Rach & Dan's Irish Blog

We're in Ireland... To Be Sure!

Saturday, October 21, 2006

Perth, Cork, Oxford, Dublin & Venice!!!

Its been a while... but here's why!

After returning to Perth for Eric & Helen's wedding, we came home to Ireland and just two weekends later we were in Oxford for Andrew and Anna's wedding! It was a lovely weekend and wedding and it was great to be able to enjoy a wedding with friends and wander around Oxford.

The very next weekend we went to Dublin to meet up with Tam and Steve who were visiting friends. As chance would have it, the AFL Final was on that weekend and we all stood in a Pub full of Aussies watching the game (although we already knew the score, it didn't detract from the excitement!) We had a lovely time in Dublin and got to see pretty much everything worth seeing!

Last week Rachel had a conference in Venice so it sounded like a good excuse to get over there and have a break afterwards! I headed over on the weekend, stopping in London to visit Shaun (thanks for having me over mate, the breakfast at Paul's French Bakery was awesome!)




Venice was just amazing, so beautiful and the weather was glorious. Not a cloud for 3 days (even more for Rach!) made a nice change from Ireland! We spent a whole day on the island wandering over bridges and getting ourselves lost to take it all in.

We spent another whole day just shopping and enjoying the World's Best Coffee! We imported a LOT back home but its just not the same!



After a long hard day of not doing much at all we worked up a thirst for good coffee and wine!

We spotted this rather hilarious Uber-Tourist in Venice who looked like a relic from a German Parachuting Troupe or an escapee from the 1980's German Olympic Squad! We figured Venice was too low for base-jumping so we ruled that out!

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

How Slack! First post in Weeks!

Oh boy have I been slack with the Blog updates! Well I do have a good excuse! With both of us working now and with commuting to work we’ve not had a lot of time. Ok, it’s a lame excuse but we’ll be sure to update it more frequently now.

Since our last post, we had another visitor in the form of Nicola Rothery who came from London for the weekend before heading up to Dublin for work. It was great to have Nic with us but the weather wasn’t the best for the day we had the touring planned. Nevertheless we had a lovely dinner out and consumed far too much wine. I have a flashback memory of the three of us walking home hand in hand singing Men at Work’s “I come from a land down under” among other cheesie tunes. Yes, we’ve become the annoying Australians!

Even more se we had our first BBQ at a friends house. It was raining and we were watching the semis of the World Cup Soccer, and BBQ’ing inside! Hilarious!

Given that I work a bit of a way from Cork, we bought a little car affectionately referred to as OOKY (thanks to the licence plate) so we are much more mobile now and looking forward to heading to Glengarriff on the long weekend for Sea Kayaking which should be great!

We’ve also moved house, which is another good excuse for not blogging more! We decided to move from Cork up to Mallow, about 30k North of Cork. Its pretty much central for both of our workplaces. I kind of miss being close in Cork but the traffic is murder so its better to be in one of the commuter towns as they call them. There is a major train station too so we can get anywhere we need if we want to catch the train, and are also closer to Shannon Airport where a lot of the flights around Europe and to the US depart from. We’re still to actually go abroad yet!

We’ll try and keep this more up to date now!

Dan & Rach

Wednesday, June 07, 2006

Long Weekend!

With a long weekend in Ireland just like at home, we decided to do some more exploring as well as plenty of sit-n-sog time to recharge the batteries!

We took in a few movies of the last few days, having seen The Da Vinci Code, X-Men III and also a DVD of Pirates of the Caribbean (which Rach hadn't seen, and now the sequels are coming out!). I think the critics have been harsh on The Da Vinci Code, if it hadn't been such a widely read book, would they have been so critical? I think not. Rachel's comment however was that it is unlikely to win a wardrobe Oscar as they wore the same clothes throughout the entire film!

