duo Marie Igoe and Niamh Giblin were also involved in the competi-

tion and made it safely through the first round. Igoe bowed out to Jones in round two while Doran dismissed Giblin 4&3 in the third round of the competition.


28 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 12 July 2012

GazetteSport Sport Feile fever descends on Dublin HE annual Feile na nGael made its way to Dublin for the first time in over 30 years as over 3,000 hurlers, camogie players and handballers from around the country came to the capital for one of the highlights of the GAA calendar. They competed in three days of competition at clubs around the city before taking part in social activities including a parade from Croke Park to O’Connell Street while Saturday saw the finals take place across the divisions in Croke Park and Parnell Park.

T

Members of St Oliver Plunkett’s/Eoghan Ruadh were among huge crowds to gather in O’Connell St to support the Feile na nGael

The referee inspects the Newport team’s hurleys

Kilmacud Crokes in action against Buncrana in Silver Park

Ballinteer St John’s camogie team enjoy the Bus Eireann Feile na nGael Parade from Croke Park through Dublin City


12 July 2012 CLONDLAKIN GAZETTE 29

Ballyboden St Enda’s Eoin Featherstone and De La Salle’s Lee Wall in the division one hurling competition

Lucan Sarsfields’ Emily McIntyre and Newport’s Ciara Floyd

parade. Pics: Martina McGilloway/ilivephotos.com

The St Brigid’s handball team enjoy the parade

The Clondalkin Youth Band lead teams down O’Connell Street

Handballers Hannah Dagg, Fiona Tully and Anna Ni Odhrain Ni Mhurchu

Stephen Smith and Thomas Donohoe

Kilcormack/Killoughey in action

Dublin hurlers Peter Kelly and Johnny McCaffrey with Peter Flannery


30 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 12 July 2012

GazetteSport Sport FastSport

Adamstown riding high in Leinster leagues

CLONDALKIN gymnasts Sophie Toomey and Zoe Taylor recently represented Dublin at the All-Ireland gymnastics finals 2012 held in Wexford and once again returned as medal winners. The competition saw the best 200 gymnasts from all over Ireland come together to take part in this two-day event which finishes off the competition year for this discipline. Toomey and Taylor took part in the extremely closely fought contest of the women’s grade two pairs and were thrilled to be placed in the bronze medal position. The pair, who give up all their free time to train together, have had an incredibly successful season and have medalled at every competition they have entered in the last 12 months. The highlight of their season was representing Ireland in the Celtic Cup and winning the gold medal. Although the season is now over, they will not be taking a long break as they will spend the summer working on a new floor routine for their trio partnership with the intention of moving up to a higher level for the coming season.

Adamstown hoping for 20/20 vision THIS Sunday, Adamstown cricket club’s second team will face Railway Union fourths in the finals of LCU 20/20 competition. Sponsored by the Russell Court Hotel, LCU 20/20 is a 20 ove r c o m p e t i t i o n played between sides competing in the lower reaches of the Leinster Cricket Union league structure. A total of 24 teams

f r o m d i v i s i o n 11 through 14 were split into regionalised groups of three and Adamstown seconds topped their group to progress to the knockout stages. They beat Clontarf fifths in the quarterfinals and Ring Commons in the semi-finals and will now play the finals against Railway Union in Park Avenue, Sandymount, on Sunday, July 15 at 6.00pm. This is great success for Adamstown in 2009 and its first team made it to finals of the intermediate cup competition in 2010.

BOXING: THE ROCK COOKS UP ANOTHER UNANIMOUS TRIUMPH

Clondalkin man Stephen Ormond, left, continues to show his undoubted ability with a thumping win over Mickey Coveney

Ormond marches on sport@gazettegroup.com

STEPHEN “The Rock” Ormond proved to the masses in York Hall, London that he is well capable of boxing with the best of them last Thursday, showing a fleet foot on his way to victory against Mickey Coveney, with the judges scoring unanimously for the Clondalkin man 100-92. The victory came on the back of Ormond’s first career loss, a fight which was dragged into a brawl with Paul Appleby, in the contest for the Celtic Crown in March, and despite

the Irish super featherweight doing a lot of damage to his opponent, Appleby clung on to claim a unanimous decision win.

