Gazette DUN LAOGHAIRE
October 20 - 26, 2016
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Relief as cul de sac build plan quashed
It’s good news for Rathsallagh Grove residents as other sites now in frame
AISLING KENNEDY
A PROPOSED planning application to build five houses and a car park on the green area opposite Rathsallagh Grove in Shankill will not be going ahead.
Local resident Kevin Brennan told The Gazette that he was “worried” about the idea that there might be additional houses built in the cul de sac as part of a project called Home Grown Homes.
He said: “It is not feasible to build these houses in our estate. I’m living here 41 years and I would not be happy for this build to go ahead.” At the meeting held in Shankill last week, however,
it emerged that there are five other sites in the Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown area that are being looked at as potential sites to build these new homes on. Full Story on Page 4
2 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 20 October 2016
CHURCHTOWN | ENDA ON HAND TO OPEN DEPUTY’S NEW OFFICE
FASTNews
EMMA NOLAN
Winning cupla focal ways for Gael Linn students
A Kenny move to get An Taoiseach’s help ENDA Kenny himself was spotted wandering around Churchtown last Friday, with locals having to double-take as they saw the Taoiseach enjoying a coffee in Howard’s Way cafe. The Mayo TD was there to open local TD J o s e p h a M a d i g a n ’s constituency office at Braemor Road. Speaking to The Gazette, Deputy Madigan said it was a huge honour to welcome the Taoiseach to her new constituency office. She said: “It was such a privilege to welcome An
Taoiseach. I was happy to be joined on the occasion by many constituents, as well as Fine Gael colleagues and my family. “The new office will play an important role in my work as a TD, representing the people of Dublin Rathdown, and working to use the benefits of a strong economy to improve people’s lives. “This is the first Fine Gael constituency office in the area for more than three decades. It will help ensure I stay fully alert to the issues and concerns of local residents, allowing me to continue to represent them to the very best of my ability.”
RATHFARNHAM and Booterstown debaters are through to next round of the national Gael Linn Irish debating competition. Junior teams from Gaelcholaiste an Phiarsaigh, Rathfarnham and Colaiste Eoin, Booterstown, along with the senior team from Colaiste Eoin, have qualified to get to the next round following the preliminary heat of Comortas Ui Chadhain 2017, held in Meath earlier this month. As an example of the area’s talented debaters, Gaelcholaiste an Phiarsaigh’s Molly Nic Giolla Phoil, Eamonn O Deagha and Oscar Mag Uidhir (above) impressed with their advocation for the ending of the Olympic Games. All the successful participants can look forward to the challenge of round two, due to take place after the mid-term break. Thumbs up for a job well done ... An Taoiseach Enda Kenny helps Deputy Josepha Madigan (FG), and family, celebrate the opening of her new constituency office
Snip to it ... Mr Kenny cuts the ribbon as deputies Josepha Madigan and Maria Bailey look on
Turn to Kilternan for a tasty pumpkin festival THE Pumpkin Festival at Scalp Wood Nursery in Kilternan is back up and running in perfect time for the Autumn season. Cllr Lynsey McGovern (Ind) is pictured at the launch of the festival, which is always popular at this time of year, and is a real hit with families. Tickets to the festival can be booked online now
Open Day on Sunday to show Edmondstown NS Mr Kenny chats with Deputy Madigan’s mother
Dublin Gazette Newspapers, Second Floor, Heritage House, Dundrum Office Park, Dublin 14 Tel: 01 - 6010240. Email: sales@dublingazette.com news@dublingazette.com web: www.dublingazette.com twitter: @DublinGazette Visit us on Facebook at DublinGazetteNewspapers
EDMONSTOWN National School is hosting an open day this Sunday at its location in the foothills of the Dublin mountains. Staff say it’s a great opportunity to find out more about the school, meet some teachers, students and other parents and take a tour of the school. Edmondstown offers small class sizes and is open to boys and girls from junior infants to sixth class, and is now enrolling for September 2017. Located at Edmondstown Road, Rathfarnham, Dublin 16,the Open Day is taking place from noon to 2pm, with all welcome.
20 October 2016 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 3
MEL GIBSON IS LOOKING FOR IRISH WOMEN TO STAR IN HIS NEW FILM AISLING KENNEDY IN hit comedy What Women Want Mel Gibson played an advertising executive who starts a crash program to research being a woman. This leads him to experiment with lip gloss, eye shadow, pantyhose and defoliation. Now the Hollywood legend is looking for Irish women to come forward to join him on the set of his new movie, The Professor and the Madman, in Dublin.
The production company behind the movie, Icon Entertainment, is looking for ladies with specific qualities, or as they say in the movies, ‘a very particular set of skills,’ to take part as extras. They’re looking for women who are 5’35’8 in height with a waist size of 26-28’, a bust size of 34-36’ and a dress size between 8 and 10. So just about everyone then..? Fake tan is out, as are fake nails, and hair should be natural in colour and of medium
or long length – no shaved heads or undercuts. Plucked/shaved eyebrows are also not accepted, nor are obvious tattoos. If you’re a woman between the ages of 20 to 60 years old that fits the above description, then log onto MovieExtras.ie for more information. The movie will begin shooting at the start of October in the Dublin/Wicklow areas and it will run right through to the end of November. Break a leg ladies!
What Mel wants NO SHAVED HEADS
NO VISABLE TATOOS
NO FAKE TAN
NO DYED HAIR
Requirements
4 Gender: Female 4 Height 5’3- 5’8 4 Dress size 8-10 4 Waist: 26-28
4 4 4 4
Bust 34-36’ Age: 20 - 60 Ethnicity: Caucasian
4 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 20 October 2016
Plan for houses and car park on green area will not go ahead says council AISLING KENNEDY
A PROPOSED planning application to build five houses and a car park on the green area opposite Rathsallagh Grove in Shankill is not due to go ahead in the area according to Dun LaoghaireRathdown County Council. Local resident Kevin Brennan told The Gazette that he was “worried” about the idea that there might be additional houses built in the cul-de-sac as part of a project called Home Grown Homes.
The proposed planning application is part of a new housing project set up by Niall Martin and two architects to offer local people in Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown the chance to build their own homes. A meeting was held last week in the Resource Centre at St Anne’s Church in Shankill to showcase the plans put forward by Mr Martin and more than 100 local people turned up to hear about it. As part of the proposed
housing scheme, interested applicants must be on the Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown housing list and they must be willing to put in construction site hours for a year. Mortgages By the end of the process, respective applicants will own their own home and there will be no financial cost to build the homes as Mr Martin has building materials and tradespeople readily available. Once the homes are built,
planned mortgages will be arranged for the families involved which will cost substantially less than other homes. According to Mr Martin, a unit can be built for between €60,000 to €80,000. Local residents who attended the meeting last week raised concerns that there would not be enough space to hold the amount of cars driving in and out of the estate even with the proposed car park that is planned. Mr Brennan said: “It is not feasible to build these houses
in our estate. I’m living here 41 years and I would not be happy for this build to go ahead.” Cllr Denis O’Callaghan told the Gazette: “To my knowledge no planning application has been lodged for either housing or a car park in Rathsallagh Grove Shankill. Neither has anybody from Rathsallagh Grove contacted me about this. “The piece of ground he may be referring to has a residential zoning on it and is in the ownership of the council.
They have no plans at present to build on it.” A spokesperson for DLRCC also told the Gazette that the build is not due to go ahead in the foreseeable future and said: “We have no record of an application at this location.” At the meeting held in Shankill last week, however, it emerged that there are five other sites in the Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown area that are being looked at as potential sites to build these new homes on.
Celebrating all our citizens LOCAL charity Making Connections helped start the Dun LaoghaireRathdown Festival of Inclusion, which has seen a range of activities throughout October that celebrate the bonds between citizens and, in particular, has helped to highlight the role and strengths that older members of the community have to contribute. The Connecting Generations event hosted by Airfield Estate was a spontaneous display of openness, as volunteers and the people they visit shared inspiring stories about the power of regular visits to alleviate loneliness and isolation. Among those making connections and celebrating new intergenerational friendships were Nick Polley, Pat Pearce, Aisling Corristine, Deirdre King, Grainne Kelliher, chief executive, Airfield and Mary O’Donohue, chief executive, Making Connections. For further information, see makingconnections.ie. Picture: Aidan Oliver Weldon
20 October 2016 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 5
GazetteGALLERY
| READER SHOTS SHOWING BITS OF YOUR LIVES IN THE CITY
Dundrum Sunset
Oh Deer, An Unexpected Pupil! – Everyone at Edmonstown NS was surprised when they looked out
The Red Lighthouse - Kathleen Nolan
the window and saw an unusual visitor to the school
Gettin’ Ready for Christmas
Feeding Time at Stephen’s Green
Trinity College: Night Study
It’s your shot – a slice of Dublin
THE Gazette is always delighted to show and share your shots – and just take a look at these great pics you’ve been sending in! Although some of these shy snappers have forgotten to tell us who they were
(but do get in touch if it’s your shot), we’re happy to be able to show how you see our great city. Don’t forget – we’re always on the look-out for any cool, quirky or pretty shots of Dublin city, your
neighbourhood or what you are up to, so send in your shots with as much information as you can (along with your name too, of course)! Email your pic to picturedesk@dublingazette.com.
6 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 20 October 2016
DUBLINGazetteGALLERY |
KILCROSS COMES OUT ON TOP AT AWARDS
Sharing the winning feeling ... Mairead McLaughlin, Giulia Mazzone, An Cathaoirleach with the delighted members of Kilcross Estate Management Forum, Sandyford
Cllr Cormac Devlin, Ger McArdle, Mairead McLaughlin, Cathy McDonagh, Tracy Dowling, Marise Hegarty, Giulia Mazzone, Pauline Coleman,
An Cathaoirleach, Cormac Devlin,
Maureen Shakespeare and Anne Ryan, all from Kilcross Estate
paid warm tribute to the true
Management Forum, Sandyford, with Dearbhla Lawson, DLRCC
community spirit of the winners
Marise Hegarty and Pauline Coleman. Pictures: Peter Cavanagh
A community to be proud of T
HE community-minded spirit of members of Kilcross Estate Management Forum was highlighted and praised at the Royal Marine Hotel in Dun Laoghaire, where the Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council Community Awards were being held. The forum’s members were delighted to take home the top award, and a cheque for ₏3,000 to further support their collective efforts.
