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Gazette CLONDALKIN

Mar 30 - Apr 5, 2017

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A SIGNED COPY OF LIFE. LOVE. FLESH. BLOOD IMELDA MAY’S EAGERLY AWAITED NEW ALBUM AND TWO TICKETS TO SEE HER LIVE AT THE BORD GAIS ENERGY THEATRE

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Cruel con-man scams OAP out of life savings Psychiatric out patient is left with just €93 in bank account

 SYLVIA POWNALL

PENSIONERS have been warned to be careful after an “exceptionally vulnerable” woman was conned out of her €90,000 life savings. A Clondalkin man involved in the scam which

left the woman, a psychiatric out patient, with just €93 in her bank account was jailed for three years for deception. The Circuit Criminal Court heard that Michael O’Brien, 24, of Old Castle Drive was not the main orchestrator of the fraud

and took orders from a “boss man” he refused to name to gardai. In a separate case a Clondalkin man who persuaded an OAP to pay him €3,570 for unnecessary roof repairs was ordered to pay the money back.

Age Action Ireland spokesman Justin Moran told The Gazette: “Your heart goes out to people who’ve been treated in this way and targeted by unscrupulous individuals. We would urge people to be careful.” Full Story on Page 8


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FUNDING | ‘STRONG MIX OF HOUSING AT AFFORDABLE PRICES AND RENTS’

€27m investment to create 11,500 homes  SYLVIA POWNALL UP T O 11, 5 0 0 n e w homes will be delivered across Adamstown and Clondalkin as a result of a €27 million Government investment in infrastructure. The funding, announced on Tuesday, will provide for key services for lands in Adamstown, Clonburris and Corkagh earmarked for “strategic development”. An estimated 3,000

houses – a mix of private, rental and social housing – are expected to be built by 2021 with the potential for 11,500 in the long term. Welcoming the investment Tanaiste Frances Fitzgerald said: “This will deliver a strong mix of housing at affordable prices and rents.” She added that the Local Infrastr ucture Housing Activation projects was a step in the right direction in terms of

“recalibrating a sector that has faced enormous challenges in recent years”. S h e a d d e d : “ We are making progress in delivering houses for those who need it. Today’s announcement signals what can be achieved from a collaborative approach involving local authorities, public bodies and housing providers. “This is a great example of ‘joined-up Government’ and has acted

as the trigger to draw both public and private partners together to leverage much wider public and private sector investment.” The funding provides for delivery of the Celbridge Link Road, Airlie Park and Tandy’s Lane Park – all part of the Adamstown strategic development zone. Other works provided for include drainage improvement works for the Clonburris strategic development zone and access roads, pumping station and sewer works to tie in with the local authority masterplan for Corkagh Grange/ Kilcarberry. Adamstow n was designated a Strategic Development Zone (SDZ) in 2003 – the first area to earn that status in the country – to allow

for its fast-track development. The new town was originally designed to have 10,000 homes , housing 25,000 inhabitants, but just 1,500 properties were built between 2005 and 2009 before the project ground to a complete halt during the recession. South Dublin County Council last year wrote to Transport Minister Shane Ross asking him to reinstate the Dart Underground project, after the €3billion tunnel plan was shelved until after 2020. The council argued that the rail line was vital in addressing traffic congestion in west Dublin and “facilitating sustainable future housing supply at Adamstown and Clonburris SDZs”.

‘Monster’ is jailed for sex abuse of boy A SUNDAY school teacher described by his victim as “a monster” has been jailed for four-and-a-half years for sexually abusing the boy more than 20 years ago. Thomas Garvan, 64, who has a previous conviction for a sexual offence, was a trusted family friend of the then 11-year-old. Garvan, of Corbally Glade, Westbrook Glen, Tallaght, pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to seven sample charges of sexually abusing the boy on dates between December 1996 and October 1999. The now 32-year-old man stated in his victim impact report: “How could a monster like that

ruin kids’ lives? He has destroyed my life entirely and I can never get it back. My chance of getting a job, my chance of having a normal relationship with my children and partner are all destroyed.” He said he started taking cocaine as it helped him block the abuse but it sent him “off the rails”. “I didn’t care about anything. I never had a meaningful relationship. I had an excessive interest in sex trying to show myself I was a real man.” He said he got two women pregnant in the same year. He had tried to commit suicide three times and he felt he never had the chance to grow into a man.

FASTNews

TD calls on colleagues to refuse their pay increase EOIN O Broin TD has called on his constituency colleagues from Fine Gael, Fianna Fail and People Before Profit to refuse their pay increase due to come in this month. The call comes as O Broin this week signed the official Oireachtas waiver gifting the salary increase back to the state. The Sinn Fein deputy said: “This month TDs will get the first of two pay increases worth a total of €5,000 per year. This will bring the basic TD salary up to €92,000 per year. “There is simply no justification for any TD or Minister to take this pay rise. We are already paid too much. At a time when many families are struggling to get by on low wages or with rising prices and high levels of household debt the right thing for all TDs to do is to gift this substantial pay increase back to the State. “I have signed the official Oireachtas waiver form gifting the first part of the pay rise back to the State. I will do the same when the second phase of the pay increase comes into effect in January 2018. “As a Sinn Fein TD I only take home an average wage and invest the remainder of my salary into the local community and my constituency service. I think it is important for TDs to make it clear that we do not deserve or need this €5,000 increase. I am calling on my constituency colleagues, Minister Frances Fitzgerald, Fianna Fail’s John Curran and PBP’s Gino Kenny to refuse this unjustified and unwarranted pay increase.”

Proposal for Clondalkin to be a ‘party town’ rejected CLONDALKIN will not be labelled a “party town” any time soon after councillors voted against the expansion of the Purple Flag initiative. The international accreditation for town centres aims to “raise standards and broaden the appeal of towns between 5pm and 5am”. Sinn Fein councillor Mark Ward put forward a motion at an area meeting of South Dublin County Council to pre-empt expansion of the flag into Dublin 22. Cllr Ward, a director of the Clondalkin Drugs and Alcohol Task Force and representative on the Clondalkin Community Alcohol Steering Group, said the flag would “go against the ethos” of recent developments in the area. He said: “My argument was that we have the Round Tower heritage project taking place, and other positive developments like new housing and the Fairtrade town. We don’t need to send out the message that Clondalkin is a party town.” Currently there are 18 Purple Flags in the Republic of Ireland and two in Dublin – one at Temple Bar and another in Swords.


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DUBLIN LIFE | DOCTORS IN THE HOUSE PUT DUBLIN PAIR ON THE RIGHT ROAD TO HEALTHY LIVING

Meet the mum and daughter TV3 docs labelled ‘Ireland’s sickest family’

MEET the mother and daughter who say airing their bad habits on TV3’s Doctor in the House has given them a new lease of life. Geraldine Haskin, 54, and her daughter Amanda, 31, who live in Clondalkin, were labelled “one of the sickest” families the medics had ever met on last night’s show.

 SYLVIA POWNALL Before signing up charity shop worker Amanda tipped the scales at 24st, consumed up to 7,000 calories a day and smoked up to 30 cigarettes daily. Mum Geraldine is also obese and has high blood pressure along with a family

history of heart and stroke problems. Amanda admitted to binge eating and had struggled with depression. She sought help from Pieta House after social media bullying left her feeling suicidal. She told The Gazette: “My mother decided to sign us both up. At first I was

scared but then I said yeah because I felt it might help me out. I’m nervous about how the public will react because some people are not very understanding about obesity. But I’m not nervous about the way it was shown. I wanted it to be wartsand-all, to be real and show my struggle.” The pair got their first visit from the doctors in November and after a medical got started on an eight-week programme prescribed by the experts. Both were found to have fatty livers and Amanda was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. Amanda said: “I used to hide my feelings and binge on food but now I’m talking to a therapist. “I’m going to exercise classes, I’ve joined Slimming World and I’ve picked a date to give up smoking for good. “Mam’s lost a lot of weight and goes walking with the dogs. It’s been tough and we have good and bad days, but the change wouldn’t have happened without Doctor in the House.”


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NEILSTOWN | OVER 100 GATHER AT ESTATE CHANTING: ‘GET RADFORD OUT.’

‘Mob mentality’ blasted as crowd seeks sex offender  SYLVIA POWNALL

GARDAI have warned against vigilantism after a house in Clondalkin was wrongly targeted last week by a large crowd seeking a serial sex offender. Over 100 people gathered at Weaver Court after incorrect information about the whereabouts of convicted sex attacker David Radford was posted on social media. Up to 10 gardai from R o n a n s t ow n G a r d a Station responded to restore order after the angry mob assembled at the Neilstown estate chanting: “Get Radford out.”

Information claiming that recently released Radford, 20, was staying at an apartment there had been posted earlier on Facebook. Radford, of Butterfield Avenue, Rathfarnham, was released from the Midlands Prison two weeks ago with unconfirmed reports that he was staying in Tallaght. Gardai assured the angry crowd Radford was not at the address however it took more than an hour to disperse the crowd. No arrests were made. A source said: “This mob mentality does no one any favours. Garda resources could have

Convicted sex attacker David Radford

been better deployed in that area on Thursday night.” In November 2015, Dublin Circuit Court heard that Radford tried to drag a 15-year-old girl into a cul-de-sac after telling her he wanted her and her body. He was jailed for two years after the court

heard CCT V footage s h owe d a m a n g a rdai were satisfied was him following the girl from the Luas stop and approaching her. Radford denied the allegation but was rearrested in January 2015, two months after the attack, when his

DNA was found in a semen stain on the girl’s bottoms. The teenager gave gardai a good description of her attacker and said she could feel his penis against her backside as he was pushing her along. She said she couldn’t

sleep because she could only see Radford’s face every time she closed her eyes. His 15 previous convictions include three for sexually assaulting women in similar random attacks, dating back to 2010, when he was aged 14.

Fined for a litter offence A WOMAN whose waste rubbish was identified in Maynooth has been fined €600. Sarah Kelly, 56 Wood Avens, Ronanstown, Clondalkin was fined at Kilcock District Court for a litter offence at the Cathedral car park in Maynooth on May 9, 2016. Evidence was given by Kildare County Council that the litter contained items identifying her as the owner of the waste.

Neighbours in row over dumping  MARK O’BRIEN RESIDENTS in Balgaddy are turning on each other as illegal dumping continues to plague in the area. Horrified Foxdene resident Teresa Noonan recieved an anonymous letter last week which falsely accused her of illegally dumping. Mrs Noonan then posted a photo of the letter on the Balgaddy Tidy Towns Facebook page, where she strongly denied the accusations. The letter read: “You have been spotted by different people in our community throwing rubbish on the green or in the streets. This is not acceptable and is absolutely disgusting behaviour. Bags of rubbish belong in the bin NOT on the streets. “The children of Balgaddy cannot play on the green because of people like you.” The letter goes on to say that the sender had photographic evidence of Mrs Noonan dumping that they would be passing on to the gardaí and local media. The letter was signed: “You’re (sic) neighbour”. Mrs Noonan strongly denied the accusations. She said: “We are in fact totally disgusted with the rubbish being dumped. We have spent many hours cleaning out the rubbish that has blown into our garden because of the people who dump it on the green. “Feel free to share what photographic evidence you have. I can assure the person who sent this that those photos are not of my husband or me.” Many neighbours came to the Noonans’ defence and expressed disgust that the letter had been sent anonymously. Deirdre Curley wrote: “Cowardly, keep your head up, whoever did this is has no clue what good people you are, their loss.” Balgaddy Tidy Towns urged the sender to go through the proper channels and not turn on their neighbours. In Facebook post, they wrote: “The person who sent the letter should just send the photos to SDCC and elected Representatives as well, to make sure dumpers get fined cos they will keep doing it if there is no con-

sequences and sending letters like this to wrongfully accuse people is not the solution.” Balgaddy has been plagued by dumping issues in recent months. Two weeks ago, the Gazette reported that a person had been identified and fined after a large number of rubbish had been dumped outside the community garden over a six week period. South Dublin County Council cleared this rubbish on Thursday March 16 but last week, Balgaddy Tidy Towns posted pictures that showed the dumping had started again. The council confirmed that it was investigating the latest incidents of illegal dumping but warned that it can be difficult to identify and prosecute offenders. A spokesperson told the Gazette: “I can confirm that there was a particular issue with illegal dumping outside the community garden which was cleared by the Council’s public realm crew on March 16. “Since then we have received five reports of repeated instances of illegal dumping in the Balgaddy area, and as always, all such reports are investigated and then scheduled for removal. It is, as always, proving extremely difficult to obtain evidence in relation to the identity of offenders, and we continue to encourage residents and the public at large to support the Council in efforts to identify alleged polluters and to provide the necessary information to allow appropriate enforcement action to be taken. “In the absence of clear and substantive evidence, or witness statements and the presence of such witnesses in court it will not be possible to bring successful prosecutions.”