The other films were great too and provided some much needed mental tune-out time for us both. On the weekend we also headed out to Cobh (Pronounced Cove!) which was supposed to have lovely little beaches for us to enjoy the hot weather (No, really, it actually IS hot and sunny here and has been for almost a week!) but when we asked a local where the beaches were she responded with "Benches?" I said no, "Beaches, sandy beaches!" and she laughed! They are about a 30 minute drive away, and given the train trip had taken that long to get us to Cobh in the first place, we decided against it... Cobh is famous for having been the last port of call of the ill faited Titanic. We followed the map pointing to where the Memorial was supposed to be and stood around confused as we seemed to be right on the spot! Then we realised we were... literally standing on this little plaque. Right.

Sunday saw an exceptionally long walk due to my navigational skills (or lack thereof). I suggested it was more a scenic route. The walk took us to the Blackrock Castle, a very small but still somewhat impressive castle which would make a great scene for a themed wedding! It was well worth it though. Being so hot here, it is hilarious to see the locals... as soon as the sun comes out they take off indecent amounts of clothing and expose terrible pale skin, which the next day is a shoking pink/red! We even burned a tiny bit!

On Monday we headed to the Cork Butter Museum. At this point you might be thinking there isn't much to do here, it is actually quite cool. It shows the importance of the Dairy industry to Ireland and also the history of butter making. Any friend who decides to visit must come here and view the entirely inapporpriate video of how butter is made.* I will add that this was perhaps the funniest few minutes of video I have seen in a very long time!

Photos to come soon!

* Email me for details :-D

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Old Midelton Distillery


One of the highlights of the weekend for me was the tour of the Old Midelton Distillery in Midelton, where Jameson's Irish Whisky* is Distilled. The tour begins with a short movie about the history and the impact that Prohibition in the states had on the industry in Ireland, which was facinating. Next we were taken through each of the stages of production, right from grain delivery to finished product.

The "Tasting Plate" Another round please!

Sniff Sniff... Smells GOOD!

Bottoms up!


At the end of the tour, the group was asked for some volunteers, and I didn't so much volunteer as hurl myself at the guide... I was "selected" (I say selected loosly because I think at this stage I was holding the leg of the tour leader and refusing to let go...) to taste a series of different Irish, Scottish and Amercian Whiskies (Bourbon Whisky - made with corn rather than barley) in a sort of tasting session, followed at the end with a full glass of my preferred tipple! I even got a "Special Certificate" that verifies me as a Certified Irish Whisky Taster! Apart from the different ingredients, bourbon is only distilled once, Scotch is distilled twice and Irish whisky is triple distilled, to be sure, tobe shore, tobeshuurrrr...

*Whisky, Whiskey... Either spelling is acceptable. What isn't though is confusing Irish Whisky with Scotch! The processes are very different, with Scotch's main ingredients being smoked Barley and Malt, whereas Irish Whisky Barley and Malt (Malted Barley) dried using odourless anthracite as a heat source! See! I did learn something! To be sure!

Irelands most South-Westerly point?!


The weekend rolled around and we decided to up-stakes and go exploring again! This time we decided to head out to Bantry, which according to the tour books is the site of a lovely Historical house, built arond 1700, with impressive gardens and a good place for tea with scones! The area, Bantry Bay was also the location of a failed French landing in 1796. A little museum had some parts of one of the scuttled French vessels and an old canon which was recovered in the early 1980's. The gardens were also great and made a good spot for some photos!


After the tour of the Bantry Gardens we headed out to Mizen Head, the most South-Westerly point of Ireland. There was much debate about what it really means to be the "Most South Westerly Point"... Not the most Westerly, not the Most Southerly... Umm... So? Still, the view was impressive and watching the weather roll in was really great!

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Makeup...Like

Two things today... The first is Makeup. I think the best way to make money in Cork is to sell makeup! It seems the reason the shops don't open up until around 9:30 or 10:00 is that all the girls need to spend hours putting on tonnes of makeup! This morning I was having a coffee waiting for the library to open and a girl wearing more makeup than a Klingon from an episode of Star Trek walked passed! This is actually the norm! I walked passed the Cinema and there was an advance screening of X-Men III and I thought people had dressed up in the outfits and done their makeup like that of the X-Men, but no, they were just walking by on their way to work... Like.