20 October 2016 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 7
DUBLINGazetteGALLERY |
LAUNCHING A UNIQUE SERIES OF CONCERTS
Aileen O’Reilly and Pat O’Sullivan
Brian Collins and Avril Harris
Lily Aron, Oisin Hills, Jack Aron and Joshua Hills strike a relaxed pose in the formal setting. Pictures: Rose Comiskey
Happy to get a Handel on beautiful choral music T
Eithne Bowen and Michi Maharry
Lucia Shelly and Denise Cooney
HE beautiful surrounds of some of the finest rooms in the Mansion House provided a noteworthy setting for the Choral Fusion launch party recently. Aptly named in respect of a series of double-choir concerts, members of Dun Laoghaire Choral Society sang
beautifully in the historic setting, leaving enthralled listeners in no doubt about the quality of music to enjoy in the upcoming concerts. From November 12, a series of five concerts will be held in Dublin and Galway, with the east coastal choiristers also singing with their west coast
The choir in full flight, framed by the historic crests on show at the Mansion House
counterparts – the equally impressive Galway Baroque Singers. The two choirs will feature works from the likes of Haydn, Lully, Teleman, Purcell and Vivaldi, while they will also be accompanied by some of the country’s best young soloists, and the fantastic Fishamble Sinfonia.
Rosamond Phillips and Ann Fleeton
8 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 20 October 2016
PROTEST | COMMUNITY TO UNITE OVER MISSING BOY
FASTNews
Hundreds set to march in honour of Philip Cairns AISLING KENNEDY A PEACEFUL protest march will take place this Sunday, October 23 in Ballyroan to mark the 30 year anniversary of the disappearance of Philip Cairns in Rathfarnham. The 13 year old was reported missing on October 23, 1986, and to this day has never been found. His school bag was found a week after he went missing in an alleyway that linked Anne Devlin Road to Anne
Devlin Drive in Ballyroan. There are many theories as to what happened to Philip with local DJ, Eamon Cooke, now deceased, named as a possible suspect. However, extensive DNA testing by Forensic Science Ireland which compared the DNA found on Philip’s schoolbag with that of Cooke revealed that there was no match. Other suspects have since been named on a Facebook page by a we l l - k n ow n D u b l i n
journalist, including one man who currently lives overseas and remains unquestioned about Philip’s disappearance. Trish Murphy, organiser of this weekend’s protest march, said: “We simply want justice for Philip and we want the gardai to act on information they have been given about the disappearance of Philip Cairns.” She said that she is expecting between 200 to 300 people to turn up to the march on Sunday, and asked that
people sign a petition set up by the Justice for Philip group, which asks the Minister for Justice, Frances Fitzgerald, to investigate new information given to An Garda Siochana recently about the reasons behind Philip’s disappearance. “This petition calls for this information to be investigated thoroughly by the gardai and, if they choose not to, the reasons should be laid out fully,” she said. To sign the petition, see the Justice for Philip Facebook page, and click
Two GoCar vehicles are torched in suspected arson attack
Philip Cairns, who disappeared on October 23, 1986
on the change.org petition link on the page. The peaceful protest will begin at 1.15pm on Sunday in the car park of Ballyroan Community Centre at Marian Road, Dublin 14. At 1.30pm, the time that Philip disappeared
30 years ago, the protest march will stop in the laneway where Philip’s schoolbag was found, and lay flowers in his memory. From there, the march will continue up as far as Rathfarnham Garda Station.
CHARITY | CALL TO GET ‘FREEZIN’ FOR A REASON’ AT THE FORTY FOOT
Can you bear to take a polar plunge for Special Olympics? EMMA NOLAN
THE coolest event of the year (literally) is set to take place at The Forty Foot in early December. Special Olympics Ireland is calling on Dubliners to get “Freezin’ for a Reason” by participating in the Polar Plunge. Taking place from 1pm on December 3 at the famous Sandycove swimming spot, last year, hundreds of people – including families, sports clubs, businesses and individuals – turned out to take part in the fundraising event, bravely plunging into icy-cold waters. Special Olympics Ireland are hoping that this
year’s event will be as popular with potential plungers, so that funds for the organisation and its athletes can be raised. The sports charity is gearing up to send 26 athletes to Austria next March, enabling them to compete in the Special Olympics World Winter Games 2017. Dublin footballer Dean Rock has already signed up to participate in the event, and has said he’s really looking forward to it. “Special Olympics is a very inspirational sporting charity and I am delighted to be involved in it. The event itself is a great day out. “ I wo u l d e n c o u r-
age ever yone to get their friends and family involved and participate in their nearest plunge together.” Special Olympics Ireland provides sporting opportunities for more than 9,000 athletes with intellectual disabilities, with 360 clubs found all across Ireland. Those who think they are brave enough to take the Polar Plunge can register at www.specialolympics.ie/polarplunge. Registration costs €15, with plungers asked to raise an additional €35. The full €50 goes directly to supporting athletes with intellectual disabilities in sport and competitions.
TWO “GoCars” were burnt out in a suspected arson attack in Dublin 8 on Tuesday night. Gardai say the cars, which were parked next to one another at the junction of Malpas Street and Blackpitts, were torched sometime between 9pm and midnight. Gardai in Kevin Street are investigating the incident as an arson attack. A spokesman said yesterday: “Two males were seen running from the scene in the direction of the South Circular Road.” A motive for the attack is not yet known and the scene has been preserved pending a forensic examination by members of the garda technical bureau GoCar is a car sharing company where subscribers access vehicles with their own swipe card and then start the car using a PIN number. The majority of their cars are low-emission.
OAP hit by car dies in hospital
Polar bears, elves, and all kinds of creatures and characters are welcome to pop along – and into – the Forty Foot waters on December 3 to help a cool fundraiser
AN elderly pedestrian seriously injured in a collision with a car in Donaghmede last week has died. The incident happened on the Grange Road just after 10am on Thursday last. The 69-year-old woman was rushed to the Beaumont Hospital where her condition had been described as serious. The male driver and female passenger, both in their 60s, were uninjured. Gardai are appealing for witnesses.
20 October 2016 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 9
10 GAZETTE 20 October 2016
GazetteGALLERY
| LEINSTER TAKE TOP
POINTS IN THE RDS
Leinster fans Zac Thomas from Castleknock and Thomas Early from Lucan
Noah O’Leary from Cabinteely. Picture: Cody Glenn/Sportsfile
Liam Reddan, James O’Dwyer, Joe Reddan, Matthew Fox and Shane O’Dea
A perfect start T
HESE young Leinster fans had plenty to cheer about as their team took maximum points in their European Rugby Champions Cup opener against Castres on Saturday. The three-time European champions beat the French side 33-15 at the RDS. On Sunday, the Irish rugby world was in shock at the news of the tragic passing of Munster head coach
Jennifer Malone from Clane, Co Kildare
Anthony Foley. Leinster CEO Michael Dawson praised Foley as a “fierce competitor” on the pitch and a “gentleman away from the field”. He added: “The thoughts of everyone at Leinster Rugby are with Anthony Foley’s family on this very sad day. Munster and Irish Rugby have lost a great captain, leader, and one of the finest young coaches in the game.”
20 October 2016 GAZETTE 11
GAZETTE
12 GAZETTE 20 October 2016
DUBLINBUSINESS
Osborne marks 20 years of driving recruitment DUBLIN-BASED Osborne, one of Ireland’s leading recruitment consultancies, celebrates 20 years in business and two decades as one of the country’s foremost recruitment consultancies. To mark the milestone, Osborne held an employer conference at The Marker Hotel. Presented by Osborne chief executive and owner, Shona Mc Manus, guest speakers included footballing legend and former Republic of Ireland soccer manager Brian Kerr; and leading psychologist and author, Dr Maureen Gaffney. The conference
INNOVATIONS | FINALISTS ANNOUNCED FOR THINKTECH
Using tech to drive a positive social impact EMMA NOLAN
Brian Kerr, author and psychologist Dr Maureen Gaffney and Osborne chief executive, Shona Mc Manus
focused on developing talent and high-performance teams, employee engagement and wellbeing and establishing
FIVE companies located in the capital have been shortlisted for Thinktech – a €1 million project to develop ideas for a better Ireland, with social innovation and a community focus at its heart. The five finalists are ...
Change X team ChangeX - an online database for proven social innovation projects, providing projects the mechanism to scale and maximise their impact while also providing local solutions that are proven to work for communities who want them.
an effective corporate culture. Osborne has also recently launched a new website; see www. osborne.ie.
Niamh O’Reilly
Marianne Chekley AONTAS/ An Cosan Virtual College Community (VCC) - a
iScoil - an online learning community that offers
social enterprise set up to scale the work of An Cosan,
an alternative path to learning, accreditation
a community education centre that has served the
and progression for young people.
community of Tallaght West for over 30 years.
MANAGEMENT | STAFF DEVELOPMENT
Success is a cert for Windsor Motor Group AS PART of its ongoing investment in all employees, Windsor Motor Group has presented eight employees with a QQI Level 6 Management Development Certificate after completing a specifically designed programme. Delivered by Dublin firm Optimum and supported by Skillnets, the highimpact programme was specifically tailored to the retail motor industry, and focused on developing the skills that lead to successful teams and business management. It enabled the aftersales employees to develop their skills in fostering an environment for innovation and continuous improvement – two of the key components in driving the Windsor
Motor Group’s success, to date. Modules in the programme included communication, self-management, organisational skills, managing teams for high performance, leadership, legislation and strategic planning. Pictured are Mark Morrison and James Browne, Windsor Airside Nissan; Padraig Foran, Windsor Belgard Nissan; Carl Miller, Windsor Raheny Nissan; Robbie O’Neill, Windsor Motor Group; Garry Hobson, chief executive, Windsor Motor Group; Alan Buckley, Windsor Liffey Valley Opel; Daniel Davies, Windsor Deansgrange Nissan; Brenda Byrne, Windsor Clonee Nissan, and Derek Flynn, Windsor Dundrum Nissan.
Peter Mangan Kate Morris The Freebird Club – operates as a peer-to-peer Student Volunteer - an online resource that aims to
homestay club, offering a new way of travelling
become the one-stop shop for matching students with
for older adults, a new source of income and a
volunteering opportunities.
unique way to promote companionship.
The finalists will take part in a development programme devised by Social Innovation Fund Ireland, and supported by Google.org and the
Department of Housing, Planning, Community and Local Government. The overall award recipients will be announced in Decem-
ber at a special awards ceremony at Google’s EMEA HQ in Dublin. The initiative is a collaboration between Social Innovation Fund
Ireland and Google.org, the philanthropic arm of Google which invests in teams with bold ideas that create a lasting global impact.