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Out and About

Celebrating diversity T

HE annual Intercultural Day took place in St John the Evangelist NS, Adamstown, as part of the celebrations for the St Patrick’s Day festival. As usual it was a celebration of the diverse nature of the school with an abundance of colour representing the four corners of the globe. A wide variety of dishes provided a culinary feast for the parents and children as they were able to sample food from across the planet. Children performed song, dance and poetry whilst dressed in national costume adding to the spectacle. The performance finished with an Irish dancing display with the musical accompaniment provided by teacher Martin McCormack formerly of River dance fame. The day was a recognition of how the school community has been the catalyst for bringing families together in the atmosphere of tolerance and respect.


30 March 2017 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 7

Out and About

Young leaders of the future

STUDENTS from St Joseph’s School, Lucan, took part in the National Student Leadership Conference organised by Ceist, the trust managing 107 voluntary Catholic secondary schools nationwide. Over 250 pupils from schools all over Ireland attended the conference in Dublin where they shared experiences and viewpoints on life and living in Ireland and on leadership in their schools and communities. The event was also attended by Education Minister Richard Bruton and the Archbishop of Dublin, Dr Diarmuid Martin. The St. Joseph’s students are pictured here with Dr Marie Griffin, CEO of Ceist.


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APPEAL | JOY AT GIVING THE GIFT OF LIFE FROM PAGE 1

‘We need more organ donors to give hope’  SYLVIA POWNALL

Hello, petal! Help at hand for gardeners BLAIR Doyle was happy to help TV presenter and mother of three Anna Daly launch GroMor 2017 – a nationwide campaign in association with Bord Bia to give clear and useful advice on how to best grow plants, herbs, flowers, fruits and vegetables, and to highlight the health benefits of gardening. A series of 50 free gardening demonstrations take place across the nation at GroMor garden centres from April to September, offering advice on a wide variety of themes. For further information, see www.gromor.ie. Picture: Robbie Reynolds

A MUM who donated one of her kidneys to her daughter has spoken of her joy at being able to give her only child the gift of life. Liz Delany, 46, underwent a barrage of tests last year before medics declared she was a match for daughter Michaela, 17. The transition year student was born with kidney disease and had her first transplant when she was aged just two. Liz told The Gazette: “This gave her the chance to have a normal childhood away from dialysis treatment and we are very grateful to her donor’s family for giving her that precious opportunity.” Michaela’s kidney function declined in 2015 and she had to undergo haemodialysis treatment at Temple Street Hospital just before sitting her Junior Cert exams last year. Mum Liz was one of those tested to see if she was a suitable donor – and after several months’ anxious wait she was

pronounced a match and the transplant operation went ahead last September. Liz, from Monaster y Gate in Clondalkin, said: “I was delighted when I was accepted. Michaela turned 17 at Christmas and everything is going well now. She is my only child so I was relieved when I could help. “My health is fine now. It hit me a bit hard at first just after the operation but I’m back to normal now.” Liz’s husband Dermot is related to RTE reporterVivienne Traynor who is the ambassador for Organ Donor Awareness Week which runs from April 1 to 9. Vivienne donated one of her kidneys to her nephew Martin and he and his partner Mary welcomed their third child, a baby girl, into the family last week. Liz, who takes part along with her family in a fun run for the Irish Kidney Association in Corkagh Park each May, said: “We need more organ donors to give hope to Michaela and others who are awaiting transplants for a chance at life.”

Michaela Delany with her mother Liz

There are an estimated 600 people in Ireland awaiting life-saving heart, lung, liver, kidney and pancreas transplants. The Irish Kidney Association’s Organ Donor Awareness Week takes place from 1-8 April, encouraging families to discuss their wishes about deceased organ donation, supporting the IKA by buying merchandise while volunteers distribute donor cards.

Elderly being targeted

Mr Moran, head of advocacy with AAI, added: “Scams and frauds targeting elderly people are a real problem in this country. We advise people always to ask for ID and references. Age Action Ireland can recommend trusted tradespeople.” Michael O’Brien, who had no previous convictions, pleaded guilty to four sample charges of deception on dates between October 2015 and November 2015. The woman, who was acting as a carer for her 95-year-old mother and was being treated as an outpatient in the psychiatric ward of St James’s Hospital, went to gardai in a distressed state in December 2015. She said a man called to her home and said she needed to have her driveway re-paved or the postman would trip and sue her – costing €7,500. The same man suggested he paint her house after telling her that it was “going to fall down....”. She paid €1,500 for this but the work was never completed. Some time later the woman received a call from a person purporting to be an accountant who said he had heard she’d been scammed by a group of travellers and he could help get her money back. The caller told her if she paid him in instalments of €5,000 he would get her “a big cheque for €76,000”. She regularly withdrew €5,000 and handed it over until she had just €93 left. Separately, Judge Miriam Walsh ordered a man who conned an OAP for unnecessary roof repairs to pay back all the money. Charles O’Brien, 37, with an address at Rosebank Place, Clondalkin, has paid back €2,000 of €3,570 he took from a pensioner at Cappaghmore estate, Clondalkin in March 2016. His case was adjourned to May for him to raise the balance, and for sentencing.


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Gazette babies are the cutest...

Matilda Nisbet is enjoying relaxing near her toys

More steak for Alexandra, please!

Christopher Arthurs loves cars

WIN!WIN!WIN!

Caroline B Valentim shares how great Alicia and Chloe looked for a certain day ...

Send in your baby photographs and...

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Leppin’ leprechauns! Parker Daly certainly looks the part

E’RE entering the final week of The Gazette’s Bonnie Baby competition so this is your last chance to send in those cute pix of your little prides and joys. We’ve had a wonderful response from mums, dads, proud grandparents and family friends, who’ve shared some of the cutest photos we’ve ever seen. Keep sending in those wonderful snaps of your little ones – next Thursday’s paper will be the last week for new entries, after which we’ll chose our lucky finalists, who’ll appear in the paper on Thursday, April 13th. We have some great prizes to give away – including two hampers worth €90 each from our friends at NUK Ireland – and one lucky winner will win a free family or newborn photoshoot worth €180 from Gazette photojournalist and expert baby photographer Ali, of Alison O’Hanlon Photography. So keep sending in those snaps to competitions@dublingazette.com or via our Facebook page – and don’t forget to include your details and your baby/toddler’s name and age!


30 March 2017 GAZETTE 11

Gazette competition

Ella McCullage plays peekaboo

Zack Hennessy composes his next masterpiece

Liam Kavanagh is dressed to impress

Nice to meet Louise O’Carrroll

Aneta Patriak shared this thoughtful shot of Maia Kurkowska


GAZETTE

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DUBLINBUSINESS FUNDING: DUBLIN GROUPS TO GAIN FROM TECH FIRM’S DONATIONS

Brexit stage left: New research points to Dublin as preferred relocation option for London’s city bankers LONDON’S bankers should relocate to Dublin post-Brexit, according to a new study. Research by Movinga reveals that Dublin is the most favourable city for bankers, based on the average high-end rent prices, language spoken, cuisine, luxury stores and bars, pushing the cities of Frankfurt and Paris unexpectedly far down the list. According to the study, Dublin ranks first and is followed by Amsterdam in second and Valletta in third, while Frankfurt trails far behind in sixth place and Paris in ninth. The results reveal that Dublin is the most desirable city for London bankers to relocate to, scoring high for proximity (70-minute flight), English language comprehension (100%), and affordable high-end rent prices (€1,975.67). Tax Dublin also has the highest maximum income tax rate at 52%, along with Amsterdam. “Everyone talks about Paris and Frankfurt as the new financial centres of Europe after Brexit,” said Finn Hansel, managing director at Movina. “But other cities like Dublin, Valletta, Luxembourg and Amsterdam may actually be better equipped to make these workers feel happy and at home. “Individuals and businesses alike should consider the unique factors important to their relocation before planning their move.”

Laura Morgan Walsh, Director of EMEA Risk and Financial Services Operations, PayPal (centre in white top and red skirt) together with PayPal teammates presents a cheque for €9,300 to Junior Achievement Ireland. Picture: Patrick Browne

PayPal presents €55k to a range of charities  EMMA NOLAN

PAYPAL has donated more than €55,000 to seven Irish charities. The five charities that received funding through PayPal Gives are ARC Cancer Support, homeless charity Depaul, children’s hospice LauraLynn, Dundalk Dog Rescue and children’s

charity Temple Street Foundation. The organisations were nominated by PayPal employees at the Blanchardstown and Dundalk offices, and received a donation of €8,400 each. ARC Cancer Support will use its donation to continue its work in supporting children and adults affected by cancer

and those caring for them. Depaul will fund a programme that supports homeless women leaving prison; helping them to integrate successfully back into their local communities.

Hospice donation LauraLynn’s donation will help fund its popular annual Light Up event,

when the charity turns on its Christmas tree lights. The contribution to Temple Street Foundation will support a new play facility for children in the hospital, while Dundalk Dog Rescue’s funding will enable it to continue to give unwanted dogs a second chance. Junior Achievement Ireland and Outreach

Moldova received €9,300 and €4,600 respectively through PayPal’s Financial Inclusion Charity Grant Programme. Maeve Dorman, PayPal’s head of Global Operations, Europe, Middle East and Africa said: “We are delighted to support these seven charities and recognise the invaluable work each of them does.”

New express Dublin-Belfast coach links cities in just 2 hours A NEW express transport link has just started between the hearts of Dublin and Belfast, with 16 daily services in each direction on offer. With March marking Dublin Coach’s tenth anniversary, the transport firm has rolled out a direct twohour service, with no stops, departing from Custom

House Quay and whisking passengers directly to Glengall St in Belfast in less than two hours. Aoife Dunphy, marketing manager for the Dublin Coach Group, said: “Dublin Coach are delighted to provide a direct service with no stops for our new M1 express service, as we received much

needed feedback from our loyal customer following. We are really excited to add Belfast to our ever-expanding nationwide network.” Fares for the Dublin Coach M1 express service will be €10 or £8 one way, with both currencies accepted at each of the stops; two children u-12 travel free with

every paying adult. Dublin Coach can be easily recognised by its distinctive green livery, with new Mercedes coaches operating the route with increased leg room, reclining leather seats, free wi-fi and a toilet on board. See www.dublincoach.ie or call 01 465 9972.


30 March 2017 GAZETTE 13

MOTORING: MICHAEL MORONEY ON WHY IT’S A GREAT TIME TO BE A VAN DRIVER P20

TRAVEL: WHY ROMANIA IS A PHOTOGRAPHER’S DREAM DESTINATION P23

DUBLINLIFE Let Dublin Gazette Newspapers take you on a tour of the news and events taking place across the city and county this week

GAZETTE

MUSIC: JAMES HENDICOTT EXPLORES THE RISE OF IRISH HIP-HOP P16-17

MUSIC: THE EAGERLY AWAITED NEW ALBUM FROM DUBLIN’S FINEST IS ALMOST HERE LISTENING to Imelda May’s new album, it’s clear that one of Ireland’s biggest exports has found a new groove, here presenting the most personal and intimately autobiographical album she has ever written. Featuring the powerful single ing musicians including the core trio Should’ve Been You, the heartof guitarist Marc Ribot (Tom Waits, wrenching blues ballad ‘BlackTears’ Elvis Costello), drummer Jay Bellerose with guitar legend Jeff Beck, and the (Robert Plant and Alison Krauss) and stunning first single ‘Call Me’, May has bassist Zach Dawes (The Last Shadow poured her soul into Life. Love. Flesh. Puppets, Mini Mansions). Blood, her fifth studio album. May’s new sound sits firmly outside With just a over a week before its of any sharply defined genre box, release, Imelda says: “I wrote Black widely spanning blues, rock, soul, gosTears with Angelo Petraglia after a pel and jazz. ‘Life, Love, Flesh, Blood’ heart wrenchingly difficult goodbye. I breathes new life into a classic sound, closed my door and caught a glimpse with Imelda’s powerhouse vocal as of myself in the mirror with black tears distinctive as ever, cementing her posirolling down my face. tion as one of the strongest vocalists of “It’s a sight and situation most her generation. women have unfortunately seen ourThe singer herself describes the selves in at some point in life. Angelo record as her most “honest” yet. had a beautiful guitar piece that fit the Imelda’s life changed considerably mood perfectly.” in the run up to recording, and this is Recorded over seven days in Los documented in the only way she knew Angeles, the album features contribuhow, saying: “It’s therapy, like keeping tions from guitar hero Beck, piano lega diary that a lot of people read.” end Holland (on ‘When It’s My Time’) With just over a week to go, we can’t and an accomplished group of backwait to listen to that diary!