Which takes me to the second bit. The Cork Irish use the word "like" at the end of almost every sentence! Its very confusing because you are expecting something to follow. For example, when you order a coffee you will be asked "Do you want sugar like?" Umm... Like what? The McDonalds (refer the previous post!) advertising campaign at home was "I'm lovin' it" Well, without a word of a lie, in Ireland the posters say "I'm loving it, like" I think it was just that they didn't know how to pronouce a "full stop" so they decided to say "Like" instead! Just for the record, one more advertising campaign is the Murphy's Irish Stout advert, which is "Smooth, Like." Interesting.

One other turn of phrase here which gets used in every second sentence is "Well to be honest, like" which means "I'm about to tell you a fib but you're supposed to let me off the hook".

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

The cost of McLiving in Ireland

All of the guide books like the Lonely Planet and so forth say that Ireland is one of the more expensive places to live in the EU, not quite like London, but on its way. They say one of the best ways to work out the cost of living is to use the BigMac as a relative guide.

According to sources in Perth, a BigMac costs around $3.80. Well in Cork it costs around E3.40, which works out to AU$5.80! On the face of it that sounds expensive (and it is!) and a good reason not to eat McDonald's, but the truth is its a tax on the people who eat Fast Food! There is a movement in Cork called the "Slow Food Movement" which is a return to appreciating cooking and eating. For that same E3.40, you can buy 1.5kg of fresh chicken or 2 dozen fresh eggs!

In Ireland there is a 21% VAT on goods, much like the GST at home (only BIGGER!) so fresh food is a fair bit cheaper then it may first appear.

We have had to make some changes to our lives over here, not having a car and having to carry everything we buy back home has made us shop smarter. One very good thing the Irish have here is on every price tag in the shops, they not only have the price, but the cost per unit weight, so you can compare everything (apples with apples so to speak!) Something that would be good at home!

Monday, May 22, 2006

Kinsale

Sunday Morning - We decided to head to Kinsale, the lovely little village south of Cork on the coast. It is the home of fine Irish dining according to the tour book and has been graced with the presence of such notables as Rick Stein on his Seafood Feast Tour. There is a magnificent 17th Century Fort watching over the bay, and the town plays host to some international sailing events in the bay.


Judging by the number of Porsches, Ferrari's and the occasional Bentley with UK plates, it seems it is the playground for wealthy Poms on holiday!

We toured around the Fort and visited a very old Church, first built in the 12th Century on the site of a Norman church from the 7th Century... amazing history that's for sure!


After sampling the local fair, we found on a pub in the main street a "Boutique Beer List" of foreign fine ales which they served... among them was Victoria Bitter! It described it as having a strong mid pallette with fruity overtones and a fine bitter finish for the most discerning Lager drinker... I must have missed that as I shotgunned them down at uni in my mis-spent youth! Hilarious! Even funnier still was the price... E4.60, or about AU$7.80 a pint!

Smoking...

It seems the Irish national passtime is not drinking Guinness, Murphy's or Beamish, it is in fact smoking. Since smoking was banned inside (including pubs and clubs!) the smokers have moved out onto the streets in a silent smoky protest. In order to get into our out of anywhere (and I mean ANWHERE!) you have to brave a wall of tobacco! Now, I know its a bit of a bug bear of mine and I do go on, but I just think smoking is anti-social, especially when 10 people are crammed into a tiny bus shelter away from the rain and someone decides to light up...

Tracky-Dacks!

The fashion in Cork has an interesting element. There seem to be oodles of lovely dresses on display in the windows of the fashion outlets, but no evidence of the same clothes inside! Instead you are greeted with pastel coloured tracksuits-a-plenty! We thought after our first few weeks that the number of bright pastel pink or yellow tracksuit wearing girls were the exception, but it seems they are the norm!

To wear a two piece matched fluro tracksuit takes a certain kind of person, normally wearing ugg-boots to finish off the "oops, did I forget to get dressed before I left the house again!" look. Now the reason the lovely clothes in the windows don't feature inside is its just too damn cold and wet! Well, we decided to join the masses and buy tracksuits, but only for lazing around at home! For now...