20 October 2016 GAZETTE 13
ASDFSDAF P27 STYLE P22
FOOD & DRINK P21
DUBLINLIFE Let Dublin Gazette Newspapers take you on a tour of the news and events taking place across the city and county this week
have a fangtastic time at the Bram Stoker Festival
IAN BEGLEY
GET ready to celebrate Dublin’s darker side this October Bank Holiday weekend as Bram Stoker Festival, October 28 to 31, returns with four days of living stories and four nights of deadly events. By day, the Bram Stoker Festival programme presents gothic intrigue at family-friendly events, talks and interactive experiences. At night, the city will embrace the darkness as a host of venues deliver deadly adventures for festival goers in search of macabre thrills and late-night parties. The festival programme includes theatre, spectacle, visual arts and music in haunting locations across the city celebrating Dublin’s gothic and supernatural traditions, the city itself and gothic architecture, and links
to Samhain festival. Thrill-seekers are invited to Glasnevin’s Botanic Gardens for Nightmare Plants (Fri 28), an immersive performance and after-dark experience like no other seen this year; master-storytellers and creators of stunning, brilliant chaos, and big, bold, visual spectacles. Macnas – Spectacle and Street Performance Company, will summon spirits and awaken the ghosts with Sleep No More (Mon 31), a new parade like no other on Henry St and Moore St; Bleedin’ Deadly (Oct 28 – 31) in the atmospheric Pillar Room of the Rotunda Hospital is a raucous celebration of a time when the Freak Show dominated in all its shocking glory. The culturally curious will enjoy Dracula Live (Sat 29) at National Concert Hall which sees leading Irish musicians
David Meyler, Daniel Moran, Lexie and Lily Barry behind the walls of a North Great Georges Street gothic pile to launch the programme for Bram Stoker Festival 2016. Picture: Sasko Lazarov/ Photocall Ireland
Matthew Nolan and Sean MacErlaine perform a specially created deathly new score for Todd Browning’s 1931 classic movie Dracula. Horror Expo (Sun 30) in the stunning surroundings of Freemasons Grand
Lodge will deliver a one of a kind event which promises to please the most ardent of horror fans. There’s lots of fun for families too. Stokerland (Oct 29 & 30) will see St Patrick’s Park transform into a pop-up gothic fun
park with the macabre talents of world class street-performers alongside rides and attractions to ensure a fangtastic time for all. The magnificent Marsh’s Library plays host to Tales From the Shadows: Gothic Tales (Sat 29), a beautiful shadow puppet show with devious devils, vengeful vampires, gloating goblins and sorrowful spectres to name but a few. While spooktacular events for kids at The Ark in Temple Bar include The Bram Jam (Oct 30 & 31), Dracula’s Spooky Underground Sound Lab (Sun 30)and Dracula’s Disco (Mon 31) where Dracula’s very own DJ Will Softly will be spinning the decks and scratching vinyl at an energetic set for young zombies, ghosts and musicloving monsters. For events information and tickets sink your teeth into www.bramstokerfestival.com
GAZETTE
DIARY P14
SIMPSON IS A DELIGHT THE Gazette has teamed up with Dogs Trust to help find homes for lost and abandoned dogs. Our dog of the week is Simpson, a five-year-old male Labrador crossbreed who has been at Dogs Trust for some time now, and really, really wants his new home! He is one of the brightest dogs in the rehoming centre, and is looking for an adult-only home with patient and loving adopters who will love and cherish him for the rest of his days. 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 at www.dogstrust.ie. The new Dogs Trust campaign - See Page 20
GAZETTE
14 GAZETTE 20 October 2016
DUBLINLIFE
DIARY
Get ready because MoRunning is back DON a tash and dash for charity – MoRunning returns to Dublin this November! Last year saw more than 1,000 runners from across Dublin and beyond donning fancy dress and digging deep to help raise awareness and funds for Movember. And it was such as success that MoRunning has announced it is back next month. Hosted at the Phoenix Park on Saturday, November 5, MoRunning is calling on Dublin to rock everything and anything from a flamboyant facial hair to a wacky wig and get involved with its 2016 fun run. With both 5k and 10k races on offer, and all ages and abilities welcome, participants will kick-start the race at 10:00am complete with moustaches, fancy dress and raise funds for the Movember Foundation. Now in its eighth year, MoRunning has also announced Mr Motivator as its 2016 Ambassador, who will help to motivate thousands of runners across Dublin ahead of the runs.
CANCER SUPPORT CENTRE TOUR MEMBERS of the public will have the opportunity to take a tour of the longest-running community-based cancer
ning from 11am on Friday, October 21. During the event the public can take a tour of Purple House and meet the centre’s staff, volunteers, counsellors and therapists. All are welcome to join Purple House for a tea or coffee and learn more about the cancer support services on offer. A dedicated website – cancerweek.ie – has been set up to allow everyone to upload and promote their event to a wide audience.
GETTING OUR KIDS FIGHTING FIT
Mr Motivator will help to motivate thousands of runners across Dublin
support centre in Ireland as part of a range of events taking place across the country for Cancer Week Ireland 2016 (October 17 - 23). Purple House Cancer Support will give the public access to their centre in Aubrey Court, Parnell Road, Bray, in an Open Morning run-
NOW in its third year, Super Troopers with Laya Healthcare, is being rolled out to 197 Dublin schools with 43,547 Dublin students taking part. For the coming school year 1,250 primary schools and almost 200,000 children will complete the enhanced Super Troopers health homework programme which aims to encourage more physical activity and healthy eating in children, parents and teachers. Super Troopers encourages children and their families to have a positive attitude towards physical activity, wellbeing and nutrition and aims to change practical lifestyle habits to help children and families lead healthy lifestyles.
Visit www.supertroopers.ie for lots of ideas and tips on physical activity and wellbeing activities.
FESTIVAL A MUST FOR TECH LOVERS EUROPE’S biggest Start-Up/Tech Festival UPRISE is coming to Dublin’s RDS and will give tech lovers an opportunity to network. Taking place on Thursday, October 20 from 9am to 6.30pm, the unique festival will host 150 crazy start-ups, 15 workshops, buskers, games, music, DJ’s, entertainment, jobs and much more. Uprise also adds Irish buskers and food stalls to a relaxed environment of CEO’s and talent, helping to make new business ideas more approachable, investable and connected. An epic start-up Pitch Battle will see six international start-ups pit their strengths against six Irish based start-ups, after local heats were held in Europe and the USA in earlier this year. To a frenzy of audience questions, answers and reactions, the audience will decide which company wins (no judging panel required). Dublin City Local Enterprise Office will award a prize fund of €5,000 to the winning entrepreneur. Visit www.uprisefestival.co to book tickets.
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DUBLINLIFE
DON’S DUBLIN A pigeon that has left its mark on the city for centuries BY THE mid-1750s, entry to and from Dublin Bay was a hazardous operation and the city governors decided something drastic needed to be done to improve the situation. And so, a plan was drawn up to construct a wall into the bay that would stop the silting up of channels, and provide a safe place for passengers to board. This work to build the Great South Wall took over 30 years and was complete in 1795 with safer passage for travellers and an improvement in trade. During the lengthy construction, John Pidgeon was the caretaker of the storehouse for the equipment used during the building, and he began selling refreshments to travellers, who often waited for days until the weather improved to travel. As a smart businessman, he also offered trips around the long wall, which was one of the longest in the world when completed. Business improved, and Pidgeon (the ‘d’ in his name was dropped a long time ago) built a small hotel to
THE BIG INTERVIEW
SHANE ON THE BUS STRIKES, TRAINS, RIO, ABORTION & BUDGET
Minister Ross out for a constitutional in his constituency with fellow Independents – councillors Seamas O’Neill, Deirdre Donnelly and Kevin Daly
EXCLUSIVE
MINISTER SHANE ROSS ON THE BIG TOPICS
cater for the needs of the growing number of travel-
MINISTER for Minister for Transport, Tourism and Sport Shane Ross has a particularly busy portfolio, which keeps him constantly moving across the city and country. However, EMMA NOLAN was able
lers. In 1793, years after John Pidgeon had died, a new building was erected and operated for many years. This building still stands, and lies in the shadow of the twin towers of the Poolbeg Power Station. Not long afterwards, with the whiff of revolution in the air (and the 1798 Rebellion a recent memory), a fort was
to shadow Minister Ross one day last week as he went about his official business, during which he gave her his unique insider views on a range of the main issues affecting the city and the country ...
Sharing a cuppa, an ear and a word with a constituent
constructed near the hotel. It became known as ‘the Pigeon House Fort’. Today, the canon guns outside the entrance to the ESB power station were originally facing out to sea anticipating a possible French invasion that never came. The place also made its literary mark on a young James Joyce. In his first great work, Dubliners, he tells of two boys playing truant (no doubt he was one of them) as they went to the exotic building and the long wall that stretched, seemingly forever into the bay, in his short story, An Encounter. “We arranged to go along the Wharf Road until we came to the ships, then to cross in the ferryboat and walk out to see the Pigeon House.”
Don Cameron
www.donsdublin.wordpress.com
Pigeon House – a legacy of the canny business that grew up around the city’s Great South Wall
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16 GAZETTE 20 October 2016
On those Dublin Bus strikes ... “I wasn’t involved – that was the point.” Minister Ross defended his lack of involvement in the strikes which saw widespread disruption in the city for a number of days in September. The Dublin-Rathdown TD said that he was “firm in [his] resolve” and would not have backed down, even if the strikes had continued until Christmas. Minister Ross said that he wasn’t prepared to fund Dublin Bus management at the expense of the taxpayer – especially with the possibility of further potential strikes from Bus Eireann and Irish Rail. He said that when he made it clear he wasn’t going to just sign a cheque, that this comment wasn’t intended for
the workers. “T he people who annoyed me most were the Dublin Bus management – not the workers or the unions. “It was important that when the management went into negotiations that they got the message that they were on
every day, criticising us. “[Deputy] Richard Boyd Barrett (PBP), who is a friend of mine, was outside my office with a huge sign that said: ‘Where is the Minister?’, but I thought that was quite funny, actually!” However, Minister Ross said that the widespread
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‘The Minister said that he was “firm in [his] resolve” and would not have backed down, even if the bus strikes had continued until Christmas’ --------------------------------------------------------
their own, and that the Department wasn’t just behind them waiting to sign a cheque. “It worked – we weren’t going to sign a cheque for them, and it was difficult not to, because we could have done it and both sides were annoying us
criticism didn’t bother him, and he is satisfied that he set a precedent for future industrial action in the transport sector. What did cause problems, though, was the bus lane issue, which Minister Ross says he wanted to keep open for use by
drivers, but he was prevented from doing so by the Road Safety Authority who ruled that it was “too dangerous”.
On Budget 2017 ... This was the first budget that Minister Ross had much involvement in at Cabinet level – an experience which he described as “a very interesting time”. “It was my first time involved at that level, and I think that was marked down as being a point of difficulty, but we came to an agreement and the Government worked well on the budget, actually.” Minister Ross said that he feels his Independent Alliance “got a lot into the Budget,” and cites the old age pension bonus as a particular success that
Minister for Sport Shane Ross hoists the mighty Sam Maguire trophy aloft during a visit to Stillorgan Shopping
Metro Nor th and Dart Underground to be completed until around 2025. “They’re being planned, but the funds aren’t there yet.”
Centre as part of its 50th birthday celebrations Pictures: Peter Cavanagh
they brought to the table. On parts of the Budget he was not happy with, Minister Ross said that he was annoyed with pension payments being delayed. “I would have liked to have given a bit more away in other areas, but we couldn’t do it – it was very thinly spread. We only had about €800 million, which seems like a lot – but it’s not – to spread around the different interest groups. “So yes, I was unhappy we couldn’t do more, but I hope we can do more next year. It all depends
on Brexit now, that could knock us for six.” On Brexit, he added: “things could really kick off”, and said: “It’ll affect our exports, and tourism could go down because of exchange rates. We’re in a precarious position.”