THIS HUSKY LADY, COCO, IS A SWEET, CLEVER PET OUR Dog of the Week looking for their #SpecialSomeone* is Coco, a stunning threeyear-old Husky. Suitable for an adultonly home, Coco is a little aloof but she more than makes up for this with brains galore and a super, fun personality. Coco is an active dog and would make a great running partner for a sporty owner. She gets on well with other dogs, but being independent, it’s not essential that she is rehomed with another dog. If you are looking for an active running or hiking buddy that would happily curl up by your feet rather than on your lap, then Coco could be perfect for you. If you can be Coco’s #SpecialSomeone*, then please contact Dogs Trust on 01 879 1000. They are based in Finglas, just off Exit 5 on the M50. Map and directions can be found on their website, www.dogstrust. ie. You can also find them on Facebook, at www.facebook.com/ dogstrustirelandonline, or on Twitter @ DogsTrust_IE.

WIN The new album, which will be released by Decca on April 7

A SIGNED COPY OF LIFE. LOVE. FLESH. BLOOD AND TICKETS TO SEE IMELDA MAY PLAY LIVE

WE’RE offering one lucky Gazette reader the chance to win a SIGNED copy of Life. Love. Flesh. Blood. But that’s not all, you can also take a pal to see Imelda and her band play live at the Bord Gais Energy Theatre at the end of May. All you have to do is Like and Share the Imelda May post on our Facebook page – and if you haven’t already, be sure to Like the Dublin Gazette Facebook page itself! Four lucky runners up will also receive a signed copy of Life. Love. Flesh. Blood. The competition is open until the April 7 – the day the new album is released – so get on down to the Dublin Gazette Facebook page and start liking and sharing!


GAZETTE

14 GAZETTE 30 March 2017

DUBLINLIFE

DIARY

SCHOOLS: OLD TECH TO HELP CONTACT HIGH-TECH ORBITAL STATION

What haven’t the Irish done for the rest of the world? HERITAGE: AN AMUSING LOOK AT OUR INFLUENCE

 EMMA NOLAN

Students and teachers from Tallaght Community School pictured preparing to contact the International Space Station by direct radio, with the ISS soon to be in place 400km directly above the school. Picture: Colin O’Riordain

Students get ready for a far-out experience STUDENTS at Tallaght Community School, along with two schools from Cork, will make history this year as they have been announced as the first Irish schools who will make direct radio contact with the orbiting International Space Station (ISS). For a brief timeframe during Expedition 52 and 53, the crew on the ISS will be traveling at 27,600 km/h – and for 6 to 12 minutes it will be passing directly over Tallaght Community School. The closer the space station flies to the school, the stronger and clearer the audio feed will get. At one point during this fantastic feat of broadcast engineering, the ISS will be 400km in the sky directly above the school. Daniel Cussen, radio technical co-ordinator will be there hand to ensure their temporary mission control radio station is up and functioning. He said: “I have worked with

many schools in Europe to facilitate contact with the ISS, but as an Irishman I am delighted to be working with Irish students as they leave their mark in history.” However, due to the uncertain nature of life in outer space, an exact date for the event can not be given yet, but to stay updated on the students’ journey follow them on Facebook/TallaghtCommunity-School, or Twitter @ TCSTallaght.

BRAVE SOULS SOUGHT TO ABSEIL OFF CROKER EVER felt like abseiling from the top of Croke Park? Well, here’s your chance to do so – and to help out a a good cause as you go. Jigsaw, Ireland’s National Centre for Youth Mental Health, are seeking 60 brave individuals to join them in an abseil fundraising challenge from the top of the famous Hogan Stand at Croke Park. The challenge aims to raise more than €30,000 to support

Jigsaw’s work delivering a range of services improving the lives of young people experiencing mental health difficulties. Dubliner Caoimhe O’Callaghan, who braved the abseil last year, said: “I absolutely loved the Jigsaw Croke Park Abseil. I was terrified at the top, but once I had my feet firmly on the pitch I wanted to do it all over again!” Potential daredevils can register their interest online atjigsaw. ie/abseil, or calling the fundraising team at 01 472 7010. There is a €50 registration fee, and participants are asked to raise a minimum of €300.

DIARMUID’S GARDEN TO GO TO DUNDRUM DUNDRUM is set to get a visit from celebrity gardener Diarmuid Gavin this summer when he brings his critically-acclaimed Chelsea Flower Show Garden to Dundrum Town Centre.

The spectacular garden, which was one of the highlights of the 2016 Chelsea Flower Show, emulates pure childhood fantasy and will be on display in Dundrum Town Centre’s Pembroke Square from May. The traditional garden features beautifully preened conical trees and topiary balls, colourful planting and an elegant brick folly which takes pride in front of a sunken rectangular pond. Every 15 minutes, the tranquil garden is transformed into a whirlwind of mechanical imagination, with flowerbeds rising from the ground, twirling trees and a wooden shed that comes to life full of cogs and gardening gadgets. The garden, which will take three weeks to install, has seven moving parts and each theatrical show lasts a minute and a half. Dundrum Town Centre’s Garden of Pure Imagination launches on May 20, and will be free of charge to visitors and suitable for all ages.

“WHAT have the Irish ever done for us?” some have asked. Well, a new book aims to explore just that! Celebrating Irish achievements, W hat Have The Irish Ever Done For Us? by author and journalist David Forsythe tells how Irish people and the Irish Diaspora have made a positive contribution to the wider world. Did you know that a Dubliner is regarded as the father of conservatism, that a Dublin soccer player helped to save FC Barcelona from extinction, or that a Dublin doctor invented the hypodermic syringe? Did you also know that the Irish invented cheese and onion crisps, the submarine and chocolate milk? That without the efforts of an Irish engineer, the city of Los Angeles would not exist, or that a Kerryman is credited as the father of modern economics? These and many other surprising stories are covered in the book, which launched on St Patrick’s Day. David said: “The idea for the book came about during The Gathering in 2013. “I was covering a lot of the events associated with

the Diaspora and it struck me that virtually every village, town and townland in Ireland has some kind of intriguing story about one of their own who has done something amazing, or at least impressive! “So I decided to put some of these stories together in a book. “There are lots of ‘heavy’ books on Irish history or in-depth biographies, but I wanted to do something that was light and easy to read and hopefully interesting and entertaining.” The book is arranged into 51 short chapters and covers a wide range of topics, including how the Irish built New York, why a Cork woman was awarded Israel’s highest honour, and how the Irish helped create the modern-day horror boom. What have the Irish ever done for us? is available to order from Amazon in paperback and e-book.


30 March 2017 GAZETTE 15

Hope springs eternal over at Fingal’s only microbrewery  EMMA NOLAN THERE’S only one brewery in the whole of Fingal, and that’s Hope Beer. The state-of-the-art craft beer microbrewery is based on the Kilbarrack Road just behind Howth Junction Dart Station. Set up in late 2015 by old pals with a passion for beer – Wim de Jongh, Jeanne Mahony and Des McSwiggan – Hope now has five full-time employees and is firmly on a path to further growth. Wim said: “I always loved special beers.” Having grown up in Holland surrounded by a booming beer industry, Wim, who lives in Sutton, set up Hope after a long corporate career where he travelled abroad almost every week. He joked: “It’s great now being able to cycle to work! It was important to set up close to home.” With the Irish craft beer revolution taking place mainly outside Dublin, Hope Beer is the only brewery in the Fingal region and one of only a handful in the Dublin area. Wim added: “It’s fantastic to be a part of this industry and it’s something that will continue to grow

so it’s more of an evolution that a revolution. They have also been awarded the Fingal Enterprise Award 2017, and their beers have won a number of beer competition awards. “We were helped by Fingal County Council getting our business going and we did some course and applied for a number of courses. Then we were invited to enter the awards which we were delighted to do.” Wim said he wasn’t expecting to win because of how young the company is. “The judges were very impressed with what we’ve done so far and we’ve a very well invested facility. We really bought state-of-the-art, environmentally-friendly brewing equipment and it was all funded from our own resources.

“We’re all aged 50-plus too, so we’re known as ‘a silver start-up’.” When Hope won the award, the chief executive of Fingal, Paul Reid, praised the entrepreneurs for their “drive and determination”. He said: “Hope Beer is a very worthy winner of this major enterprise award, in recognition of what they have achieved here in Fingal in such a short space of time.” Hope’s three core beers are Handsome Jack (a fruity IPA), Grunt (a crisp, dry Saison) and Passifyoucan (a malty Blonde). Wim added that food pairings are a major part of the appeal of the beers. “Grunt goes perfectly with seafood; Passifyoucan is great with anything spicy, and Handsome Jack is great to have with burgers or a barbeque.” Hope also has a number of limited edition beers; they brew everything from stouts and lagers to red and brown ales. The entire Hope range is bottled and kegged at the Howth Junction brewer y, and is available in off-licences, bars, restaurants and also in some supermarkets nationwide.

A fine haul of three Silver medals at Alltech Craft Brews and Food Fair; inset: part of the brewery

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DUBLINLIFE

“POWER, BELONGING AND THE NEED TO BE HEARD:” N O I T C U D O R T N I AN P O H P I H H S I R I O T JAMES HENDICOTT

TEMPER-MENTAL MISSELAYNEOUS

FROM creeping into the mainstream through the likes of Rubberbandits, Super Extra Bonus Party and featuring in Love/ Hate, to the Rusangano Family’s debut album taking home the Choice Music Prize earlier this month: the rise of Irish hip-hop has been as dramatic as it has been unlikely. It helped, of course, that the scene’s quick progression fell alongside a massive recession instigated in part through regulatory failure, repressively rising urban rents and mass social protests. Angry, pointed voices sat naturally with their new audience. As Dublin-based hip-hop star TemperMental MissElayneous tells it: “It’s hunger that’s causing hip-hop’s boom. It’s also identification with the social dynamics of the birthplace and creators of hip-hop, and a willingness to learn and lead. But we value cultural identity and the lyrical Irish roots: saints and scholars. Poverty, loss and grievance.” While on the poppier end of the spectrum, Temper-Mental embodies much of what’s strong about the budding Irish scene: a distinctly locally-accented sound, quick wit, cultural references and original beats. In ‘Create the Pain to Alleviate It’, she shows her depth, with the imagery of rotting apple cores set against a world of social and gender politics: “questioning, self loathing, dissatisfaction, doubt... We refuse to believe we’re animals yet... Poets once honoured are now in McDonalds, a dozen a dime.” Temper-Mental identifies many of the topics of Irish political discourse as her themes, singling out misogyny, heterosexism, God, transformation and pain as her core elements.