Exhibition The Clondalkin pugilist Ormond’s latest victory was a real exhibition, claiming ever y round as he won with real tenacity, showing great head movement and technical ability in a showdown that was a complete contrast to the primal performance put on against Appleby. Fighting out of the Celtic Gym, it was plain to see that Ormond put

a lot of road work in, constantly moving and shooting a beautiful jab into the confused face of Coveney who couldn’t time the The Rock’s attacks throughout the contest. Looking like he could have finished his opponent at some stages of the ten round fight, Ormond backed off on a couple of occasions to prolong his dominant display, regardless of the fact that he previously finished the same opponent in round 7, just over a year before in the Braehead Arena in Glasgow. However, it may well

have been a conscious effort by the Dubliner to get some rounds under his belt with an eye on future meetings that could demand a similar showing when it comes to stamina, timing and efficiency.

Imagination It was a matter of who out of the two had improved the most since their Glasgow showdown the previous year, and Ormond left nothing to the imagination when the bell sounded at the end of the tenth stanza. Such a display could put the Irish man in the

mix for a run at a title and he will almost certainly be setting himself amongst the division’s elite in the near future, with some names being uttered that would pit him against a British champion and pace setter. With his career as a professional now spanning over four years, seeing him fight in the quaint surrounding of the Gleneagle Hotel in Kilkenny to the big shows in the United States, before his return to the United Kingdom, Ormond, now 12-1-0, has a lot to look forward to.

Esker celebrate Football For All launch sport@gazettegroup.com

FOOTBALL For All arrives in Lucan this September as Esker Celtic will play host to an initiative from the FAI to ensure every child in the country is able to play and enjoy soccer. The programme has been designed for children aged six-14 with all types of disabilities that may prevent them playing for a mainstream team. The ethos of Football For All is inclusion of young peo-

ple who love soccer, and to keep the game as enjoyable and as fun as possible. It is a safe and friendly environment where young people are free to express themselves through sport. Esker Celtic now has a large team of fully trained FAI Disability Awareness coaches ready to kick off this September. It will run every Saturday from 1.30pm for one hour in Hermitage Park, beside the clubhouse. It pus Esker among a select

group who are now one of the very few clubs in the country to offer this service and will team up with other Football For All clubs to provide a strong network where young people can play with their peers all over Ireland and beyond. Places are limited so if you are interested in involving your child in this new venture, check out www. eskerceltic.ie or you can contact our Football For All co-ordinator, Colm Young on 087 2503456.


12 July 2012 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 31

HURLING: TRIM AND CARNEW VISIT CLONDALKIN

CLUB NOTICEBOARD ROUND TOWER WELL done to Gary Quinlivan and the

three plus the bonus ball not available.

Dublin minor hurling team and to Amy

Next week’s jackpot is €8,000.

Conroy and Sinead Collins and the Dub-

The clubrooms are available for

lin Ladies U16 team on winning Leinster

rental for parties, anniversaries, etc.

titles at the weekend. The inter hurlers defeated Good

The Round Tower U-14 hurling side that hosted three games in the Feile na nGael last weekend

Tower’s top quality hosts of super Feile I sport@gazettegroup.com

ROUND Tower’s young Feile stars produced some fine hurling last weekend as they played their part in an incredible celebration of Gaelic games in the capital last weekend. They began by welcoming their host team Trim to the clubhouse last T hursday. A f ter lunch both teams made their way to the Community Centre for the first of the Feile Matches. Tower ’s got off to a slow start conceding 1-3 before they got their first score. The Clondalkin club started the second half well with the first two scores but Trim broke away to score a second goal. Both team’s matched each other for points but Trim edged out a win that was to see them top the group at the end of proceedings by virtue of winning all