On repealing the Eighth Amendment ... Minister Ross is personally in favour of repealing it, and wants there to be a free vote on the matter in the Dail. “There should be a free vote on it,” he added, but stated that not all members of the Independent
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‘[Enda Kenny and I] didn’t really see eye to eye, but now we have conversations. We have to talk and reach agreements, but we don’t have to go for a pint together or anything like that.’ -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alliance are in favour of repealing it. “I’m in favour of repeal – absolutely, as is Finian McGrath and John Halligan.” However, the two rural TDs in the IA Cabinet, Kevin “Boxer” Moran and Sean Canney, are against such a move. “Our view has always been that it is a matter of conscience and up to the
individual – we’re going to have to sort out our differences at some stage.”
On Dublin’s key transport projects ... Minister Ross said that the Luas Cross City line will be completed next year. “It’s on target and it’s within budget,” he said, insisting that it will be up and running by next
Autumn. “I don’t think there will be any delay on it, it’s been on target the whole time, so there’s no reason why it should be.” He said that the Luas Cross City will be “a bit of a monument to transport in this country”, once completed. However, he confirmed that we can’t expect other major projects such as
On the Rio Olympics and Pat Hickey ... The minister, who also has Sport on his portfolio, says that the Olympics was “quite the event”. “We were meant to be going over to encourage the athletes and to be there as a presence and show support from the Government, and it was overshadowed by Pat Hickey. We were meant to be there for a fortnight and we came back after three days. It was very dramatic.” Minister Ross said that he has not spoken to Pat Hickey since Rio, adding: “We didn’t get on very well!” But he admitted that he feels sorry for the
former president of the Olympic Council of Ireland. “He’s only available on the phone anyway. I do feel terrible for him, stuck over there – he could be there for another 18 months or more. “On a personal level, we didn’t get on at all, but he’s not a young man; he’s stuck out there without his family. It’s tough for him.”
On his relationship with Enda Kenny ... “Relationships between the different people in government are actually rather good at the moment,” Minister Ross revealed, after a “catastrophic” first few months. “There’s no point in trying to pretend otherwise, they [the first few months of the new government this year] were incredible – we were working on completely different
agendas. “We [the IA] believe that we should have a free vote [in the Dail], and Fine Gael had never heard of free votes, so it was very difficult.” Minister Ross said that he and An Taoiseach, Enda Kenny, are now beginning to understand each other. “The relationships have improved – they were bad – Enda and I didn’t even have conversations. It was almost impossible; we didn’t really see eye to eye, but now we have conversations. “We have to talk and reach agreements, but we don’t have to go for a pint together or anything like that, but the relationships are getting better. “We’re getting on quite well now – as partners in government, we’re beginning to work better together.”
18 GAZETTE 20 October 2016
WIN WIN WIN WIN WIN WIN WIN WIN Spooktacular Gazette contest THE Gazette’s Halloween reader pix competition is up and running and we have some fire-cracking prizes to give away over the next five weeks. This week’s winners are the Egans from Blanchardstown, who sent us this cuter than cute pic of their little girls Alisha and Ayla (left) and another of their fangtastically ghostly garden. The adorable Disney princesses win a Swizzels Halloween Hamper choc-abloc with bewitching treats. A special
DUE to phenomenal public demand, Russia’s Ice Vision have announced extra dates for both Alice In Wonderland and the eagerly awaited Dracula On Ice, The Story Of Eternal Love at the National Show Centre in Swords next month. And to celebrate the extra dates, The Gazette has THREE family passes to give away for BOTH spectacular productions. To win a special day out for your family, all you have to do is visit The Gazette’s Facebook page at Facebook.com/DublinGazetteNewspapers, Like and Share our Ice Vision competition post and write which of the two shows you’d prefer to see in the Comments section. So if you’d like to win four tickets to see Alice in Wonderland on November 24, just write “Alice” in the comments section, or if you’d prefer tickets to see Dracula on Ice the
mention also goes out to Oisin Murphy, who sent in a lovely photo (below) of his dog Coco, sitting next to the pumpkin he grew and carved himself. Keep those spooktacular snaps coming in folks – we have great prizes for the best decorated Halloween garden, and we’ll have more for the best – and worst – dressed trick-or-treaters. Just email competitions@dublingazette.com or upload your pix to our Facebook page. Happy snapping!
GET YOUR SKATES ON
following day, just write “Dracula”. Featuring top professional Russian skaters, the unique productions are sure to thrill audiences of both children and adults. The beloved tale of Alice in Wonderland is transformed in a new and amazing spectacle for all the family. Musical numbers in union with the art of dance on ice creates an unforgettable impression and enchanting show, permeating the soul of audiences of all ages. The performance takes place on large-scale video scenery that plunge the viewer into the picture so spectators can experience the effect of following Alice through the rabbit hole. Dracula On Ice retells Bram Alice in Wonderland Stoker’s classic novel featuring
Jonathan Harker, his beloved Mina, young Lucy, courageous and brave Van Helsing who devoted his life to fight dark forces; hungry and ruthless vampires and, of course, ominous Count Dracula. Dracula On Ice includes acrobatic elements, air gymnastics, fire juggling and much more. Visitors will see large scale video-installations, exquisite costumes, interactive decorations, lighting and mirror balls incorporating the entire venue. The mystical show features fog, red steam, flying vampires, fire on ice and extremely demanding ice skating elements: high support, death spirals, triple jumps – all complemented by charming music. Visit www.mcaevents.ie for full details on the productions.
Dracula on Ice
Seeking talented BASE tour guides BASE Entertainment Centre want to let parents know about the fun things kids can do at the centre so they are recording a series of videos (to be posted on Facebook) to showcase their themed party rooms and activity areas. They are seeking expert help from young people who can talk on camera about the fun that can be had at Base Enter tainment and show off the different rooms. If there is a young person in your life who is a natural in front of camera, a comedian or just an all-round show-off, they want to hear from you. To apply, please Facebook message them a clip of your child in action or email it to marketing@baseentertainment.ie To record the guided tour video clips on-site at Base, each competition winner will need to be accompanied by a parent or guardian. And at the end of it all, they will invite your superstar back to Base Entertainment with nine friends for a party on them valued at €250. Entry deadline date Friday, November 4.
Swizzels launches spooky selection of sweet treats for Halloween Swizzels, has launched a variety of fun Halloween themed sweets that are perfect for Halloween sharing occasions, from ghoulish parties with friends and family to trick or treating.
20 October 2016 GAZETTE 19
COMMERCIAL FEATURE
Let’s talk TTIP/ CETA SO what’s this TTIP/ CETA business that’s causing so such much concern to so many people across the EU? TTIP and CETA are two transatlantic trade deals. CETA is the trade deal between the EU and Canada and is fully negotiated. TTIP is a trade deal between the US and the EU and negotiations are still underway. Under the Lisbon Treaty, Ireland handed over trade negotiating rights to the EU Commission. TRANSPARENCY:
NOBODY can see the details of these negotiations. Whether you’re an MEP or a TD you can only read the details about the ongoing TTIP negotiations in special Reading Rooms in the European Parliament or Leinster House. ISDS MECHANISMS:
The information that we do have on what is up for negotiation is deeply concerning. PRIVATE COURTS:
UNDER both CETA and TTIP, there is a proposal for a mechanism called Investor State Dispute Settlement. Its name has changed over the course of the negotiations to make it more palatable but effectively it is a private court system that puts multi-national corporations’ rights before citizens. Multi-national corporations can and do sue governments for trying to pass laws that offer protection for citizens from harmful chemicals, laws that attempt to ban harmful products. Corporations can even sue governments for passing laws that might cause these corporations to make a bit less money such as laws that raise the minimum wage.
THINK I’M JOKING? HERE ARE JUST A COUPLE OF EXAMPLES:
Following the nuclear disaster at Fukishima in Japan 2011, Germany decided that it wanted to end its use of nuclear energy, Vattenfall, the Swedish company operating two nuclear power plants in Germany decided to sue for €3.7 billion compensation. Ah that’s an extreme example you say? On the contrary, there are many examples of how insidious this investor dispute mechanism is. In June 2012, French company
Veolia sued Egypt. One of Veolia’s claims was that Egypt’s decision to introduce a national minimum wage harmed Veolia’s investments. In 2012 Ecuador was ordered to pay a petroleum company $1.77 billion in damages for terminating the oil giant’s contract when the company broke Ecuadorian law! That settlement amounted to the entire health budget for one year in Ecuador. Theses ‘special courts’ are so bad that one of their judges is quoted as saying: “When I wake up at night and think about arbitration, it never ceases to amaze me that sovereign states have agreed to investment arbitration at all.” Ireland is a small open economy that has traded with countries across the world including the US and Canada without the need for an Investor dispute settlement. Yet now, our Government under Fine Gael have, in fact become cheerleaders for these undemocratic courts. In a letter to the EU Commission in 2014, then Minister for Trade and Enterprise, Richard Bruton actually endorsed their inclusion!
OTHER AREAS OF CONCERN: JOBS
THERE will be job losses or ‘job dislocation’. The European Commission itself has said that TTIP is likely to bring “prolonged and substantial” dislocation to European workers, as companies will be encouraged to source goods and services from US states where standards are lower and trade union rights are non-existent. HEALTH
THOSE in favour of TTIP and CETA constantly tell us to trust them that health and food regulations won’t drop, however, the evidence to date shows otherwise. Let’s take the example of Endocrine Disrupters, chemicals that have been proven to harm health and which the World Health Organisation refer to as a global threat. The EU Commission had an explicit deadline of December 2013 to regulate these chemicals. In June 2013 the American Chamber
MEPs Matt Carthy and Lynn Boylan (above) and all four Sinn Féin MEPs, Matt Carthy, Liadh Ní Ríada, Lynn Boylan and Martin Anderson protesting about TTIP in the European Parliament (below). food. Ractopamine is banned in 160 countries including the EU 28 due to impacts on human health. Concerned? Thought so and I have only touched on some of the risks of these trade deals. It is not too late to act though. Last week, the Seanad voted on a motion rejecting CETA. The message was clear – we don’t want CETA, just as we don’t want TTIP. But rejection by the Seanad is only a start. Both TTIP and CETA should be put to the people in a referendum. A referendum would put of Commerce met the EU Commis- faith before trade deal negotiations the decision on the future of our sion and requested that they wanted began with the US, giving a strong democracy in the hands of those the regulation of these chemicals indication that the EU is willing to that matter – the people. dropped. Lo and behold in July, the lower its food standards to accommoLET’S FIGHT TTIP & CETA EU Commission announced that they date these trade deals. In the US and Canada, ractopa- Contact Minister for Trade would carry out an impact assessment of the regulation plans thereby delay- mine, a growth stimulant, is used as & Enterprise Mary Mitchell ing the process by a further two years. a veterinary drug that is injected in O’Connor and your government When it comes to food, history cattle, swine and turkeys. The stimu- TDs and insist that CETA and TTIP shows that trade agreements put food lant is injected before slaughter result- be brought before the people of safety at risk by harmonizing stand- ing in residue levels remaining in the Ireland to decide. ards and reducing regulations to the lowest common denominator. In the EU there is a strict farm to fork policy, this is not the case in the US or Canada. Canadian and US regulations allow beef and chicken to be washed and Please feel free to processed with chlorinated water, a process that is banned in the EU. In contact me: 2013 the EU dropped its ban on beef rinsed in lactic acid as a sign of good
Got an issue for me or want to join Sinn Féin?