“It’s a cultural revolutionary movement,” she explains. “It’s on the concrete, on the corner, it’s in classrooms, yards, youth clubs, community art centres, it’s in prison, in the bedroom studio, on the stairwell, down the lane and held privately in a heart’s rhythm waiting to be translated to words.” A distinctly accented, smart-quipping artist who rose alongside Temper-Mental MissElayneous at the height of the recession in 2011/2012, Lethal Dialect has a harsher dynamic to his sound and also cites local cultural figures as key influences in his lyrics, nodding in particular Irish folk star Damien Dempsey. Despite being three albums into his career, the rapper admits “I’m only really finding my own sound now. There’s some old stuff where you could nearly tell what I was listening to at the time.” His north Dublin lilt and conceptual approach to albums, however, have often stood out. As a lyricist, he’s distinctly observational, picking out local characters mid flow, like in ‘New Dublin Saunter’: “I can’t fathom why your own people hate to hear their own accents, they call by different names, inferiority complex, malignant shame... A problem child Oscar Wilde... Watch what this generation does, and remember I said that...” For him, despite the growth of live shows recently, the scene lives mainly online, a more boisterous and magnified version of the bedroom recordings he started out with. “There’s a good online following that can be converted into a real world following with more gigs,” he explains. “There are class acts putting out quality releases constantly.”

INTELLECTUAL HIP-HOP... There’s a recurring theme in Irish releases, and while the accents can be wonderfully distinct, it runs deeper. It’s more in the intellectual angles; the artistic references, the experiential depth of the carefully shaped words. Bling it’s not; it relates more to the urban jungles of Dublin and Limerick, the poverty trap, the crumbling corners tourists never see.

one of Ireland’s growing number of African immigrants. “This is where history finds us: no black, no dogs, no Irish” they quip in hit single ‘Heathrow,’, a stunningly moving and emotional diatribe on race politics that brilliantly documents the senses and everyday dimensions of an immigrant’s journey. It roles off in abrasive first person, opening with “I don’t care where you come from,

RUSANGANO FAMILY Perhaps the most successful act of 2016 gathered, slowly, a wider following before exploding on the release of their album ‘Let The Dead Bury The Dead’. Rusangano Family are a band built - unusually for the scene - on an intensely vibrant live show, also chucking in those unique personal perspectives. Regardless, they agree with Lethal Dialect’s labeling of hip-hop’s Irish heartland: “The easier answer would be Irish hip-hop lives on the internet,” they explain. “But it’s more multifaceted and more mature than ever.” Based in Limerick the trio trace their roots to Togo, Zimbabwe and down the road in rural County Clare. Lyrically, they vigorously cut to the heart of what it is to be

I don’t want any of your kind around here anymore.” “I think people are more adventurous musically, and realise they need a plan of action, better tracks, sharper production, tighter stage shows,” they argue. “These things take time to mature, but it feels like it’s going in a really creative direction. More power to us, it’s really inspiring.” Another act pouring his heart into his music is Emzee A, though he prefers to turn his observations inwards. The Dublin-based up-and-comer simply defines his music as “a combination of what I’ve been through, and what I’m going through, all the relationships in my life.” His slightly foggy style of beats layer with

FEATURES

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EMZEE A

deeply personal moments, like in Sober Thoughts, in which he spits “my life is going nowhere, I’m lost, I don’t need your love.” “It’s about the people in my life and how I have either helped them or disappointed them, or the books I’m reading at the moment, that’s where the messages come,” he tells us. “Stuff like lucid dreaming, sleep paralysis, insomnia, love, my flaws and how I’m willing to become a better person everyday.” He’s another voice emerging into what was once all but a void. BUILDING ON A BUDDING A SCENE An organisation operating right at the very roots of Irish hip-hop, putting on backroom shows and promoting burgeoning artists, is fast-growing Dublin promoters Word Up Collective. “The vibrancy and the energy of those involved really attracted us,” Word Up cofounder Phil Udell explains, “as well as the supportive nature of those involved.” “It just feels like there’s something really important happening. Everywhere you look there’s some incredible music being made. Since we started in April, we’ve had a huge number of artists get in touch. Our monthly live gigs in Dublin have expanded to feature acts who aren’t directly part of the collective, we’ve had a good few make their live debut with us.” “It’s very varied as well, even in Word Up we have R&B, pop, alternative rap and spoken word. I hope that it’ll develop it’s own identity, just like the grime scene in the UK has done. Rusangano Family and others are pushing their own unique sound. It can only get bigger” What Irish hip-hop lacks is a physical heartland. In the greatest of Irish traditions, as well as typical music venues,

events take place in pub back rooms and are only slowly emerging into the more established venues, yet festival slots and support roles alongside touring artists like Kendrick Lamar and Death Grips are quickly expanding audiences. Rusangano Family’s album launch show - a boisterous, sold-out triumph - took place in Dublin’s Sugar Club, a sloping, seated venue given a theatrical feel by its velvet and tables. It’s better suited to its regular burlesque nights, but the trio triumphantly made it work. Yet the signs of mainstream acceptance of the scene are coming thick and fast. Rusangano Family’s debut was recognised as Ireland’s best of 2016. TemperMental MissElayneous’ unusual career highlight came through substantial cultural recognition: having her work formally preserved in the James Joyce library at University College Dublin. Their intent? “That generations to come will see my work as part of urban contemporary poetry, music and art in Ireland.” What’s reassuring is the scene’s collective ambition: despite their successes, almost every artist speaks about improving. They talk about their progress, but also about how far there is to travel. Hip-hop as a local musical force still feels like a baby in Ireland, but it’s lent credibility by history: Irish storytelling traditions adapt nicely to urban poetry. But the scene is new to substantial acclaim, new to having a following, and new to the shining spotlight of any notable media attention. “Confidence and cowardice has caused this hip-hop boom in equal measure,” Temper-Mental concludes. Both when it’s confident and when it’s not, Irish hip-hop lives today in a way it never has before.


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FEATURE

INSIGHT: TAKE A COMPREHENSIVE LOOK AT THE WORK OF THE ORBIS FLYING EYE HOSPITAL

A plane amazing charity Are ye right there, Teds? Visitors have a perfectly bearable wait aboard the Orbis Flying Eye Hospital, which gave Dublin visitors a great look around its specially adapted medial interior recently.

EARLIER this month the Cllr Donnelly was suffer from preventable Orbis Flying Eye Hospi- wowed by the suite of conditions. Some 90% tal – the world’s only air- medical facilities on of those affected live in borne ophthalmic train- board, and praised the developing countries ing facility – winged it to charity’s work. She said: where they cannot access Ireland for the first time in “In late 2013 I visited the type of sight-saving ten years, giving visitors a Ethiopia to make a radio treatments that many othfirst-hand look at its sight- documentary on disability ers take for granted. saving, life-changing work in the developing world. I For more than 30 years, around the world. was really impressed with Orbis has helped counOne of the visitors to the incredible work Orbis tries build the skills and the aircraft during its brief do in that part of the resources they need to stayover at Dublin Airport world.” address the problem. was former radio producMore than 285 million The charity now has a er Cllr Deirdre Donnelly people around the world team of more than 400 (Ind) from Stillorgan, who are blind, and 4 out of 5 expert medical volunteers, has personally witnessed the work carried out by Orbis overseas. The international charity fights blindness around the globe, with its Flying Eye Hospital – a specially designed and converted MD-10 aircraft – combining the latest in avionics, hospital engineering, technology and clinical expertise, making it possible to bring ophthalmic training to communities Cllr Deirdre Donnelly (Ind) taking a close look around in developing countries. the Orbis plane and its impressive medical facilities

from 30 countries, training local medical teams both in their own hospitals and on the Flying Eye Hospital, with a focus on quality and safety standards for patient care. Over the past 10 years, irish people have invested €4.33 million in providing eye care services across the southern regions of Ethiopia – an area with a population of 2.2 million people. By 2019, Orbis Ireland’s aim is to conduct 17,000 eye surgeries, provide more than 4,000 training sessions for eye care teams and health workers, and prescribe more than 6,000 pairs of glasses. Orbis Ireland is based in the Sandyford Business District and each year paediatric ophthalmologist, Donal Bresnihan and optometrist, Tony McAleer of the Eye and Ear Hospital in Dublin, travel with Orbis to Ethiopia to train

medical teams in treatment and prevention. Cllr Donnelly said: “When I was making the programme I visited some of the woredas, or small villages, with no electricity, toilets or running water. “It is really sad to witness first-hand how blindness or any other kind of disability affects not just the person who has the condition, but so many others around them. “It automatically means a reduced income and quite often the children – usually the girls – can’t go to school or partake in other activities because they have to become the carer. Restoring one blind person’s sight will have a positive effect on the lives of so many around them. “I saw first-hand how an operation to restore sight is carried out, and I was there when the antibiotic that prevents Trachoma was being distributed.

“I learnt on my visit that a large percentage of the population live in remote rural communities. This poses problems for distribution and treatment, so that is why outreach facilities and mobile clinics are so important,” she said. Maurice Cox, chairman of Orbis Ireland, said: “Over the past ten years, Orbis Ireland’s mission has been to eliminate a painful blinding eye disease – Trachoma – from the poorest regions of southern Ethiopia.

“Together, the unwavering commitment and partnership from the Irish people has allowed us to accomplish so much to provide basic eye care for those most in need.” For every €1 raised by Orbis Ireland, 81 cent goes directly towards saving sight. The remaining 19 cent is invested in raising more funds and administration – for each €1 spent, Orbis Ireland raises €5.31. For further information, see http://irl.orbis.org/

Diane Wetherup and Dr Maurice Cox, both of Orbis Ireland with Donal Bresnihan, consultant paediatric opthalmologist at the Eye and Ear Hospital, Dublin


M50MOTORING

GAZETTE

30 March 2017 GAZETTE 19

in association with

The Dublin Gazette drives you through the motoring world on a tour of the latest models, technology & industry news

VOLKSWAGEN TO BUILD SEAT’S NEW MIDSIZE SUV THE Seat car group which is part of Volkswagen Group will add a new midsize SUV to it range over the coming year and that car will be built in Volkswagen’s factory in Wolfsburg, Germany, Seat CEO Luca de Meo has said. The new unnamed Seat SUV will be launched in 2018 and will be the Spanish brand’s third entry in the growing SUV/crossover segment after the Ateca compact and about to be launched Arona subcompact SUV, the Seat CEO said. “The Ateca will have a big brother, a five- and sevenseat SUV that VW will build for us in Wolfsburg,” de Meo said. The Seat head said that the new mid-size SUV will share its underpinnings with the Volkswagen Tiguan, which is built in Wolfsburg, Germany. This will be the Seat model to be built at a Volkswagen Group plant instead of the Spanish brand’s home factory in Martorell, Spain. The recently introduced Seat Ateca is built by Skoda in the Czech Republic. Seat is expanding into the segment to help it become sustainably profitable after years of losses. SUV sales last year grew to cover one every four sales in Europe. Seat claims that the new SUV will be Seat’s flagship and hopes that it will have a positive effect on the company’s challenged profit margins. Seat achieved its best financial results in its history in 2016. The company made progress towards sustainable profitability with the company closing the year in the black for the first time since 2007, achieving as well the high-

Seat will be adding a new

est operating profit

bigger SUV to the recently

in its history.

introduced Ateca model

Opel OnStar users to get further services

Get a look at the new Giulia

ALFA Romeo in Ireland is poised for a significant return to the market with the arrival of the new Alfa Romeo Giulia. These impressively stylish and stand-out cars are powered by a new range of all-aluminium engines that provides fresh competition in the market for the likes of the Audi A4 and BMW 3 Series. Entry prices start at €40,395 for the 2.0 litre turbo-petrol model. The new Alfa Romeo Giulia embodies the core elements that have made Alfa Romeo one of the world’s best-loved automotive brands. It comes with distinctive Italian design, new engines and transmissions, unique technical solutions and the best weight-to-power ratio. The Giulia comes with a new rear-wheel drive system with short overhangs, a long bonnet,

OPEL cars with OnStar on board have been on the roads for about 18 months now. Currently, every second new Opel in Europe is equipped with the information system. The personal connectivity and service assistant offer includes automatic crash response, vehicle diagnostics, stolen vehicle assistance and a Wi-Fi hotspot for outstanding connectivity. In the last 18 months, Opel OnStar has already registered more than nine million interactions, around half of those via smartphones and the myOpel app.

muscular haunches and claims of the longest wheelbase in its segment. The Giulia claims to benefit from the careful management of weights and materials to obtain 50:50 weight distribution across its axles. Alfa Romeo says the new four-arm AlfaTM Link rear suspension and new double-wishbone front set up have been specifically tuned to maximise its dynamic abilities and enhance driving comfort. Also new on the Giulia is a new semi-virtual steering axis which claims to optimise the filtering effect and guarantees rapid, accurate steering by keeping a constant caster trail in corners. New eight-speed automatic transmission will be standard on all Irish models.

