Tír na mBláth
Irish Seisiún Newsletter
Thanks to our past editors - Mary Gallacher and Bill Padden Editor Tommy Mac Today's date and new proverb Monday, June 15, 2026

This Week’s Session 2

Tom,

   Much to Ronan’s delight, there were kids everywhere this week in the pub. Evidently, there was a birthday party going on, and so kids were flying off the walls and for a while Finnegans looked for the most part, like a Chucky Cheese Factory thingamajigy.
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That is, except for the roaring reels and jigs emanating from the back corner, where we usually are on a Sunday session. We had a nice meet-up today, a couple of occasional visitors showed up (Rex and Jeff) to add to the mix, and a mighty time was had by all.
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On fiddle were Bob, Art, Seamus, Rex, and Jeff, Randy on Bouzouki, Rosemarie on Whistles and flute, Grace on Accordion, Seamus on bodhran, and Seth on Guitar. Randy sang a couple of songs; likewise, Seth sang one too, thanks for that!
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Some of the tunes were: Down the Broom, Gatehouse Maid / Calliope House, Black Rogue, Rambling Pitchfork / trip to Parlement, Torn Jacket / Lisnagun, Anthony Frawley’s / Haunted House, My Darling Asleep, Old Favorite / Milky Way, Crock of Gold, Green Mountain / Garagh’s Wedding, Fig for a Kiss, Farewell to Whalley Range / Sally Gardens, Black Haired Lass, Bucks of Oranmore / Tarbolton reel, Longford Collector, Sailors Bonnet / Ryan’s slip jig, Little Drops of Brandy, Foxhunt slip jig / Banshee, Maid behind the Bar, Sligo Maid / Christmas Eve, Killavil Reel, Boys of Ballisodare / Trip to Birmingham, Tim Maloney’s / Lakes of Sligo, the Gurteen Cross, Port Lairge / Garret Barry’s Jig, Michael Hyne’s jig, Boys of the Town and finishing off with Lark in the Morning, Connaughtman’s Ramble and Larry O’Gaffes, naturally.
    Bob Murphy
Thanks to Bob and Art for the photos below
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Click any image below to enlarge

Special Treat

Tommy Mac playing (and trying to keep up)

at St. Stephan’s Green Irish Pub

in Spring Lake, New Jersey, in 2012

Click below to watch and click the back arrow to return


Find out what’s happening at Tim Finnegan’s this month.

 

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Click here to view calendar

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Finnegan’s supports us…Let’s support them!


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“That’s How I Spell Ireland”

Saturdays at 7 to 8 PM EST.

You can listen on 88.7FM or WRHU.org.

For a request please text me on 917 699-4768.Kevin and Joan Westley

Note: Show will be preempted whenever the NY Islanders have a Saturday game

Old Ireland

Irish Cricket players 1800s

Recent Mail

Travel in Ireland

FAVOURITE PLACES IN IRELAND


Rockfleet Castle, County Mayo. (See it on a map here.)

Carraigahowley Castle (which translates as “rock of the fleet”) is best known as the home and operations base for the “pirate queen of Connacht”, Grace O’Malley.

We share more about the castle in this article – check out this aerial video of the castle and area as well.

And if you have any connections to Mayo, I know you love the Saw Doctors, and I’m loving listening to this one at the minute.

Irish Language

Tír gan Teanga, Tír gan Anam:
A land without a language is a land without a soul.

Submitted by our own

Anita

Dia duit Tom. Ta suil agam go bhfuil tu go maith!
Now we’re into the full swing of summertime, I thought it would be nice to revisit this famous tune, which references the coming of summer.
 
Sin e inniu. (That’s for you Bob!) Slan go foill.
Anita
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What is your favorite seanfhocal?
Let me know, and I’ll write about it next week!

[email protected]

Free Irish Classes

The classes are over zoom and are held at 12:00 eastern time the 1 st Sunday of every month.

It is basic conversational Irish and open to learners of all ages, especially beginners.

All are invited.

Hope to see you there!

slan go foill. Le dea ghui,

Anita

click here to register

Travel Quiz

Can you identify this site 

and its location in Ireland

Send your guess to Tommy Mac at [email protected]

Answer in Next Week’s Newsletter

Last week’s answer

Kinbane Castle

Antrim

This week’s Irish Recipe

Planning a picnic!

How’s about you make it Irish with these delicious recipes

Traditional Irish picnic foods and delightful recipes to make summer picnics in Ireland truly special.

Get outside, plan a picnic and bring some of these delicious Irish picnic foods with you.

Get outside, plan a picnic and bring some of these delicious Irish picnic foods with you. Getty

 

These traditional Irish picnic foods will satisfy your taste buds and nourish your soul. So, gather your loved ones, pack your picnic basket, and embark on a delightful journey celebrating the beauty of Ireland’s summertime.

While Ireland’s weather doesn’t always cooperate, this summer has been on the whole delightful so far. If you’re lucky enough to be heading out into the countryside this weekend or even your local park why not make an afternoon of it and pack a picnic?

Here, we will delve into the world of traditional Irish picnic foods, share delightful recipes, and provide insights into what essentials to pack for a perfect Irish picnic.

Soda bread sandwiches

 

Irish soda bread.