lynn.boylan@europarl.europa.eu
20 GAZETTE 20 October 2016
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DUBLINLIFE Rolling out the ‘yellow brick road’ to help rescue dogs
L AU N C H I N G t h e i r t h o u g h t p r o vo k i n g new campaign entitled There’s No Place Like Home, Dogs Trust hopes to highlight the plight of hundreds of rescue dogs currently in their care who need a new home. As part of the init i a t i ve , t h e c h a r i t y have transformed their rehoming centre in Finglas with a “yellow brick road” and have released a short video, filmed almost entirely from a dog’s point of view. The clip, which you can see by visiting The G a z e t t e ’s F a c e b o o k
page, shows one little pooch’s journey as she is rescued and makes her way along the “yellow brick road”, meeting the specialist carers who help her along the way. Irish rock band Kodaline have kindly lent their support with the track “The One” which plays beautifully as we observe the beginning of a new friendship between “Dorothy” and the little dog. Dogs Trust’s Suzie Carley said: “We believe there is the per fect home for every dog in our care, some of which have been overlooked
many times through no fault of their own since being rescued. “One particular dog, Buddy (pictured below), has been overlooked 26,000 times since being rescued which is so hard to believe as he is such an incredible dog. “We do our very best for each and every dog we save but really there is ‘No Place Like Home’ for these amazing dogs and it’s our mission to find their rainbow at the end of their yellow brick road, that they can call home.” Home Tweet Home is a digital element of
FEATURE
the campaign from Dogs Trust, where the charity are asking dog lovers to go on to their website’s rehoming gallery, choose a dog and click on the Twitter icon beside the dog to share him/her with their friends to highlight them even further. It’s a ‘pay it forward’ for the dogs, so to speak. The charity has also taken a stand at this y e a r s Id e a l Ho m e s exhibition at the RDS during the October bank holiday weekend, which they’ll transform into the Ideal Home for a dog. Grace Toohey, from Ashbourne, dressed as Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz to help launch “There’s No Place Like Home,” a new campaign by Dogs Trust. Picture: Fran Veale
20 October 2016 GAZETTE 21
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FOOD&DRINK
Bayin Tomato Salad
The new two-story restaurant features cream leather seating, a parquet floor, iroko wood and subtle accents of grey with bolts of red
Amazing sushi has arrived at the IFSC EMMA NOLAN
DUBLIN sushi speciallists Michie have just opened a new restaurant at the IFSC. The Japanese eatery known for its fresh sushi opened first in Ranelagh in 2007 by proprietors Michel Piare and Anna van Exel. It initially opened as a small takeaway but has since expanded and they now have four restaurant loca-
tions in Ranelagh, Dun Laoghaire, Sandyford and IFSC and two Sushi Bars in Avoca Rathcoole and Avoca K ilmacanougue. The menu offers hand-rolled, quality sushi and fresh Japanese cuisine. The new menu for the IFSC has been expanded to include tempura, teppanyaki, and additional desserts. Michie IFSC is located at Unit 3, Georges Dock, Dublin.
PEANUT oil isn’t used that often at home but it has many health benefits and a high smoke point, meaning it’s great for cooking with. It’s also good for drizzling over salads. New Irish company Bayin has launched a range of oils including a peanut oil which is used in their recipe for tomato salad.
Ingredients l l l l l l l l
Two to three ripe tomatoes Two teaspoons Bayin Peanut oil One teaspoon fish sauce 1/2 red onion 1 garlic clove minced 1 lime (juice) Two tablespoons crushed peanuts bunch of coriander chopped
Method l Cut the tomatoes into slices and place in bowl. l In a jug mix the Bayin peanut oil, fish sauce, minced garlic and lime juice. Pour dressing over tomatoes. l Add crushed peanuts and chopped coriander and mix well. Available in Supervalu and independent retailers nationwide. RRP €4.99
Stopping heartburn before it hits
Dr Ciara Kelly
OVER half of Irish adults suffer from heartburn – so National Heartburn Awareness week is back this month to highlight the condition. Starting on October 24, the nation is being advised to be mindful of the condition and its lifestyle effects, and to seek more information from a pharmacist if suffering regularly with heartburn symptoms. With one in three Irish people suffering from heartburn more
than once a week, Dr Ciara Kelly is encouraging people to consult with their local pharmacist on how best to manage the ailment, reminding us that heartburn is something easily treated. The pharmacist should be the first choice for advice, as many heartburn cases can be solved over the counter without a visit to the GP required. In addition to speaking with phar-
macists, Dr Kelly advises those suffering with heartburn symptoms to: Keep a food diary and listen to your body. Pay heed to what causes your heartburn to flare up, monitor and avoid these foods. l Don’t eat late at night before you’re about to go to bed, having a full stomach before you lie down will increase acid backflow and put pressure on digestion. l Avoid spicy foods that effect
your stomach balance, especially anything with lots of chilli. l Consciously add acid neutralising foods to the diet, such as almond milk, bananas, ginger, porridge. l Keep your alcohol intake within recommended limits (17 units for a man, 11 units for a woman per week, or less!) l Reduce your tea and coffee intake, again especially before you go to bed.
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22 GAZETTE 20 October 2016
DUBLINLIFE
Massimo Dutti Bomber €129; Finders Keepers Harvey Nichols Dress €160; House of Fraser Bagpack €40; River Island Shoes €65
(Left:) Harvey Nichols DKNY blue jumper €420; LK Bennett Dress €795; River Island Boots €100; (Right:) House of Fraser Therapy Coat €220; BT2 DVF shirt dress €467; French Connection Boots €139; Accessorize Pop pom scarf €45.90
Gray and Willow House of Fraser Faux fur coat €219; River Island Top €55; Philip Lim BT2 Skirt €760; M&S Boots €82
Three Floor Dress €395; Accessorise Clutch €65; River Island Shoes €65
Turn over a new leaf in Dundrum Town Centre’s Autumn/Winter styles delight EMMA NOLAN Style Editor
Acne BT2 Coat €950; Sandro BT2 Jumper €245; Selected Skirt €69.95; LK Bennett Trainers €200
(Left:) Biba House of Fraser Faux fur coat €229; DVF BT2 Polo neck €308; Karen Millen Skirt €160; (Right:) Alice & Olivia Harvey Nichols Dress €402; Accessorise Stole €37.90
DUNDRUM Town Centre has unveiled its Autumn/Winter 2016 ladies wear collections, showcasing some of this season’s popular trends available in the centre, from luxury to high-end brands. Curated by stylist Corina Gaffey, the presentation offers a look at what’s available in the 1,000 fashion brands found in the centre. Key trends of the colourful season include Shades of Pale: soft pinks, camels, creams; Renais-
sance: Victorian influences, frills and embroidery; Winter boho: maxi dresses, faux fur and chunky boots, and Tinsel: Sequins, metallics and velvet. Speaking at the shoot, Corina said: “Dundrum Town Centre is a stylist’s dream, and after pulling this collection together, I’m even more excited for the winter months ahead.”
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Pinko Harvey Nichols Military Jacket €678 and Dress €621
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STYLE
Nail the right make-up for winter with these nourishing products EMMA NOLAN
AS THE winter chill creeps into the air, choosing products with nourishing properties becomes all the more important. This season, make sure your skin, lips and nails are ready to brace the winter months with cold weather essentials. Available in Penneys stores and pharmacies nationwide, Catrice has a range of inexpensive winter products to keep chapped lips and dry skin at bay ...
(Left:) Sandro BT2 Coat €650; Therapy House of Fraser Polo neck €65; Acne BT2 Skirt €350; M&S Boots €82; (Right:) Pinko Harvey Nichols Coat €815 and Dress €413; Dune Stole €45; Therapy House of Fraser Bag €55; Office Shoes €77
Catrice Prime & Fine Beautifying Primer €4.95 KEEP make-up in place without drying out the skin with a nurturing primer. The product contains nourishing Vitamin E and light-reflecting pearl pigments that create a natural glow and soft shimmer on your skin while delivering long-lasting staying power for your make-up. Catrice Iron Strength Nail Hardener €3.50 A NEW arrival for Autumn/Winter, the Iron Strength Nail Hardener forms a protective barrier on the surface of the nails to make them more resistant. For best results, apply twice weekly to clean nails.
Pinko Harvey Nichols Military Coat €815 and Dress €413
Catrice Vitamin Lip Treatment €3.95 GIVE lips a vitamin boost with the Vitamin Lip Treatment from Catrice. Available in three shades, this lipgloss is enriched with Vitamin E and Q10, designed to pamper lips with their regenerative properties. The lipgloss also offers a fruity fragrance and beautifully shiny finish. Catrice Volumizing Lip Booster €3.95 FORMULATED with jojoba and almond oil, the Catrice Volumizing Lip Booster is a great all-round product. While helping to hide fine lines, the ingredients – including menthol – naturally plump up the lip, adding lusciousness with a rose finish while the oils soothe and nourish lips.
(Left:) Pinko Harvey Nichols Coat €413; River Island Dress €60; French Connection Boots €139; (Right:) River Island Jumper €45; Linea House of Fraser Skirt €89; River Island Boots €100
Catrice Wellnails Regenerating Care Pen €3.95 FOR fast and effective nail and cuticle care, look no further than the newWellnails Regenerating Care Pen. Enriched with caring ingredients such as olive and jojoba oil, shea butter, aloe vera, Vitamin E and bamboo extract, this pen provides targeted nourishment for dry and stressed nails and cuticles.
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24 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 20 October 2016
DUBLINLIFE
CINEMA ReelReviews
INFERNO
It’s flaming awful TOM Hanks takes the money and runs, thanks to the hellishly bad Inferno (Cert 12A, 121 mins), the latest film based on Dan Brown’s clever-clever books. This time round, the globe-trotting academic is in a race against time to stop a plague wiping out half the world before you can shout: “Dante do it!” Any ‘Da Vinci Code’ and Tom Hanks fans may enjoy this, but everybody else ...