Now Opel OnStar subscribers can look forward to further services such as hotel room booking or parking spot search via an OnStar advisor. By the end of the year, Opel plans to offer OnStar in 33 countries across Europe and in 23 languages. Since the summer of 2015, the Opel OnStar Service Center has received over 21,000 emergency calls. Responding to emergencies is only one of the many functions that make driving safer and more comfortable. Now OnStar advisors can also help find and

book a hotel room or locate the best spot to park the car. Both services launched with the new Opel Insignia will be available for all models ranging from the Adam to the Zafira.

The new Opel Insignia


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It’s a great time to buy if a van is your only man Commercial drivers have never had so many choices when it comes to making their selection of a mid-range panel van. There has been a plethora of new vans joining the market in 2017, so Dublin van drivers have choices like never before – as Michael Moroney discovered when he compared Nissan’s new NV300 with Toyota’s new Proace.

came with a twin turbo system to give marginally more power at 120bhp. That was reflected in better road performance as the NV300 could achieve the motorway speed of 120km/hr with a reasonable load at 2000rpm on the engine. For the lower power Toyota Proace there was a need for a heavier pedal SPECIFICATIONS Nissan Toyota and that too was reflectEngine 1.6 litre 1.6 litre ed in slightly poorer fuel Engine power 125hp 95hp economy over the entire 0 – 100km/hr 10.2 seconds 15.5 seconds length of the test drive Economy 17m/litre (5.9l/100km 18m/litre (5.5/100km period. Both vans are well or 48mpg) or 51mpg) rated in terms of econoFuel Tank Capacity 80 litres 80 litres my and would put some CO2 emissions 139g/km 139g/km cars to shame. On paper Road Tax Band Commercial €333 Commercial €333 the lower power Proace is Load Volume (m3) 5.2 5.3 the more economical, but in reality I found that the Payload (kg) 1243 1360 extra power in the NV300 Entry Price €22,995 €22,790 meant that over the period of a slightly longer test IT’S a van driver’s world that also encompass the and the cubic capac- drive it gave a marginin 2017 as a wide selection Renault Trafic, Fiat Talen- ity was tested in terms of ally better fuel economy of new vans has appeared to and Opel Vivara on the load space with each of return. The use of Nissan’s on the Irish market giving Nissan NV300 side, and them across a range of Eco button to give lower more choice than ever. All the Citroen Dispatch and road conditions. As an overall com- power and better econoof the popular mid-range Peugeot Expert on the van suppliers have intro- Toyota Proace side. So in ment it’s fair to say that my on longer drives and duced new models and essence we are compar- van drivers are getting I could see the different delve a little deeper and ing seven vans that have a better deal than ever when put to the test. This you’ll find some interest- broad similarities across from both ranges in terms is a useful feature that will ing similarities. two design families. That of comfort and perfor- save fuel on longer runs, This week I’m com- makes it a true van driv- mance. Economy levels while it was difficult to be paring two popular mid- er’s world in terms of 2017 have improved and I was exact on the level of fuel range vans, the Nissan van choices. impressed with the range saving. NV300, which replaces I’ve driven the Nissan achieved with a full dieFor van drivers the the Primastar and the NV300 and the Toyota sel tank capacity, which load capacity is the other Toyota Proace, both new Proace in recent weeks, interestingly was 80 litre important consideration. vans for 2017. each time clocking up in both cases. Whether you are a carBoth vans are powered penter, butcher or builder, T h e c o m p a r i s o n close to 1,000km over a by 1.6 litre turbo-diesel the key is how much you doesn’t stop there as these number of days. vans are each part of a Each van was tested engines, while the test fit securely into the back separate family of vans with and without its load, version Nissan NV300 of the van and how acces-

in association with

The new Nissan NV300 has a new more modern van layout with impressive specification options to give good load carrying capacity coupled with driver comfort

Nissan NV300 v Toyota Proace

Toyota’s new Proace has similar styling to the Citroën Dispatch and Peugeot Expert and comes with a range of options and three vehicle lengths

sible that load is. It was interesting that both vans were almost identical in terms of load volumes to make that choice even more difficult. The NV300 had one side opening door while the Proace came with two. This is a specification detail and most vans can be specified with a range of door options to suit the users need. The twin door feature on the Proace made loading that much easier, but then it is another door to keep secure if you have valuable tools as part of your load. Both vans come with smart storage options that allow a small hatch to be opened under the passenger seat to carry

longer timber or pipe loads. The Nissan comes with the longer length capacity and is rated to carry three euro pallets or 2.5m sheets of plasterboard on the flat. I liked the LED lighting in the Nissan NV300; it was bright and made night loading so much easier. The bulkhead behind the driver was solid, while that on the Toyota Proace came with a strengthened window, also a useful feature. An important part of van ownership is the cost to your business. That is a combination of service intervals, depreciation and the warranty deal. Nissan tops Toyota when it comes to the warranty deal with a 5 year offer versus Toyota’s

3 year deal. The final decision will not be about price either, as these vans come with very similar entry prices, €22,995 for the Nissan and €22,790 for the Toyota. The final costs will be determined by the choice of specification options and there are plenty of choices in either van. What will dictate the deal is the overall value and that includes deal access, because van owners cannot tolerate downtime. Making van choices has never meant so much about options, so that’s why comparing like with like in the van market can take some time; on the basic performance features the Nissan NV300 left me impressed.


30 March 2017 GAZETTE 21

in association with

Microsoft licenses connected car patents to Toyota MICROSOFT said it will license many of its connected vehicle patents to Toyota Motor in its most wide-ranging intellectual property agreement with a car company. The agreement gives Toyota broad access to all of its connected car patents. These include an operating system, voice recognition, gesture control, artificial intelligence and cyber security tools. Microsoft said it is looking to partner with additional car companies along similar lines.

The E-Class Coupe is here

THE STYLISH new Mercedes-Benz E-Class Coupe has arrived in Ireland and is already causing quite a stir amongst motoring buffs in dealer showrooms around the capital. This follows the line of its predecessors, exuding that timeless combination of beauty, elegance and performance within an overall modern design. This new Coupe joins the E-Class line-up alongside the saloon and estate versions and ahead of the soon-to-belaunched cabriolet. Mercedes-Benz claims that it combines the virtues of a grand tourer with the latest developments in the fields of passenger safety, comfort and performance. Outside, this coupe is larger than its predecessor in terms of overall length, width and height. Passengers enjoy an extra sense of spaciousness and comfort, especially in terms of rear legroom, front and rear shoulder room and rear headroom. Two wide doors give easy access to the front and rear of the car while its

frameless side windows and the absence of a B-pillar give it an added air of luxury and style. From the front, its sporty styling can be seen in its long bonnet with discreet power domes, low set diamond patterned grille with centrally-mounted star and broad air intake vents. This sporty note is carried through to the interior where contemporary colour schemes combine to give an added measure of sophistication.

Two light wood trim packages in openpore and high-gloss finishes are exclusive to the Coupe. Interior lighting makes use of LED technology. Emissions Initially, the car will be available with one diesel and three petrol engines all of which come with start/stop function and are Euro 6 emissions compliant. Other engines will follow. Models likely to attract most attention here will be the

E200 petrol and E220d diesel versions. Powered by a 1991cc, 4-cylinder, 184bhp engine, the E200 comes on the market at â‚Ź52,310. The E220d, powered by a newly developed, 1950cc, 194bhp, 4-cylinder diesel engine, launches at â‚Ź52,995. Equipped with items first introduced in the E-Class saloon, this latest version makes greater use of technology than the model it replaces. Features carried forward include a remote parking pilot system that allows the vehicle to be moved into and out of garages and parking spaces remotely. Full smart phone integration, active brake assist and other driver assistance systems, latest developments in driver infotainment and the option of partially automated driving are amongst it many features. A new LED tail light arrangement employs innovative crystal optics to give off a brilliant appearance that MercedesBenz says is reminiscent of a jet engine glow.


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FASTNews

Fiat Chrysler under emission cheating investigation in France

FIAT Chrysler Automobiles (FCA) is being investigated in France over allegations that the Italian based carmaker cheated in diesel-emission tests. This came after the French finance ministry’s DGCCRF consumer affairs and anti-fraud body had referred the case to the courts. The FCA Groups claims that its diesel vehicles fully comply with emission regulations, as confirmed by the Italian Transport Ministry. The spokesman said the company would continue to collaborate with the authorities on all investigations and was confident the matter would be fully resolved. Following Volkswagen’s admission in 2015 of cheat-

ing on U.S. diesel-emission tests, some European countries launched tests on vehicle emissions. The European tests found on-road nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions more than 10 times above regulatory limits, for some Opel, Renault and FCA models and widespread use of devices that reduce exhaust treatment in some conditions. The French test program has so far led to four car companies Volkswagen, Renault, FCA and PSA Group, being referred for possible prosecution by the consumer fraud agency. In recent weeks, the Opel brand was cleared of any emissions wrongdoing by the French authorities.

New branch manager at Renault Belgard Kevin Troy has been

Renault Ireland, where

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Mile Road for 10 years.

in association with

Renault revs up their support for Pieta House R E N AU LT I r e l a n d recently handed over the key card to a brandnew 171 Renault Megane Grand Coupe to Pieta House. One person who will happily make use of the Coupe is Pieta House CEO Brian Higgins, who regularly travels all over Ireland to visit the Pieta House centres, the latest of which is to open in Letterkenny, Co Donegal, by mid-May. The car is branded with the charity’s logo, and it will act as a ‘vehicle’ to raise awareness of Pieta House. Brian Higgins, Pieta House CEO said: “I am delighted that Renault has lent us their valuable support. I spend a lot of my time on the road visiting our centres and aside from its safety and comfort, Renault’s

Brian Higgins Pieta House CEO, Kevin Troy Branch Director Renault Retail Group, Liz O’Gorman Marketing Manager Renault Ireland

Pieta House branded car is a moving advertisement for our services as I travel the length and breadth of Ireland in the Renault Megane

Grand Coupe. One of our key messages is that we all need to tackle the stigma that leads people to the doors of Pieta House, so the further

I travel to spread that message and the more people I get to see and speak to, the better.” Patrick Magee, countr y operations man-

ager, Renault Ireland said: “Renault Ireland is delighted to be in a position to lend its support to such a worthy charity as Pieta House. Its staff work tirelessly every day to help some of the most vulnerable people in our society and we hope that this All-New Renault Mégane Grand Coupé will benefit the amazing work that they do.” Pieta House has helped more than 28,000 people since its doors first opened 11 years ago. Since last year, Pieta House has also been providing counselling, therapy and support to individuals, couples, families and children who have been bereaved by suicide. Pieta House also operates the free 24-hour suicide helpline 1800 247 247.

Texaco invitation to take ‘Road to Adventure’ TEXACO is inviting motorists to take a ‘road to adventure’ in a new forecourt promotion now running at participating service stations across the country. Said to provide proof that the forecourt sector is as active as ever in its drive to win new customers and retain the loyalty of others, motorists purchasing fuel valued €30 or more are being offered the opportunity to win one of eight week-long holidays to Italy’s Amalfi Coast, each one valued at €3,000, with no limit on the number of entries any one motorist can make. Using latest smart phone technology, those purchasing the qualifying amount of fuel are asked to upload a picture of their receipt to a dedicated website together with name and contact details thereby eliminating the need for form filling or mailing. Running until early-May, winners can decide the dates and details of their holiday which must be booked before the end of August and taken before the end of August next year.