three games, the final score ending 0-5 to 2-6. It left Tower’s needing to bounce back if they were to make their divisional play-off phase but they came up against a tough Carnew Emmets side and missed out 3-4 to 2-8 on Friday in wet and windy conditions. The host club did get off to a great start with Tower’s scoring a goal with their first attack. This rattled Carnew and with their next attack they got a goal back. Carnew got the next two points and were looking like they were g o i n g t o p u l l aw ay but another Tower ’s point and a goal saw Clondalkin rebound to go up by a single point. But the pendulum swung back Carnew’s way as they got the next two points. And that was the pattern the tie followed for the rest of the game as Carnew edged two points up before Tower’s closed

the gap to one while a late flurry of scores saw the minimum in the difference. The second of Friday’s game’s saw Tower’s get a well deserved win over a very good Olaf’s team. This game was played in driving rain but both teams put up a fine show of hurling despite the conditions. Tower’s had the better of the first half and went into half time in front, a lead they were to hold onto

until the final whistle despite a good comeback by Olaf’s.

Please contact Jimmy behind the bar or on 01-4592960.

Council while the minor football-

The annual golf classic is on Friday,

ers were beaten by St Mark’s and

July 13 at Castlewarden golf club. Enter

O’Toole’s, both league games. The

a team (3 Ball Scramble) for €210. Entry

senior ladies lost to Ballyboden and

fee includes a three course meal plus

the junior ladies defeated St Jude’s.

burger and drink on the tenth (note:

All this week’s fixtures can be found in

individuals catered for). Sponsor a

Between the Posts.

tee box or green for €20. For further

There is a now a dedicated Tower’s

information, contact Ed O’Malley on

match tracker service for all teams

087-8073391 or Bren Cronin on 087-

in Towers! https://twitter.com/RTow-

9083980.

ersTracker. The Twitter account is @

The lotto committee are looking for

RTowersTracker - we would like to

your assistance to sell Tower’s lotto

include all results for all teams - we

tickets on a Friday evening or Sat-

encourage all mentors, juvenile and

urday morning for one hour once a

adult, players and supporters to

month. If you are able to help, please

send in the result of your game using

contact Matt McCormack on 087

one of the following methods: text

6836737 or email info@roundtower.ie.

0876290870; email info@roundtower.ie

The club shop is open in the club

or send a tweet to @RTowerstracker.

every Monday night from 7.30-8.30pm.

This week’s lotto numbers were 10,

You can call Betty Ward or Catherine

12, 13 and 20 while the bonus ball was

Moran direct if you have any par-

27. There was no winner of this week’s

ticular enquiries on 0876752238 or

jackpot of €7,900.

0868303207 respectively.

Congratulations to Fergus Murphy,

Bingo takes place this Tuesday.

Joan Cullen and Lorraine Murphy, who

Line €10, full house €20. First call is at

were the three €100 winners. Match

8.30pm.

ST PAT’S PALMERSTOWN CONGRATLUATIONS to our senior

The first summer hurling camp

hurlers this week on their victory

started this week for kids aged four

against Na Fianna. The club would

to 12 and will run until July 13.

also like to congratulate St Bridg-

Lotto number and results: the

Round Tower: Ian Carberry,

id’s on winning the division one

first draw winning numbers were 8,

Patrick Daly, Eoghan Fitzgerald,

hurling Feile.

13, 14 and 16. There was no winner.

Eamon Walsh, Connor Farrell,

Hard luck to the Dublin senior

The second draw winning numbers

Darren Gilligan, Graham Proc-

hurlers and congratulations to the

were 3, 13, 26 and 28; there was no

tor, Shane Scappaticci, Daniel

Dublin minor hurlers on their Lein-

winner. Any three numbers winners:

Kelly, Alex O’Neill, Eoin Brady,

ster championship win. Reminder

Eddie Diamond, Jessie O’Brien, Rob-

Matthew McLoughlin©, Eoghan

to all to order Leinster minor and

bie Carson and Alan Keaney. Next

Halpin, Eoghan Murphy, Sean

senior inter-county football cham-

Sunday, July 15, the first draw jack-

Tunney, Tony McDonagh, Liam

pionship tickets by 10am Friday, July

pot is €10,000; the second draw jack-

O’Connor, Jarleth Brennan,

13 on the ticket hotline: 086 7255586.

pot is €3,400.