While the first film was a little different for the action genre, ‘Jack Reacher 2’ is a more conventional affair, and subsequently a much less interesting sequel
JACK REACHER - NEVER GO BACK: THIS MEDIOCRE SEQUEL IS A BIT OF A REACH
Passes by on Cruise control TOM Cruise returns to break limbs and bust heads as the world’s best-looking vagrant in Jack Reacher: Never Go Back (Cert 12A, 118 mins). Thanks to Christopher McQuarrie’s lean direction and Cruise’s undeniable magnetism, 2012’s original Reacher film was a surprisingly witty, straight-shooting action thriller with few pretensions. Never Go Back carries over much of the hardboiled, gritty action of the original, with each punch delivered with a signature Cruise wink and smile. Unfortunately, not even the superstar’s charm can save this sequel from the realms of mediocrity. Attempting to layer a little emotional depth
MARTIN MACNAMARA
into the mix, Never Go Back overcomplicates and omits that which allowed Jack Reacher to lift its head above other average, contemporary action movies. Based on the bestselling books by Lee Child, the film starts four years after the first film. An ex-army investigator, Reacher has been awarded every military honour there is; in fact, he’s so good, “they ran out of medals to give him”. Our introduction to Reacher in the first film was a shameless delight:
he’s the kind of guy you don’t go looking for – “he finds you”. Stripped of this initial charm, Never Go Back fails to deliver on the introductory excitement of the original and lacks an instigating narrative punch. We’re not so much dropped into the action here, as slowly, laboriously eased into it. Having continued his vagrant lifestyle, moving from state to state, Reacher decides to meet up with Major Susan Turner (Cobie Smulders) – an army officer at his old military unit who’s helped him to solve cases across the country. When he discovers that she’s been accused of treason, he sets out to prove her innocence, naturally unearthing the odd government conspiracy along the way.
The original’s most glaring fault was its alpha-male oriented narrative. This time around, that’s balanced out by the inclusion of Major Turner; a female co-lead just as fiercely capable in combat as Reacher. This is certainly a step up from the damsel in distress dynamic of the original. As a sequel, then, Never Go Back attempts to compensate for the originals’ o v e r whelmi n g machismo with a
few depthless dialogues on gender roles, particularly within the military. While this is a commendable effort, the theme is underdeveloped and ultimately proves a shallow attempt at progression. Further attempts to develop Reacher as a character are made with a subplot centring on his possible daughter, Samantha (Danika Yarosh). While watching Reacher struggle with responsibility and manners has a certain charm, this attempt at injecting some human emotion is a relatively drab affair, and slows the narrative down to a torpid pace around the halfway
mark. Of course, the action here is again expertly choreographed, maintaining a grounded realism; every punch is well and truly felt. The poorly developed plot, however, only really serves to tenuously link these action segments together. The only real compelling mystery here is how Cruise manages to disguise himself snugly in the uniform of a man twice his size. U l t i m a t e l y, J a c k Reacher: Never Go Back is a lifeless, mediocre retread of the original. Even the biggest action fans will find this one distinctly lacking in thrills.
There’s strong support from Cobie Smulders as Major Turner. However, the strong female lead doesn’t change the fact that this film is still very much an adventure for the boys.
DON’T BREATHE
House about a twist? FOR most of this film you’re never quite sure who to root for, as Don’t Breathe (Cert 16, 88 mins) ratchets up the tension when three teens decide to rob a blind man in his decrepit house. The wrong blind man, it turns out, as he’s anything but helpless, in this tensionfilled film that soon turns the tables on the young hoods. Shot and edited with skill, it’s a daft but deftly delivered tale.
GIRL WITH THE GIFTS Presents a decent film
TO USE its full title, The Girl With All The Gifts (Cert 15A, 111 mins) staggers into the zombie genre with something a little different. Glenn Close leads an evershrinking group of survivors in a near future world that’s been devastated by, in effect, a zombie plague – with one young infected girl the potential key to a cure. It’s an interesting film, bringing a little brains to the zombie genre.
20 October 2016 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 25
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TECH WeeBytes
Would-be Cockney geezer types can have a go at criminal capers, with VR successfully planting you in the seat of a getaway van
SONY PLAYSTATION VR HITS THE STREETS
Major move to get in on totally new consumer sector
Whether climbing through dusty desert tombs or gunning through abandoned Soviet strongholds, Lara Croft’s latest game delivers a worthy addition to the Tomb Raider series. Screengrabs: Shane Dillon
TOMB RAIDER | FROZEN SETTING HELPS TO CREATE A COOL GAME
LARA-KING ABOUT IN SIBERIA YOU know what they say about the best laid plans of mice and men and tech/games editors … I had a piece on virtual reality (VR) in the bag, but a last minute change of plans involving an upcoming extensive look at Sony’s new PlayStation VR headset (see preview, right) meant substituting another player onto the pitch – this review of Rise of the Tomb Raider
(PlayStation 4, Cert 18, c. €60). Eagle-eyed and sharpwitted Gazette readers will recall that this isn’t Lara Croft’s first outing with this game in the Gazette, as she and it previously graced our pages just over a year ago. However, following her year-long sojourn on Microsoft’s impressive XBox One console, that timed exclusivity has now expired, setting Ms Croft (right) free on the PS4.
SHANE DILLON sdillon@dublingazette.com
Not only that, but she’s packed all kinds of extra goodies into her satchel, bringing with her all of the extra downloadable content, additional features and bonus items released on the XBO platform over the past year, creating an ultimate package. As before, the very successful reboot of what had become a tired, stale franchise sees a young Lara choosing to set off on her first proper adventure, with snowbound Siberia playing host to much of her adventure as she chases a McGuffin extraneous plot device, pitting her against Trinity – a group of religious fanatics try-
ing to complete a mission started centuries earlier. Lara runs, climbs, jumps and swims her way through one icy locale after another, constantly on the look-out for loot and items to gradually upgrade her abilities and weapons alike, such that it isn’t too long before she’s more like Rambo Croft, laying waste to the local wildlife and not-so-local bad guys with aplomb. It’s a very pretty game; not quite up there with Uncharted 4 – then again, what is – but it’s quite a looker in its own right, packed once again with the same gradual unlocking of skills and character/weapon upgrading which made her precious adventure so enjoyable. However, it’s the extra content that really puts the icing on this particular frosted cake, with a more than generous amount of features and extra story
beats bolted on to create a subtly different game than before. While these extra features don’t change the core essence of the game, having them all in one neat package elevates it substantially above the XBO original release, helping to validate a return to the game. In extra content, completionists will enjoy nosing around t h e somew h a t dilapidated Croft manor, while a de rigeur zombie mode, of sorts, further ups the ante for Lara’s action credentials as she zips about the family home-
stead, gunning down hordes of the undead. Not terribly ladylike behaviour, perhaps, but worthy of the Croft adventurer name. With its great mix of frantic action and quieter moments, a nicely scripted and believable Lara Croft (courtesy of Rihanna Pratchett’s, daughter of Terry, input as lead writer), great graphics and its comprehensive set of extra material, Lara’s latest has raised the bar yet again for the reinvigorated series.
I POPPED over to a pop-up unit (below) at Dame Lane last week, where Sony were giving punters a hands-on (or should I say, heads-on) look at the PlayStation VR (virtual reality) headset as it hit the retail market. The newly launched PS VR marks Sony’s entry into the burgeoning consumer VR market, which has finally become a tangible, physical reality after decades of delayed promise. I trialled a number of games and visual demos, and while the results were varying, the VR experience just worked, and worked well. Whether riding shotgun in a Cockney crime caper (top), looking all around as I flew a fighter through a debris-littered asteroid field, or ignoring my instinctive desire to grip the bars in a dive cage being attacked by a hungry shark, the PS VR, and unit, worked as well as I’d hoped. With the headset adjusting the image in time with my head movements as I looked about in 360 degrees, I didn’t notice any lag, or delay, in display or input reactions, and the tech was fine to wear and use. As with all early tech, it ain’t cheap – it’s still something of a rich man’s toy, running from €400 to €800, depending on whether you need the base PS4 as well. Still, dedicated gamers and media users are likely to lap it up, with a good year of development ahead sure to grow up some great titles and experiences as developers, and content creators, get to grips with its capabilities. Look out for my more in-depth exploration of the PS VR, and VR in general, soon – it’s virtually assured to go ahead ...
HACK YOUR WAY TO A €5,000 CASH PRIZE
ESB event looking to create energy-efficient solutions CALLING all hackers – ESB is on the hunt for the best and brightest minds in the country to take part in Ireland’s first ever “hackathon”. The Big Eneregy Hack is bringing great minds together for over 48 hours to disrupt, invent and innovate, with the aim of developing solutions for a low-carbon future. Taking place from October 21 to 23 in Dogpatch Labs at Customs House Quay, organisers are on the look out for 150 of the best and brightest minds in Ireland. They are looking for hackers from a diverse range of fields, including IT, innovation, marketing, design, finance and entrepreneurship, to help unearth Smart ideas that could help lower carbon emissions and combat climate change through such initiatives as Smarter energy efficiency in the home, enhancing the eCar experience, and optimising the electricity network. Participants will be tasked with three energy-focused challenges, with cash prizes of €5,000, €3,000 and €2,000 for the most innovative ideas. Hackers with the top ground-breaking creations and concepts will also have the opportunity to bring their ideas to the next level at ESB’s innovation hub, X_Site. Spaces are limited, so would-be hackers and winners should register today at bigenergyhack.ie.
26 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 20 October 2016
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GAZETTE
28 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 20 October 2016
SPORT
FastSport WESLEY TO HOST CONCUSSION SEMINAR: LEINSTER Rugby, in conjunction with the IRFU, will be hosting a series of concussion awareness workshops throughout the coming weeks. All club and school coaches, players, parents and officials are encouraged to attend the workshops which are free of charge. Shane Mooney, the IRFU’s First Aid and Injury Prevention coordinator, hosts all of the workshops which include modules relating to concussion recognition, initial management and return to play protocols followed by a question and answer session. The content has been designed to educate coaches, parents, players and referees on the dangers of concussion and how to recognise it. Old Wesley will host one of the nights on November 30 at 7pm while Ashbourne RFC hosts another one on November 16 at 7.30pm.
BOXING: WEST DUBLIN CLUB HOST BIGGEST WOMEN’S EVENT IN EUROPE
Esker BC hail best ever Cup KARL GRAHAM
sport@dublingazette.com
ESKER Celtic Boxing Club enjoyed yet another hugely successful All Female Box Cup last week with 340 boxers from Ireland, Poland, Canada, Sweden, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom registered to take part at Lucan CBS Sports Hall.