Atlas Autoservice has been servicing cars for 43 years and has 10 locations


30 March 2017 GAZETTE 23

GAZETTE

DUBLINLIFE fast TRAVEL NEWS

TRAVEL

ROMANIA: SINK YOUR TEETH INTO A TRANSYLVANIA PHOTOGRAPHY TRIP

Perfect packages for an great break away TAKE advantage of the great deals on offer right now and book yourself a city break in Rome or a slice of summer sun in Spain or Portugal. Clickandgo.com has great deals starting from just €289 for a four-star stay in the Italian capital. Here are three of our fave deals. 4-star Rome city break from €289pp in May From €289pp for the 4-star Relais Patrizi Hotel. Price is per person based on two adults sharing for travel in May 2017. Price includes:• Three nights in the 4-star Relais Patrizi Hotel, Rome, Italy. • Double standard on a bed and breakfast basis. • Return Aer Lingus flights from Dublin to Rome. • Airport taxes & charges

Brasov is resplendent with gothic, baroque and renaissance architecture. Inset: Bran Castle is a hilltop fortress with ties to Dracula

Visit the Eternal City for just €289pp this May

3-star Salou in May from €759 per family From €759 per family for the 3-star CYE Holiday Centre Aparthotel. Price is per person based on two adults + 1 child sharing for travel in May 2017. Price includes: • Seven nights in the 3-star CYE Holiday Centre Aparthotel, Salou Town, Salou, Spain • Staff pick. • One bedroom apartment on a self catering basis. • Return Aer Lingus flights from Dublin to Barcelona. • Airport Transfers, Taxes & Charges Over 50’s April special to the Algarve from €399pp. From €399pp for the 4-star Belver Hotel Boavista. Price is per person based on two sharing in April 2017. Price includes: • 7 nights in the 4-star Belver Hotel Boavista, Albufeira, The Algarve, Portugal • Double City View on a half-board basis • Return Aer Lingus flights from Dublin to Faro • Airport Transfers, Taxes and Charges • Free wine and water with evening meal Visit www.clickandgo.com or call (01) 539 7777. * Prices are ‘from’ prices, based on select departure dates from Dublin based on two adults sharing. Price includes return flights, specified accommodation and airport taxes and charges where stated. Prices exclude check-in luggage unless

stated.

A picture perfect trip  SYLVIA POWNALL

MENTION Transylvania and most people conjure up an image of Dracula – or a far less sinister Tim Curry in The Rocky Horror Picture Show - but this magical corner of Romania has lots to offer. The Travel Department has just added a Transylvania Photography Holiday to its active tours list – perfect for those looking to develop their skills as a snapper under the guidance of an expert tutor. The largest of the Balkan nations, Romania is a land of stunning mountain scenery, unspoiled countryside

and historic towns, making it a fantastic destination for anyone looking to develop their street, landscape and documentary photography skills. The group will be based in the charming old town of Brasov for four nights, with the opportunity to photograph the remarkable landscapes of the Transylvania region as you travel high into the Carpathian Mountains. You’ll also visit the picturesque medieval town of Viscri, famous for its traditional houses and Saxon fortified church, and Sighisoara, with its impeccably preserved hilltop citadel.

THE UBER-romantic Radisson Blu Hotel & Spa, Limerick, is inviting brides and grooms-to-be to come and discover how the hotel can

Of course, no stay in Transylvania would be complete without a visit to the imposing fortress of Dracula’s Castle. This tour is provided in association with Dublin Photography School and is suitable for anyone seeking to develop their digital photography skills, from beginners to advanced. Stewart Kenny, an awardwinning fine-art landscape photographer plus an additional tutor from the school will accompany the group, offering tutorials, demonstrations and photography tips, as well as spectacular photographic opportunities. Camera buffs will love

this picture postcard tour of a region steeped in history – and not a vampire in sight! Alternatively, if photography is not your thing but you’re still looking for something a bit different then TD’s three-night city break to Bucharest could be the answer. From its 17th and 18th century Orthodox churches to its art nouveaux villas, neoclassical palaces and imposing communist-era buildings, the remnants of Bucharest’s fascinating history are everywhere. The historic Centru Vechi or Old Town has evolved into a lively entertainment district, full of bars, pubs

and restaurants while the city also boasts an abundance of parks, gardens and museums. Prices for the Bucharest city break start at €359 per person with departure dates in April, June and October. Transylvania Photography tour prices start from €699pp for four nights including return flights from Dublin, B&B hotel accommodation, transfers, excursions, taxes & charges, expert local guides and tutors from Dublin Photography School, with flight departing 13 September 2017. See www.traveldepartment.ie for more details.

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GAZETTE

24 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 30 March 2017

DUBLINLIFE ReelReviews

LIFE

Death snacks in space OH, THOSE scientists, will they never learn? In Life (Cert 15A, 104 mins), astronauts on the orbiting ISS recover a martian microbe, which grows ever bigger and bigger until it develops a taste for crunchy, juicy, delicious astronauts ... Life repackages plenty of familiar tropes and classic films, but the end result is an engaging, tautly-told tale of terror above the Earth.

BEAUTY & THE BEAST Watson at the cinema Chris (Daniel Kaluuya) find something rotten in suburbia when he takes a trip upstate with his girlfriend to meet her parents for the first time – but weirdness ensues ...

GET OUT: A MEMORABLE MIX OF HORROR, SOCIAL COMMENTARY AND COMEDY

A darkly original satire DIRECTOR Jordan Peele’s first foray into feature filmmaking is a horror movie with purpose; one that wears its genre-movie influences on its sleeve for all to see, but inflects everything with biting social and political commentary. Get Out’s (Cert 15A, 103 mins) subtext is anything but submerged, and is far more disturbing than any of the horror archetypes that Peele adapts. The opening few minutes of Get Out immediately conjure up memories of John Carpenter’s Halloween and decades worth of its imitators. A black man wanders through an affluent sub-

 MARTIN MACNAMARA

urban neighbourhood in the middle of the night, before being knocked out and thrown in the boot of a car. The tone is off-kilter, run through with humour, but the realworld connotation is deeply disturbing. Months later, Chris (Daniel Kaluuya) prepares for a weekend trip to his girlfriend’s family home, where he will meet her wealthy parents

for the first time. Rose (Allison Williams) insists that her parents (Bradley Whitford and Catherine Keener) will have no problem with Chris’s race; that her father, Dean “would have voted for Obama a third time if he could”. Despite pleasant first impressions, Chris’s concerns prove to carry a little weight. As the weekend progresses, things get a very specific kind of weird – Rose’s family and their affluent friends exhibit a particularly strange, deviant fascination with her boyfriend’s ethnicity. Get Out is satire first and horror second. The

message is clear from the beginning: this is a scathing meditation on liberal racism in contemporary America and it is very, very funny – peppered with the offbeat humour of its director’s successful sketch show, Key and Peele. Indeed, horror is really just the vehicle for Peele’s political message; a cinematic language in which the director is particularly well versed. Despite the occasional jump scare, spot of gore or bone-chilling musical cue, Get Out is scariest when it reminds us of the real world outside the cinema doors. Kaluuya does an admirable job as the sym-

pathetic protagonist – although it takes perhaps a little too long for Chris to react to the very weird goings-on. Caleb Landry Jones is great as his best friend – our only link to the outside world, and something to grasp onto when the film takes a surprisingly Hitchockian turn later on. Bradley Whitford is brilliantly funny as the family’s oddball patriarch; a father eager to wear his cultural appropriation on his sleeve. Peele has turned in an impressive, thought-provoking and wildly original debut. Get Out exists to incite open dialogue as much as to inspire

laughter or screams. Horror fans will delight in the abundant winks at genre favourites – there’s plenty of Cronenberg and Carpenter nods on show for the discerning viewer. At the same time, however, Get Out is unlike anything that’s come before it – a genre pastiche that transcends such a meagre description in both form and content, melding both together for a tr uly unique, wickedly entertaining cinematic experience. Get Out should leave a well-deserved legacy as a contemporary horror classic. Verdict: 9/10

HERE’S the first of the Mouse House’s unexpected live-action remakes of classic films, with Mulan also on the horizon. Everybody fondly remembers the classic animation, but Emma Watson acquits herself well in this Beauty & The Beast (Cert PG, 129 mins). Still, although it’s handsomely made, and frequently lavish to look at, it’s inferior in some ways to the original.

CHIPS

Not an arresting film THOSE of you with fond memories of the cheesy but classic TV show, look away now, as CHiPS: Law and Disorder (Cert 15A, 101 mins) is about as welcome as a big speeding fine. Bringing together a mismatched pair of California highway patrol cops, the film soon settles into dull, and occasionally mildly offensive bromance territory that manages to be inferior to the TV show.


30 March 2017 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 25

GAZETTE

TECH EXHIBITION: CATCHING UP WITH SOME OF THE LATEST PHOTOGRAPHY DEVELOPMENTS

Shoot for success  KARL JENNINGS

I SKIPPED across the Irish Sea recently to the Photography Show in Birmingham NEC Halls, where the the latest-andgreatest gear was on show not just from the likes of Nikon and Canon, but a plethora of other consumer-camera brands too. There were approximately 235 exhibitors at the show, and right from the off, the aisles were very busy each day. There was so much to do and see at the show that your correspondent can only imagine the frustration of the single-day attendee, trying to get around to all the stands and talks. Raw, Lightroom and Instagram were the three biggest buzzwords of the show during my three days there exploring the latest tech and trends. The first term, Raw, refers to a visual digital file type, which offers a photographer much more editing control than Jpeg format. If your camera offers Raw mode – use it. Next, and to Lightroom, a piece of Adobe software. That firm had its own enclosed theatre, and most seminars within were a hot ticket.

Adobe’s PhotoShop has long been the standard image editing software for amateurs and professionals alike, but Lightroom’s new upgrades offer keen photographers ever more options for managing their galleries and libraries of images. This is important from an intellectual property point of view – and for making cash from your photos, if that’s what you wish. Finally, to Instagram. Ah, Instagram! One would think that this social media platform is the preserve of 18-year-olds, sending photos of their latest hairstyles out into the ether for their 100,000 global followers. However, the show’s workshop talks convinced many middle-aged people that they, too, can become an influencer with their photos – and monetise their hobby, to boot. In addition to photography, those interested in videography were well catered for. As an example of the type of stalls and developments at the show, a small UK start-up company, Loki (lokicameragear. com), showcased its excellent modular rig for DSLR consumer cameras, many of which

today can film in 4K ultra hidefinition video. This rig can be shouldermounted one minute, a protective jib-housing the next, and even has its own wheels to facilitate pan or tracking video shots, as shown below. Moving on, and one of the most popular areas was the Drone Zone, where parents and kids alike marvelled at the latest and greatest in airborne camera technology.

Needless to say, the bigger the drone d i a m e t e r, t h e greater the expense; most such aerial kit was aimed at industrial buyers such as coastal engineers, television producers and police forces. Thin rope mesh cages prevented the airborne contraptions from “going rogue” and taking someone’s eye out – as a photographer, it’s always best to keep both of those healthy! (Though star Scottish photographer Albert Wat-

son, 74, a speaker at the show, isn’t impaired by sight issues, despite being born blind in one eye. Sony is stealing a march from even big traditional stalwarts such as Canon and Nikon because of the quality of the lenses it’s been able to buyin, and because of the ultrahigh spec of its sensor.

Drones and aerial photography were popular exhibits

A digital camera is only as good as the size and performance of this crucial piece of internal tech: the sensor, and Sony and Nikon’s stands were extremely busy, at all times. Conscious of the tech in

cameras, and how that can affect prices, once I got back to Ireland I sounded-out a local professional – Rafal Kostrzewa – who is quite the snapperabout-town. Poland-born Rafal (photocatchthemoment.com) is making a name in fashion, portraiture, and food/restaurant photography. He was keen to allay my confusion about the best camera to buy, saying: “Buy what you can afford.” My puzzled look inspired him to explainfur ther: “I use a Canon 6D, because it takes very good stills, and is also high-quality enough for my corporate video work. “My Canon is a DSLR, and its memory-card capacity is good for the shoot-heavy work that I do.” I asked: “But Rafal, what if someone’s only got, say, €140 to invest in a decent-ish camera?” He responded: “Then I can recommend, say, a secondhand DSLR by Olympus, or even Panasonic. The image

quality is very acceptable in cameras of those brands, which may be as old as 2012 or even 2011, the year of manufacture. “My Canon has changeable lenses, so there is a bit of babysitting involved to avoid getting the sensor dusty – the bane of a professional photographer! “So, if you get a second-hand DSLR, keep the sensor clean, and shoot in Raw mode.” Next I asked: “If I do get a DSLR, what lenses do I need?” He advised: “Generally, you need just two lenses to start with; the 14-24mm range, and the general 24-70mm range, but they’re expensive, admittedly. “That’s all a serious amateur needs to cover most wide-angle, and mid-range situations. When your budget permits, add a third lens to that pair – the 70-200mm range lens. “Then that’s it – you’re complete, pretty much for life!” So, why not give your interest in photography another shot? There’s never been a better time to try to develop your ‘eye’, your skills and your passion – just Google “photography courses” and “camera clubs”, and best of luck!