Aaron Douglas, Adam Behan, Oisin Douglas, Cian Proctor, Connor Flannery, Niall Acton,

LUCAN SARSFIELDS

Paul Lyons.

CONGRATULATIONS to Seanie McClel-

Divya Clandillon on the birth of their

land and Eoghan O’Congaile and the

daughter Aine in Nepal on Wednesday

Dublin minor hurlers on being crowned

last.

Leinster champions 2012.

Thanks to Cavan Developments for

Feile na nGael was a great success in

the use of their teleporter to fix the

the club with Easkey and Ballinahinch,

ball stop nets on our juvenile pitch

who we hosted, winning their finals

and to Jack O’Neill for his driving skills

and our own hurlers losing in the semi

and all the work he put into our Barn-

finals to eventual division two winners

dance.

Portlaoise. Congratulations to Fachtna and

The Junior A hurlers had a good 1-15 to 0-14 win over St Finian’s, Swords.

Follow GazetteSport on Facebook and Twitter and online at www.gazettegroup.com


ALL OF YOUR CLONDALKIN SPORTS COVERAGE FROM PAGE 27-31

BOUNCING BACK: Ormond impresses on his return to the ring P30

JULY 12, 2012

DUBLIN’S FEILE FEVER: The capital welcomes the country’s U-14 hurlers P28-29

PETER CARROLL sport@gazettegroup.com

NOEL Kelly, vice-chairman of the juvenile committee for Round Tower’s, praised the “fantastic ambassadors” of his club and Clondalkin — Amy Conroy, Sinead Collins and last year’s Round Tower Player’s Player of the Year, Gary Quinlivan, who all represented Dublin last weekend on their way to Leinster glory. “We’re overwhelmed here at the club. It’s great to have three of our players who have come up through the nursery representing us on the county scene,” said Kelly. “Amy, Sinead and Gary have been a shining example to Round Tower GAA. They’ve become real heroes at the club and

in our community on the back of their success.” Kelly claims the club have witnessed a massive surge in interest from the broader locality over the last few months on account of the team’s successes and especially their representation at county level. “Even in the last few months, we’ve seen astonishing crowds turn out to see the county players, and the nursery has nearly doubled its numbers. “There’s a new energy around the club, everyone is chipping in and helping out, and children are looking up to the likes of Gary, Sinead and Amy. “Parents are telling their children if they eat right, put effort into training and keep their heads on straight they could be as

good as these three players someday,” said Kelly. The girls of Clondalkin are turning out in record numbers to get involved with Gaelic games, and Kelly believes that the example that the two ladies’ representatives have set could go on to bolster numbers even further in the future. “We’ll be trying to get a lot more girls involved from the area in September. We’ll be visiting all of the schools in Clondalkin and I’m sure Sinead and Amy’s names will be mentioned on a number of occasions. “Even as far as the boys are concerned, it’s not just the Ballyboden and Sarsfields’ players that are being selected now. Gary has proven that we can get there, too,” said Kelly.

Amy Conroy and Sinead Collins were on the Dublin ladies’ U-16 team that won the Leinster title last weekend when they made short work of Laois, winning convincingly by 4-21 to 0-11. Gary Quinlivan was on the Dublin minor hurler’s panel that managed to see off Wexford in the Leinster final last weekend, too, in a close-fought affair that saw Dublin take over in the final passages of play to win 2-15 to 1-14. Both panels will go onto All-Ireland semi-finals in the coming weeks, with the ladies set to face Cork or Kerry, depending on the result of the Munster final, while the Dublin minor hurlers will have to wait for quarter-final results to see who they will face in the last four.

Amy Conroy and Sinead Collins celebrating with the Leinster trophy. Picture: GAApics.com

GazetteSPORT

Tower’s trio drive the Dubs


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