It makes the tournament the biggest femaleonly event in Europe and club secretary Ed Griffin told GazetteSport it was another triumph for the club. “It was brilliant,” he said. “The best one we’ve ever had because there were two international rings in operation. Every county in Ireland was represented and we have
The crowds flocked to Lucan CBS
already had inquiries from a team in South America and a team in Los Angeles about coming next year. “We had girls that have boxed twice at the World Championships for the seniors, European medallists and Irish medallists as well as three Canadian champions and a Swedish champion.” The tournament started four years ago and the rise in stature it has received in such a short space of time has been remarkable. “It is the biggest event in Europe but a guy who was over from Canada asked if it was the biggest in the world because he had never been at an event before where there
Winners in various categories, above, and a Dutch boxer, below, receives advice
were just all females boxing at it. “We started it up four years ago because there was no outlet for female boxing in Dublin whatsoever. You have to rely on Leinster and then go further afield. We set it up just for our own girls initially but then said we might as well grow it because it is a great for the profile of the club,” said Griffin. On a personal note for the club, there was success for both of their
fighters competing. Rebecca Toohey defeated her English opponent to win gold with Shannon Kelly also taking home a gold medal for Esker. Over 1,000 spectators turned up to produce a fantastic atmosphere and Griffin believes that the vast amount of support they have obtained has been invaluable. “We couldn’t have done it without South Dublin County Council, IPB Insurance, and Failte Ireland, as well as all our
other sponsors. I would also like to thank Mick Kelly, Eileen Toohey and Paschal Joyce, and everybody else who helps us out.” Despite this success for the club, they still have no permanent facilities to box out of but they are working closely with the council to remedy the situation as soon as possible so they can concentrate on taking their tournament – and their other training groups – to even loftier heights.
Railway men fluff their lines in EY Hockey League sport@dublingazette.com
Railway Union’s Mark English tackles Cork C of I’s Alex Burns. Picture: Adrian Boehm
RAILWAY Union’s men’s and women’s hockey teams had wildly contrasting fortunes as the former fell 6-2 to Cork C of I in the EY Hockey League while the women advance with a massive 7-0 Irish Senior Cup win over reigning champions Ulster Elks. For the men, the Sandymount side had opened brightly forcing two short corners without success as they welcomed back Mark English, Kenny Carroll and Fergal Keaveney. But the in-form Cork outfit
soon got on top with Stephen Sweetnam banging home a corner shot. One became two in the second quarter from turnover ball with Stephen Parker slapping into the roof of the net. C of I were beginning to dominate in midfield and their pressure led to a penalty stroke, given for a deliberate back-stick in the circle, which Olympian John Jermyn put away. Railway did get one back with their first meaningful attack of the second quarter with English scoring a low drag-flick into the
corner for 3-1 at the break. They got further into the tie in the third quarter with Richard Forrest’s left post shot going across the face of goal before English scored again from a corner. But a second goal each from Jermyn and Sweetnam stretched out a 5-2 lead. Jermyn was subsequently given his marching orders for a second yellow card. Despite their numerical disadvantage, C of I continued to aggressively pounce on Railway loose ball, Julian Dale scoring on 66 minutes to complete the rout. On the women’s side, big
scores were the order of the day. For the Ulster Elks, their twoyear reign came to an end in ignominious fashion, falling 7-0 on home turf to Railway Union. Niamh Carey and Emma Smyth both scored doubles while Cecelia Joyce, Zara Delany and Sinead Dooley all on the mark. Hermes-Monkstown were 5-0 winners over Corinthian in a Dublin derby with Chloe Watkins scoring a brace. Loreto won 4-1 at Dungannon while Evie McCullough scored the only goal for Trinity as they saw off Lisnagarvey.
20 October 2016 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 29
GAZETTE
Gavin’s 5,300-strong Ark brings hope to east Africa Dublin manager travels to Rwanda for a very special Bothar project just days after guiding Dublin to a third All-Ireland senior football championship title under his stewardship JAMES HENDICOTT
sport@dublingazette.com
FRESH from leading Dublin to their second consecutive All-Ireland title, manager Jim Gavin curtailed celebrations in order to accompany 5,300 farm animals to Rwanda on behalf of charity Bothar. It is part of the charity’s work in the country, particularly in helping the victims of the 1994 Rwandan genocide which still hovers over many aspects of life. Gavin left just 11 days after securing his third All-Ireland title in charge of the boys in blue, flying out of Shannon to the poverty-stricken, land-locked east African country after collecting the livestock in Tipperary and Clare.
T h e t r i p b r o ke a record as the largest delivery of multi-species cargo ever to take place. Gavin - who works in the aviation sector when he’s not working with the county side – said: “I’ve been fortunate to have flown around the world but this is a unique experience.” Bothar has long specialised in sending dairy cows, goats and other livestock out to some of the poorest parts of Africa in order to create sustainable farming conditions and help families out of poverty. “ Tr a n s p o r t i n g 41 tonnes of quality Irish livestock through the night from Ireland to deepest Africa, including a fuelling stop in Cairo, was unprecedented for me,” Gavin said of the
Jim Gavin with some of the pigs he transported to Rwanda
trip. “Most important was knowing at the end of it we were bringing this precious cargo, donated by Irish farmers and other Bothar supporters, to change the lives of almost 800 of the world’s poorest people.” Gavin told the charity’s blog of his experiences, explaining some of the mechanisms and going into details about the delivery. “The Bothar Ark carrying the animals is a very special 25th anniversary airlift of 37 incalf heifers, three bulls for the Rwandan government’s National Bovine Breeding Scheme, 260 pigs, 100 goats and 5,000 chicks,” he added. “Also on board were 5,000 doses of bovine semen for the Rwandan
Breeding Programme run by Bothar’s sister agency Heifer International.” Gavin went on to talk about his personal connections to the mission, including some of the farmers who have donated, before outlining the financial scale of the offering. “All in all, the cargo
explained. Rwanda suffered the worst genocide since the holocaust 22 years ago, when Gavin was still turning out for the boys in blue. The country’s population of 12 million was decimated, with the genocide having aimed to wipe out the Tutsis from the population. Many of the animals
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‘There were many widows... one who only got her husband’s torso to bury’ Jim Gavin
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is worth just short of €350,000,” he explained. “It’s essentially a donation by the people of Ireland to what are among the poorest people in the world, and most of them have been affected by genocide.” As well as delivering the thousands of animals to Rwanda, Gavin has also met with widows of the genocide during his trip. The Dublin boss had written to Bothar to offer his support earlier this year, and after being invited to join the 25th anniversary trip, said that the end of his journey was particularly important to him. “Local volunteers could be heard chopping up elephant grass for the animals when we arrived. I’m assured they’ll be treated like a family member,” he
delivered on the trip went directly to families impacted on by the events of 1994. “There were many genoicide victims, and one story was as tragic as the next,” Gavin said of the trip. “There were many widows, like a mother whose five children and her husband was butchered in the bloodlust. She only got her husband’s torso to bury, but none of her children’s remains were returned.” “We also heard stories of hope,” he continued, “thanks in no small part to NGOs like Bothar who have given these genocide widows hope and enabled them to put their lives back together as best they can in these tragic circumstances.” You can follow Gavin’s Rwandan experience online at Bothar.ie.
FASTSport
Parkrun going strong for runners of all ages FREE, volunteer-led and tailored to all comers, Marlay Park’s parkrun – and the broader parkrun concept – is going from strength to strength as it draws on its community and invites everyone to get involved. The weekly Saturday-morning jaunt is a timed run across five kilometres and typically attracts 450 to 500 runners, ranging from competitive club runners to joggers in their 80s and parents pushing buggys. “We’ll stay until the very last person crosses the line,” organiser Liam McCambridge explains of the concept. “It’s important that parkrun is a timed run, rather than a race. It’s about running against yourself. Of the people who turn up every Sunday, probably about one third are first timers. “Another third are occasional runners, and we have a final third who will be there at very nearly every run, and have made it a part of their weekend.” Originally from County Antrim, McCambridge helped set up the Marlay Park edition of parkrun – Ireland’s largest – after seeing the success of the concept in Malahide. Having originated in Bushy Park, London, the event has grown rapidly in Ireland, with 56 separate parkruns now taking place regularly in the Republic. In the early days, though, running the event on a weekly basis required plenty of persuasion. Runners are encouraged to volunteer at one of every 10 events, rather than actually run, though McCambridge says that some enjoy the volunteering aspect so much that they never actually run the route themselves. “It was a little difficult to set up,” McCambridge admits. “You need permission of the landlord and the set up costs are around €7,000; parkrun contributes half of that. “Dun Laoghaire Rathdown County Council, who own Marlay Park, were a little apprehensive at first, and after a few discussions, gave us permission for a few months. They also gave us the half of the funds we had to raise. It proved popular, and the feedback was excellent, so it wasn’t difficult to extend the time after that.” If you’d like to take part in parkrun, you can find further information or sign up at parkrun.ie/ marlay.
GAZETTE
30 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 20 October 2016
SPORT
FASTSport
SOCCER: IRELAND UNDER-17S THROUGH TO NEXT UEFA PHASE
Kilbogget welcomes over 1,000 for DLR 5k KILBOGGET Park hosted another successful Core Credit Union dlr Community 5K, a key part of the County’s Festival of Inclusion. 1,200 participants took part including hundreds of families, runners, walkers, school groups and those out to have a great time while getting active in a wonderful local park. After a warm-up taken by Ryan from dlr Leisure, An Cathaoirleach, Cllr Cormac Devlin, officially welcomed everyone and started the event. Once the hooter sounded participants ran, jogged, rolled, pushed or walked the 5k course to the finish line. Everyone received an event t-shirt and refreshments with the kids also sporting an event medal for their hard work. The Core Credit Union dlr Community 5K is organised by a committee made up of members from: dlr Sports Partnership, the County Councils Social Inclusion Unit and Community Department, the HSE’s Health Promotion Unit, Cabinteely Athletics and Soccer Clubs as well as the Core Credit Union. In addition, the support from An Garda Síochána, Dublin Civil Defence and the Councils Parks Department for this event every year is invaluable and helps ensure the safety of all the participants. Devlin said: “it was great to see the different range of ages and fitness levels taking part again in the eighth year of this event. It is a wonderful example of community integration and a great way to kick off the Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown Festival of Inclusion.” Funding for this event was provided by Core Credit Union, Dun Laoghaire Rathdown County Council and the HSE Health Promotion Unit. Shane McArdle, co-ordinator with Dún Laoghaire Rathdown Sports Partnership, added: “This event has gone from strength to strength both in terms of participants and also how it engages the local community. “It’s a shining example of how local agencies can work together to create and role out a participation event for all.”
The Republic of Ireland Under-17s have advanced to the elite qualifying phase of the UEFA championships.
Joeys five in Euro success
U-17 QUALIFIERS
sport@dublingazette.com
THERE were five more reasons for St Joseph’s Boys to be proud as a quintet of their former players represented Ireland as they began their journey to qualify for the UEFA Under-17 Championship in Croatia next year. Aaron Bolger, Brandon Kavanagh, Calum Thompson, Dom Peppard and Tom Murphy all pulled on the green jersey in the team’s 3-1 win over Kazakhstan on Monday that ensures their qualification for the elite group stage.