The very well attended event was a great opportunity to get some firsthand insights into the latest photography, videography and drone tech and developments. Photos: Karl Jennings


26 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 30 March 2017

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28 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 30 March 2017

SPORT

FastSport TERENURE SHARE KEY UBL DRAW WITH UCD: RELEGATIONthreatened Terenure College climbed out of the bottom two of the Ulster Bank League Division 1A with a hard-earned 3-3 draw with UCD at the Belfield Bowl. Terenure have edged ahead of Garryowen in the battle of the basement sides, but they almost pipped the mid-table students in the final seconds with fullback Jake Swaine narrowly missing a difficult penalty from out on the right wing. Both sides showed plenty of attacking endeavour early on but a fast-paced first half ended scoreless, with UCD full-back Billy Dardis and Terenure winger Sam Coghlan Murray both looking dangerous. Swaine finally grabbed the opening score in the closing quarter of the tie for a 3-0 lead but UCD got back on terms when blindside Robert Duke was sinbinned and Matthew Gilsenan mopped up with the levelling three points.

RUGBY: DONNYBROOK SIDE PLAY OUT SEVEN-TRY THRILLER WITH UL BOHEMIANS

Wesley go within touching distance of playoff places

UBL DIVISION 1B

Old Wesley UL Bohemians  sport@dublingazette.com

points”. Bohemians slotted two penalty kicks from James Lennon to take a six point lead and looked to be gaining the upper hand. Their swift back line was running the ball wide starting to find the odd crack in the Wesley defence. An Old Wesley line out taken against the head had the Wesley spectators groaning but, moments later, they were cheering as prolific try scorer David Poff intercepted a midfield pass to sprint in 40 metres to score under the posts.

31 27

OLD WESLEY moved within a whisker of a confirmed playoff place in the Ulster Bank League Division 1B following a cracking victory over second placed UL Bohemians in Donnybrook last Saturday. The result moves them level with Bohs on 47 points and two points from their remaining two games – including a date with bottom side Dolphin – would copper-fasten their place in the mix for promotion to the top tier. Played in perfect conditions, Wesley had a dream start when Tim Clifford broke through a couple of tackles to score a try under the posts with just two minutes gone. He converted himself for 7-0. T he visitors responded quickly levelled quickly with a converted Harry Fleming try, setting the tone for a free-flowing battle. Indeed, the Dublin side required a big turnover from Kenny Knaggs to deny another try soon after. On 24 minutes, a promising

Old Wesley on the charge against UL Bohemians last Saturday. Picture: Deryck Vincent

attack by Wesley once again had the opposition pinned in their 22. Then, a perfectly targeted pass by Josh Hinde hit Rory Stynes who pinned back the ears to cross for try number two, 14-7. But, in an exhausting spell for players and fans alike, Wesley looked to be on their way to try number three only for the visitors turned over possession

and Robbie Bourke broke away resulting in a try for them. The conversion again evened things up. UL were now getting into their stride and scored another converted try, this one from Noel Kinnane shortly after and, for the first time, the Limerick men were ahead. Just as half time approached, Old Wesley had a scrum 15

metres out from the opposition line. A break from the back of the scrum resulted in a pass to Michael Dunleavy who knew only one way to the line as he bulldozed over for a try. Again, Clifford converted to make it honours even, 21 all at the break. The second half started in a steadier fashion with both teams looking to “take their

OLD WESLEY: Rory Stynes; Brendan Monahan, David Poff, Ger Finucane, Paul Harte; Tim Clifford, Adam Griggs; Ken Knaggs, Conor Maguire, James Burton, Michael Dunleavy, Iain McGann (capt), Josh Hinde, Stephen Boyle, Mark Rowley. Replacements: David Rowley, David Henshaw, Darren Horan, Isaac Leota, Alan Large. UL BOHEMIANS: Joe Murray; Colin Ryan, Finbar Aherne, Harry Fleming, Jamie McNamara; Robbie Bourke, James Lennon; Padraig Nesbitt, Joe Bennett, Mike Lynch, Ed Kelly, Daragh Frawley, Noel Kinnane, Ian Condell (capt), Brian Walsh. Replacements: Peter King, James Ryan, Craig Trimble, Cian Aherne, Robert Hennessy

Railway and Belvedere reach All-Ireland semi-final  sport@dublingazette.com

Railway Union are semi-final bound. Picture: Inpho

RAILWAY Union will face Old Belvedere on Sunday in the women’s rugby All-Ireland league semi-final at Willow Lodge at 1pm as they finished second and third, respectively, in the regular season. Railway claimed a bonus point win on the last day of the season to finish second, winning 46-20 at home to seventh-placed Cooke. Tries from Claire Ryan, Juliet Short, Lucy O’Sullivan and Katie Heffernan ensured that bonus point was secured by half-time

and Ryan went on to score two more tries as part of a fantastic overall display by the Railway Union full-back. A second try from Heffernan and a penalty try gave Railway a convincing success. The game was notable for Ireland Under-18 Sevens international Megan O’Brien’s first start at this level. She was the 46th different player to take to the pitch for Railway during the league campaign. “It is a phenomenal amount of players to use and it is a testament to our squad who have got

us to the league semi-final and the cup semi-final too,” said John Cronin, Railway Union’s director of rugby. “We have four big weekends of rugby ahead of us hopefully with the seconds also getting to a cup semi-final so we will need all of those 46 players. “It was another good performance today and, yet again, Claire Ryan was outstanding. She has been our standout player this season and is a leader and huge influence on the team. “Not only has she been fantastic in attack but rock solid

in defence and in a number of games her do-or-die tackles have saved us at the end.” Belvo, meanwhile, secured their place in the final four with a 29-5 win over fierce rivals Blackrock College. A fast, attacking start allowed them to leave a telling blow as Jackie Shiels claimed the first of her three tries after an intense period of possession. Her second try helped make it 15-0 before the break. Milli Croman extended the margin before a late exchange of tries saw Shiels complete her hat trick.


30 March 2017 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 29

GAZETTE

FASTSport

LION HEART Leinster mascot’s special moment with Blues’ Leo LEO the Lion shares a high five with Leinster matchday mascot Emily McCabe ahead of the Guinness PRO12 Round 18 game between Leinster and Cardiff Blues at RDS Arena in Ballsbridge. Leinster won the tie 22-21 with tries from Dan Leavy, Luke McGrath and Ross Molony grabbing the points from a game in which they trailed going into the final quarter. They stay top of the table and are assured of a PRO12 playoff place as a result. Picture: Stephen McCarthy/Sportsfile

VOLLEYBALL: DUBLIN STARS TRAVEL TO BELFAST FOR TOP NOTCH BATTLE

Ireland’s All-Stars in Belfast last week

Ireland’s Northern lights sport@dublingazette.com

VO L L E Y B A L L I r e land’s All-Star men’s and women’s teams were in action last weekend in Belfast, against the Scottish and Northern Irish national squads, providing a high level of competition against an NI side preparing for the second round of the European Championships. The ladies team which includes several of the young premier stars like Natialia Ditrich and Wiktoria Wnek, got off to a great start, through

consistent setting from Regina O’Halpin, and beat Northern Ireland 3-0. Indeed, the majority of the side hail from Dublin clubs with the Tallaght’s Garda team, Ballymun Patriots, UCD and Clondalkin’s Dublin Volleyball Club all represented. The second game against Scotland, although playing superbly as a team, with great offensive play from repeat All-Star winners Indre Simkute and Edyta McMullan Ireland lost 3-0.

However, with just two points separating the teams in set 1 and 2, there was very little between the teams. The men’s team showcased some of the best volleyball skills of the Patriots conquering premier league team. Miguel Magno was controlling the game as setter and had many huge hitters to choose from including Osama Edghim, Ayslan Ferreira and Bartosz Bielecki. I n I r e l a n d ’s g a m e against Northern Ireland, which they lost 3-2, blocking on both

sides was immense, as was both teams defence, producing a great spectacle of testosterone filled long rallies. The blocking of the Scottish team had a lesser effect, allowing the Irish hitters to put on quite a show, but the tiredness of playing a second game in the day began to show, with Ireland losing the game 3-1. In 2018, Volleyball Ireland will celebrate 50 years as the governing body for volleyball in Ireland and will be running many events as part

of this celebration. One will be the St Patrick’s weekend volleyball international tournament, which they share with Nor thern Ireland every second year. Vo l l e y b a l l I r e l a n d will shortly be advertising for the head coach positions for both their national squad teams, and hope that next year they will have senior teams strong enough to compete in this tournament, alongside the All-Star teams, and continue to make the event bigger and better.

Borland’s Clontarf beat Corinthian in crucial tie CLONTARF completed the Leinster sides to contest the EY Hockey League promotion playoffs, breaking into the top three on the last day of the season for a second successive season as they bid to break into the national stage. Indeed, their 3-1 win over provincial champions Corinthian was a small landmark as the Bulls beat their first side – other than a student side – that formed part of the old Leinster Division One before the national league came in. They went 1-0 down after eight minutes from a turnover from an attacking free on Corinthian’s 23 metre line. The reds broke out and fed Dan Treacy and while he was marshalled wide by defenders and goalkeeper David Lawless, he finished well on his open side from a tight angle against his former club. John Mullins levelled the game from Tarf’s first corner with a drag-flick and they took the lead from another set piece, player-coach Gareth Borland this time dragging home. The second half saw few chances from play while both sides had corners. From one, a Corinthian body stopped the ball on the line and Borland stepped up to convert the stroke with 12 minutes to go. The result meant they jumped back ahead of Trinity who had moved into the top three four days earlier with a 7-0 win over Fingal. YMCA are the other side going forward from Dublin for the playoffs. They closed out their formal preparations for the playoffs with goals from Grant Glutz, Colin Jackson and Jamie Tobin against Weston. YM and Clontarf go into the playoffs that get under way on the weekend of April 8 and 9 with Corinthian skipping ahead to the next phase of the playoffs. From Ulster, Annadale and Kilkeel are in the playoff places while Cork Harlequins are the second best of the first teams in Munster. There remains a question mark whether Kilkeel will take part as their club constitution does not currently allow them to play on Sundays. If they withdraw, Belfast Harlequins are the side in position to take their place.


GAZETTE

30 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 30 March 2017

SPORT

FASTSport

SOCCER: GREENOGUE CLUB PRODUCE STUNNING NATIONAL FINAL WIN

Celtics eye major Super League revenge mission COURTYARD Liffey Celtics, meanwhile, set up a repeat of this year’s Hula Hoops National Cup final as they beat DCU Mercy 62-55 in their semi-final to ensure a Super League playoff final against Ambassador UCC Glanmire. It is a win that comes with some worry for Mark Byrne’s side though as Emma O’Connor was carried off the court with a leg injury that may see her miss out on next week’s clash with Glanmire. O’Connor was the star of the show of Liffey Celtics this evening, driving the Kildare side forward from the off and proving instrumental both on offense and defense before she suffered a late injury. It is hoped she makes a speedy recovery. The winning of this game for Liffey Celtics came in the third quarter though as, after holding the lead at the end of both the first (21-14) and the second (35-24) quarters, they managed to keep DCU to just two points in the third quarter, while stretching their lead considerably to go into the last 51-26 to the good. DCU Mercy came back strong in the last quarter though, with Aoife McDermott, Ashley Perez and Aoife Maguire all proving to be instrumental for them, but the damage had already been done and it will be Liffey Celtics who face Glanmire in the Women’s Super League play-off final next Saturday evening in Letterkenny. Jazmen Boone will be key to the Celtics charge having landed 20 points in the semifinal with Emma O’Connor, Ailbhe O’Connor and Sorcha Tiernan all scoring 10 points a piece. They will meet a Glanmire side who overcame Pyrobel Killester in their semi-final this afternoon in Waterford 72-58. They dished up a nail-biting thriller with just one point separating the teams at half time. It was 28-27 in favour of Glanmire with superb scoring from Mimi Clarke and Rebecca Nagle of Killester keeping the Dubliners neck-and-neck with the regular season and Cup champions. But the Cork side pulled away in the closing stages to advance the double aspirations.