The top two teams from each group, as well as five third-placed teams, make it through to the elite group taking place during the Spring of next year. From there, the group winners and seven best runners-up progress to the main championship. Bolger, Peppard and Thompson all started the game, while Kavanagh and Murphy provided backup on the bench. There was little action of note in a tight first half but whatever Colin O’Brien said to his time at the break obviously worked because they came flying out of the
RACISM’S RED CARD Dundrum girls welcome allcomers to their club DUNDRUM Football Club’s girls’ awareness
of racism day held last Sunday as part of their ethos to welcome boys and girls from all ages, no matter where they come from or what they look like. The initiative promotes sportsmanship between teams by shaking hands and exchanging bracelets before their match. The event “was a very enjoyable day as all the girls were great. I feel they all learned something thanks to this great initiative,” said child protection officer Mandy Lowe.
traps to take the lead after four minutes. It came from the boot of Aaron Connolly after Rowan Roache found space in the centre of the park and managed to pick out Connolly on the left wing. The winger cut inside his man before unleashing a ferocious shot that went in off the underside of the crossbar. Ireland doubled their advantage five minutes later as Roache swung in a corner that was headed home by Adam Idah, but the Kazakhs pulled one back within a minute of the restart. K a z a k h s t a n we r e reduced to ten men after
a late challenge on Connolly saw the Kazakh pick up his second yellow card with an hour on the clock and as the rest of the game petered out, Ireland secured the win from the penalty spot. It was the influential Connolly that was once more at the heart of the action as he was taken down in the box, with Idah the man who stepped up to put the game beyond doubt. Two days earlier Ireland opened their campaign with a 5-1 victory of Andorra, with Bolger, Peppard and Thompson also starting that game. Ireland took the lead
just before the break through a strike from Blackpool starlet Roache. The team were moving the ball well and after dominating the opening exchanges of the second half, the floodgates began to open. Peppard settled any lingering nerves when he made it 2-0 in the 53rd minute, before Roache, Idah and substitute Connolly all netted. Ireland will play their final group game against a Greece team who have also won their opening two games but sit behind the Irish on goal difference, as both sides look to secure top spot.
20 October 2016 DUN LAOGHAIRE GAZETTE 31
GAZETTE
CAMOGIE QUEENS
Kilmacud land Senior 3 title after epic replay
CLUB NOTICEBOARD CUALA
KILMACUD Crokes claimed the Dublin
Senior 3 camogie championship title at the second attempt as they saw off Faughs/ Celtic 3-7 to 1-11 in the replay last weekend at O’Toole Park. It was fast, competitive, exciting, skilful tie, played out in front of large support for both sides with Kilmacud eventually winning out, earning a place in the Leinster intermediate championship.
WELL done to the Cuala senior hurlers
on Sunday after a fantastic match
on beating Lucan Sarsfields 0-13 to 0-7
against St Maur’s, Rush. Final score
in the Dublin senior hurling champion-
was 4-7 to 2-9.
ship semi-final last Saturday. They will
Congratulations to our 2003 boys
now face Kilmacud Crokes in the final
who secured promotion to Division 2
on October 29.
hurling for 2017 on Saturday.
Hard luck to our adult camogie team
Well done to our U-15A girls who
who lost out to a strong St Pat’s side in
beat Thomas Davis by a single point to
the Adult 4 championship final. Thanks
become Division 1 football champions
to the big crowd who came out to sup-
for an amazing third year in a row.
HURLING: TREACY’S FREE ACCURACY PROVES VITAL
Good luck to the senior footballers
ball team, a combination of U-15 and
in the B championship quarter-final
U-14 girls, who lost their championship
against Naomh Olaf next Sunday at
final on Saturday by two points after
3pm in Pairc Ui Bhrian.
extra time.
Eight members of Cuala graduated
Well done to our U-14 hurlers on win-
from NUI Galway on Saturday follow-
ning the Division 2 title by beating ER/
ing their successful completion of
Plunketts 7-6 to 0-10 on Satruday and
the Dermot Early Youth Leadership
securing Division 1 status for 2017.
Programme. In the audience to wit-
This week’s Cuala development
ness the receipt of parchment by the
fund lotto jackpot is a massive €8,000.
guys was the late Dermot’s wife Mary
Our lucky dip winners last week were
and daughter Ann Marie. It was a very
Gerry Comerford and Edel Boland.
proud day for all involved.
Buy your tickets online at http://www.
The U-14 girls won their shield final
SHANKILL
Darragh O’Connell on the attack for Cuala
Cuala battle by huge Lucan defensive show
SHC SEMI-FINAL Cuala 0-13 Lucan Sarsfields 0-7 sport@dublingazette.com
DARRAGH O’Connell said it doesn’t matter if “it’s a one-point win or a 10-point win” but just that his side had made it through to the county final with a chance to retain the senior hurling championship. The Dalkey men will now face K ilmacud Crokes in an all-southside decider in Parnell Park on Saturday, October 29 (3pm) with the winners progressing to face the Laois champi-
ons on Sunday, November 6, also in Parnell Park. There was never much between the sides in a low-scoring battle that failed to live up to its billing with Cuala guaranteeing themselves victor y with scores down the final straight from David Treacy (two frees), Sean Moran and Dublin senior footballer Con O’Callaghan. For O’Connell, he said: “It was a tough game but semi-finals are there to be won and we are back in a final which is where we want to be. “They brought a great
Hard luck to the U-15B ladies foot-
port the girls.
intensity to it and are a big, physical team who are very good at the back and make it very hard for us to play. “We found it hard to break them down but knew if we kept plugging away, we would get the scores to see us through. “You have to keep on looking for new ways to improve and we will have to knuckle down again to find the little improvements which will help along the way. “It doesn’t matter if it’s a one-point win or a ten-point win. We are back in a county final and where we want to
be.” David Treacy was the scorer-in-chief with his eight points from placed balls and one from play central to his side’s victory while their defence, in particular the impressive Cian O’Callaghan, remained resolute throughout. Cuala led 0-6 to 0-3 after a lacklustre opening half with Treacy on the mark on five occasions with Nicky Kenny getting their other score while Kevin O’Reilly was accurate with two frees for Lucan with Chris Crummey adding the third for Sarsfields.
cualagaa.ie/lotto.
THE results of last week’s lotto draw,
sored by O’Donnell’s Pharmacy,
which is sponsored by Slimming World,
Shankill, is in action every Saturday
Shankill, saw 3, 16, 23 and 25 drawn; the
morning at 10am in Shanganagh Cas-
jackpot was not won. Lucky dip win-
tle.
ners were Katie Morgan, Eileen and
If you would like your child to join
Brian Kennedy and Martin McBrien.
the academy, just come along any
Next week’s jackpot is €800 and the
Saturday morning or contact us by
draw will be on Thursday evening in
telephone or by e-mail at the address
Brady’s.
below. There are no team trials, no
Well, Saturday was defintely a
grading of children and no annual sub-
game of two halves as the morning
scription; just €2 per child while having
was a complete washout while, in
great fun with your friends.
the afternoon, the U-12 girls football
Our U-14 boys football team are
team played Newtownmountkennedy
looking for extra players for next sea-
in brilliant sunshine. It was a tough
son to enlarge their panel as the team
and very sporting match with great
steps up to the 15-a-side game. Every-
scores and plenty of excitement.
one gets a game, there is no sitting on
On Sunday morning, the U-8 girls travelled to Kilmacud Crokes for a
the bench with these guys; call Gabriel on 085 7254897. For more information on the club,
blitz. The Wednesday night training is
contact secretary.shankill.dublin@
moving indoors at various locations;
gaa.ie or 086 4010438. Follow us on
check with your team manager for
Facebook and Twitter. Join Shankill
details. Our juvenile academy, spon-
GAA Club. Your community…Your Club.
FOXROCK CABINTEELY CONGRATULAIONS to our senior team
the Leinster Final. Thanks also to the
who had a very hard fought win over
Gaelic 4 Mothers players who looked
Mountmellic Sarsfields of Laois in the
after the catering on Sunday.
semi-final of the Leinster ladies senior championship on Sunday last. The final score was FoxrockCabinteely 4-13 Mountmellick Sars-
Commiserations to our Minor B, U-14 and U-13 panels who were defeated in their respective championship finals over the weekend.
fields 3-9. The final will be the weekend
The U-13 game against Ballyboden
of November 6/7 and the opponents
went to extra time and the U-14 game
will be St Lawrence’s from Kildare.
against Ballinteer St John’s actually
Many thanks to all the supporters
went to a sudden death kick-off. Well
who were present on Sunday and we
done though to all players and man-
look forward to seeing you all again at
agement for making it through.
GAZETTESPORT ALL OF YOUR DUN LAOGHAIRE SPORTS COVERAGE FROM PAGE 28-31
FINAL HURDLE: Cuala back in the county decider as hurlers grind their way past Lucan Sarsfields P31
OCTOBER 20-26, 2016
JIM GAVIN’S BOTHAR ARK: Dublin boss embarks on unique Rwanda mission P29
Foxrock Cabinteely celebrate their Dublin ladies football senior championship success. Picture: Peter Hickey/GAApics.com
Foxes raising the bar Ring and his Foxrock Cabinteely side on the verge of yet another special success as they set their sights on Leinster senior championship final
KARL GRAHAM
sport@dublingazette.com
FOXROCK Cabinteely kept their brilliant run of form rolling as they beat Sarsfields of Laois 4-13 to 3-9 in the semi-final of the Leinster ladies senior football championship. They will now take on Kildare side St Laurence’s in the final as they look to match their achievements of last year and secure a county and provincial championship double. Manager Pat Ring spoke to GazetteSport about his side’s win and performances this season. “We are absolutely delighted and very relieved because we knew going into the game it was
going to be a tough one. Sarsfields, over the last number of years, won five out of the last six Laois championships and two of the last four Leinster championships so we knew what we were up against having beaten them in last year’s final. “The girls really were up for it and we were by far the better team on the day.” Ring is now expecting another tough challenge when they take to the field on the weekend of November 6 for the final against St Laurence’s in Kinnegad. “We saw them playing in their county final a couple of weeks back and they are formidable. They have a huge amount of current and former Kildare senior intercounty players and a very strong management team.”
Foxrock Cabinteely had a tough start to the season with injuries but the underage players they called up stepped up to the plate and did their club proud and they have scarcely looked back. “It has been marvellous considering that at the start of the season we had a number of injuries. We played our first league match in Dublin during the first week of April and were short 11 players so we had to bring players up from underage level. “It is difficult going playing one of the top teams in Dublin without 11 of your key players but those injuries had cleared up by the middle of June and since then we have been more or less injury free,” said Ring.
When asked if teams had raised their games against his team this season because of last year, Ring was quick to agree. “They did. Last year in Leinster, we came in under the radar a little bit having not done well in Dublin since winning in 2012. Having gone to the semi-final of the All-Ireland last year, you can’t come in under the radar anymore with that so teams inside and outside Dublin all raised their game. “We looked at it as a bit of a compliment because we feel we have brought an awful lot to ladies football over the last four or five years. We’ve raised the bar and, before us, Na Fianna raised the bar; before them it was Ballyboden St Enda’s.”