Peamount United celebrate their FAI women’s U-18 Cup win. Picture: David Maher/Sportsfile

Peamount’s super six U-18 FAI WOMEN’S FINAL Peamount United Cregmore Claregalway  KARL GRAHAM

6 2

sport@dublingazette.com

PEAMOUNT United are All-Ireland champions thanks to a breathtaking 6-2 victory over Cregmore Claregalway FC in the FAI Under-18 women’s final at Eamon Deacy Park in Galway last Sunday. Cregmore took the lead from the spot after just 10 minutes but Peamount soon got back on level terms two minutes later through Aisling Spillane’s superbly curled finish from 25 yards. Luck was not on the side of the Westerners

when they went behind from an own goal with 27 minutes on the clock. And Andrea Trill had an opportunity to bring the sides level once again but she could only fire over. And, with the first half drawing to a close, Peamount had a couple of opportunities to give themselves a two-goal advantage going into the break but Helen Connolly in the Cregmore goal did well to deny Louise Masterson on both occasions. Leah Doyle replaced Chloe Singleton at halftime and Peamount eventually did take a 3-1 lead shortly after the restart when the referee pointed to the spot for the second

PROMOTION PLAYOFF Clon denied place in 1A in close run Monkstown tie CLONDALKIN rugby club were denied a place

in Leinster league Division 1A in dramatic fashion as they fell to a close-run 32-28 defeat in their promotion/relegation playoff against Monkstown last weekend. Clon had earned the shot with a second place finish in the regular season, setting up this date with the second last finisher in Division 1A. Elsewhere, Clondalkin’s Division 10, pictured, side beat DLSP 40-14 to assure them top spot in their league. Picture: Sharon Flanagan

time in the game. Shauna Martin finished with aplomb. Ten minutes into the second half and the game looked over as a competition when Carla McManus struck to make it 4-1. Peamount brought on Michaela Fox-Walsh for Gillian Keenan and Nicole Plunkett for manof-the-match McManus in the next five minute spell, and the former almost got herself on the score sheet immediately when she unleashed a cracking effort that tested Connolly. The in-form keeper was back in action again shortly after to keep out another great effort – this time by

Doireann Fahey – as she did her best to keep the score line down. Melanie Mulvaney entered the fray on 70 minutes for Peamount’s fourth change of the game, while fellow substitute Fox-Walsh had to leave the pitch injured five minutes later to be replaced by Robyn McEvoy but it scarcely stalled their momentum. McEvoy soon had an impact on the game when her cross into the box was emphatically back-heeled into the net by Plunkett to round off an excellent team move. Cregmore were gifted a late consolation when the referee adjudged Niamh

Coombes to have picked up a back-pass. A Peamount defender and Cregmore striker came together in search of the ball, and as it bounced off one of them towards Coombes, she picked it up believing the ball had come off the Cregmore player last. The referee blew his whistle and awarded Cregmore and indirect free kick in the Dubliners box from which they scored. Peamount, however, would not allow their opposition to have the last word, however, and scored their sixth through Masterson in the fifth minute of injury time.


30 March 2017 CLONDALKIN GAZETTE 31

GAZETTE

GO GAMES FOR GIRLS

Camogie going from strength to strength

CLUB NOTICEBOARD ROUND TOWER, CLONDALKIN OUR senior hurlers won their second

ROUND Tower’s juvenile camogie continues

to go from strength to strength. This weekend, the club put out an Under12 team, two teams at Under-10, two teams at Under-9 and three teams at Under-8 level for the start of the go games fixtures. New players are always welcome. Contact Angela on 087-2453775 for more information.

public relations.

league encounter with the opposition

Potentially a great opportunity for a

being St Sylvester’s but our junior hurl-

young person to develop experience in

ers were defeated by Erin’s Isle. Our

this field. Contact Michael McGlynn, club

minor footballers had a narrow loss to

PRO, on 087 9082970. A reminder that bingo takes place in

Kilmacud Crokes. Line dancing classes are coming to

the club every Tuesday with a jackpot

the club. The first class is this Thursday,

of €1,000 up for grabs for a full house if

March 30 at 8pm to 9pm.

checked within 47 numbers; €20 for a full

It’s €5 a class and all are welcome to

house. The game is usually €90 to €150. First

participate in the fun. Anyone interested

FOOTBALL: TOWERS U-16S BOW OUT OF CHAMPIONSHIP

can contact Linda at 086 8306740.

call is 8.30pm and all welcome.

This year’s Round Tower Easter Camp

Round Tower lotto (March 20). The

will take place on Monday, April 10 to

jackpot is €8,500. Numbers drawn were

Thursday, April 14 at Monastery Road.

1, 14, 16 and 21; the bonus ball was 30. No overall winner and no bonus ball

Full details on our website. Interested in assisting with the club’s

winner. Three €100 winners: Lucy Cronin,

public relations? The club is seeking

Eoghan Cooke, Shay Clifford. Thank you

assistance with its communications and

to all who supported.

ST PAT’S, PALMERSTOWN ANOTHER busy weekend for St Pat’s,

However, they unfortunately lost out to

Palmerstown. Super performance and

Lucan in the end. Membership registration night:

win for our U-10 hurlers, Saturday away to Geraldine’s GAA. All put in a great

Thursday, March 30 - 7.30-8.30pm. Gaelic4Girls: Thursday, March 30 -

effort with some tough defending, a battling midfield and impressive scores. Well done to our U-16s footballers who

Murray magic can’t turn tide in Skerries UNDER-16 AFC Skerries Harps Round Tower  sport@dublingazette.com

1-11 2-5

ROUND Tower were narrowly defeated 1-11 to 2-5 by Skerries Harps in the first round of their championship campaign as they made the step up to the Under-16 football championship at Townparks last weekend. Towers have made a great start to the Under16 division 3 season after five wins from five, to sit at the top of the table, but they were always going to face a tough task going up against a

division 1 side. The game was played in beautiful conditions with a large crowd making the cross-county trip from Clondalkin to Skerries. Like the weather, Towers started brightly but let the tie slip as they were unable to to find the posts on a number of occasions. Skerries recognised the danger the visitors posed so set about attacking the wings, only to be met with by a solid defence. Towers got the first score of the game after 10 minutes – a goal from the boot of Joe Murray.

Joe Leech had a great chance to get a second moments later but this time the Skerries keeper did excellently to push the ball over the bar. Undeterred, Skerries hit back with a goal and point of their own to draw level. Leech and Murray pointed for Towers but the home side responded and began to really test Oisin Douglas in goal. However, they found the young keeper in good form to pull off a number of good saves and send the game into the break with Skerries ahead 1-5 to 1-4.

Towers’ start to the second half was much slower than the first, and Skerries took advantage by scoring some early points. Murray kept Towers in touch with the hosts when he got the better of two defenders to smash the ball into the back of the net for his second goal. The final 10 minutes got underway with Tower’s down by just one point but they couldn’t do enough to get over the line and Skerries eventually ran out winners with another three points.

St Pats, Glenaulin. Enrol at 6.45 pm.

had a great win in the first round of the

Easter Camp: April 18-21, 9.30am to

championship on Saturday afternoon.

1.30pm. Ages five to 12, €30 at St Pat’s,

Lads have been training hard and their

Glenaulin.

commitment is showing in their results.

Oskars Developement fundraiser:

Well done to our U-8s in their camogie

actors wanted; auditions on Monday,

blitz on Sunday morning. Good to see Round Tower’s Under-16s league form did not fully translate to the championship. Picture: Niall Connaughton

7-8pm, ages 8-12, €10 for eight week, at

April 24; live Oskars show on June 17. Our lotto draw takes place every Sun-

so many players showing great skills in Glenaulin.

day at 10pm in Palmerstown House. Numbers drawn on March 26 were 17,

Thanks to all who came out to support them all. Congratulations also to

19, 22 and 29. There was no winner. Next week’s jackpot is €4,600 for April

our new club refs Lauren Hanlon, Aoife Dunne and Leah Garrigan, all doing a great job as refs for the blitz. Great display at our home game on Sunday morning for the senior hurlers.

2. Tickets available at SuperValu, Manor Hair Studios and Palmerstown House. Thank you for all your support.

LUCAN SARSFIELDS SOME tickets are still available for the

house starting at 9.30pm. Tables of four.

dinner dance on Saturday, April 1; con-

All welcome, young and old.

tact Mary Flannery on 087 7469143 or Josephine Donohue on 087 9447262.

For details, contact Peter Flannery on 086 2338953.

The senior hurling league side won

Upcoming Award 1 Coaching Course:

over St Pat’s, inter hurling scraped

Starting this Friday, there will be a Level

past St Finian’s but the juniors lost out

1 child course held in Fingallians GAA Club

to Round Tower, Lusk. The senior hurling

in Swords at 7pm.

Leinster league quarter final yet to be scheduled.

The course will run for the following dates: Friday, March 24 - 7-9.30pm, Sat-

The senior footballers lost to Thomas

urday, March 25 - 11.30am - 5pm, Friday,

Davis in the St VdeP Cup with the juniors

March 31 - 7-9.30pm, Saturday, April 1

losing out to St Jude’s in the Joy Cup.

- 11.30am - 5pm. If interested in taking

Both junior football teams also won with

part in the course, please email coach-

the As beating St Jude’s by 1-17 to 0-8.

ingdept@dublingaa.ie.

The senior footballers next outing is

AIG Feile 2017 Ladies Football, Sat-

away to Na Fianna at 6pm, Saturday,

urday, April 1: Lucan A, Division 1, St

April 1.

Anne’s Part, Clontarf, Starting 10:30am;

The annual hurling table quiz will be held on Friday, March 31 in the club-

Lucan B, Division 7, Garristown, Starting 10.30am.


GAZETTESPORT

ALL OF YOUR CLONDALKIN SPORTS COVERAGE FROM PAGE 28-31

TOWERS UNSTRUNG: Harps take Clondalkin club to task in the opening round of the U-16 championship P30

MAR 30 - APR 5, 2017

PLAYOFF SEASON BECKONS: Dublin clubs make their push to extend their campaigns P28

Peas hit Cregmore for six in FAI final  KARL GRAHAM

sport@dublingazette.com

PEAMOUNT United Under-18 manager Shay Martin praised his players for the dominant display that saw them crowned FAI Under-18 women’s champions with a 6-2 win over Cregmore Claregalway FC at Eamon Deacy Park last Sunday. “It was a fantastic day and a fantastic performance from the girls. It was something they worked hard for all season and it was a well deserved win,” Martin told GazetteSport. “Cregmore were a decent side. They played a bit of direct foot-

ball but I think our football made the difference in the end. We outplayed them.” He picked out Nicole Plunkett’s goal as indicative of the quality on display while Louise Masterson’s performance was another that caught the eye. “The fifth goal was probably one of the better team goals. There was a lovely bit of passing then down the wing where Robyn [McEvoy] crossed it and Nicky [Plunkett] back-heeled it into the net. It was a really cheeky goal. “It was a goal she [Masterson] deserved because she worked hard throughout the game and

had plenty of chances but the keeper pulled off some good saves. She eventually got one in the end so we were delighted for her.” Martin also believes that Cregmore saw favour from the referee for both their goals as the first was a penalty and the second came from an indirect free kick for an apparent back-pass. “The two goals they got were controversial. For the second goal, the two of them came together and the ball went back towards the goalkeeper. “Our player was adamant that she didn’t get a touch to it, that it was their striker who got the

touch and our keeper picked the ball up, obviously believing that she could.” With his players putting in such excellent performances, Martin is aware that he will likely lose some of his players to the club’s senior squad as they progress up the ranks. “Their coach has said to me that there are four or five players that they would be interested in once the league is finished. “In that squad alone, we have five players who play for the Ireland Under-17s and four players who play for the Ireland Under16s so it is a really, really talented squad.”

Peamount’s Louise Masterson, left, celebrates with Doireann Fahey. Picture: David Maher/Sportsfile


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