 

Soda bread, a staple in Irish cuisine, takes center stage in the form of hearty sandwiches for picnics. These sandwiches feature a variety of fillings, from classic ham and cheese to smoked salmon and cucumber. The dense, slightly sweet soda bread complements the fillings perfectly.
Recipe:

Ingredients:

– 2 cups all-purpose flour
– 1 teaspoon baking soda
– 1/2 teaspoon salt
– 1 cup buttermilk
–  Fillings of your choice (e.g., ham, cheese, smoked salmon, lettuce, cucumber)

Method:

Preheat the oven to 400°F (200°C) and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.

In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, and salt.

Gradually add the buttermilk, mixing until a soft dough forms.

Turn the dough out onto a floured surface and knead lightly.

Shape the dough into a round loaf and place it on the prepared baking sheet.

Bake for 35-40 minutes or until the loaf sounds hollow when tapped on the bottom.

Allow the bread to cool completely before slicing it into thick slices for sandwiches.

Fill the sandwiches with your desired ingredients and pack them for your picnic.

Egg sandwiches

 

Egg sandwiches.

 

A staple of Irish picnics, egg and onion sandwiches are simple yet flavorful. The creamy egg salad with a hint of tangy onion is a classic combination that can be enjoyed on freshly baked soda bread or crusty rolls.
Recipe:

Ingredients:

– 4 hard-boiled eggs, finely chopped
– 1 small onion, finely chopped
– 2 tablespoons mayonnaise
– 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
– Salt and pepper to taste
– Slices of white bread or crusty rolls.

Method:

In a bowl, combine the chopped eggs, onion, mayonnaise, Dijon mustard, salt, and pepper.

Mix well until all ingredients are evenly incorporated.

(Option: Add chopped tomatoes or lettuce to the mix)

Spread the egg salad generously onto your bread.

Cut the sandwiches into desired shapes and pack them for your picnic.

Smoked salmon and dill cream cheese wraps

For a taste of luxury, incorporate smoked salmon into your Irish picnic spread. These wraps combine the delicate flavors of smoked salmon with a creamy dill-infused cream cheese, creating an elegant and satisfying dish.

Ingredients:

– 4 large flour tortillas
– 8 ounces of cream cheese, softened
– 2 tablespoons fresh dill, chopped
– 8 ounces smoked salmon slices
– Fresh lettuce leaves

Method:

In a bowl, mix the softened cream cheese with fresh dill until well combined.

Spread a generous amount of the cream cheese mixture onto each flour tortilla.

Arrange smoked salmon slices and lettuce leaves evenly on top of the cream cheese.

Roll up the tortillas tightly and secure with toothpicks, if necessary.

Slice the wraps diagonally into smaller portions and pack them securely for your picnic.

Fresh fruit salad

Incorporate the vibrant colors and flavors of fresh Irish produce into your picnic with a refreshing fruit salad. Choose seasonal fruits such as strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, and sliced apples. For an extra burst of flavor, drizzle the fruit salad with a honey-lime dressing.

Ingredients:

– 2 cups mixed berries (strawberries, raspberries, blackberries)
– 1 apple, thinly sliced
– Juice of 1 lime
– 2 tablespoons honey
– Fresh mint leaves (optional, for garnish)

Method:

In a bowl, combine the mixed berries and sliced apple.

In a separate small bowl, whisk together the lime juice and honey.

Drizzle the honey-lime dressing over the fruit and gently toss to combine.

Garnish with mint.

Irish cheese and charcuterie board

 

Irish cheese and charcuterie board

 

Embrace the rich tradition of Irish cheese and create a mouthwatering charcuterie board for your picnic. Include a variety of locally produced cheeses, such as Cashel Blue, Dubliner, and Knockdrinna. Pair them with slices of cured meats, artisan bread, chutneys, and fresh fruits for a delightful grazing experience in the great outdoors.

Traditional beverages

To quench your thirst on a warm summer day, consider packing traditional Irish beverages. A refreshing option is a homemade lemonade, combining freshly squeezed lemons, sugar, and sparkling water. For those who prefer a taste of Ireland, a bottle of craft cider or a flask of Irish whiskey mixed with ginger ale can add a touch of authenticity to your picnic experience.

* Originally published in 2023, updated in Aug 2025.

Poem of the Week

“The Fields of Light”
by Seamus Heaney
Aeneid VI, 638-78

They emerged into happy vistas and the green welcome
Of the Groves of the Fortunate Ones who dwell in joy.
Here a more spacious air sheds crystalline light
Upon the land, they enjoy their own sun here
And their own stars – some at their exercises
On the grass, some competing in earnest, wrestling
On the tawny sand; others are dancing dances
And lilting tunes, Orpheus among them
In his long musician’s robe, keeping time,
Plucking his seven notes from the seven-stringed lyre
Now with his fingers, now with an ivory plectrum.
Here too were members of Teucer’s ancient stock,
That noblest of families, magnificent heroes
Born in better days – Illus and Assaracus
And Dardanus who founded Troy. Aeneas gazed
In wonder at their armour and the chariots beside them
Standing idle, their spears stuck upright in the ground
And the horses loosed out, free to graze the plain
Anywhere they liked. The pride they took in armour
And chariots when alive, the attention they paid
To their glossy well-kempt horses, it is still the same
Now they have gone away under the earth. Others too
He sees on every side, feasting in lush meadows
Or singing songs together to Apollo
Deep in a laurel grove, where the Eridanus
Courses through on its way to the earth above.

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Here was a band of those who suffered wounds
Fighting for their country; those who lived the pure life
Of the priest; those who were dedicated poets
And satisfied the god by worthwhile work; others still
Whose discoveries improved our arts or ease, and those
Remembered for a life spent serving others –
All of them with headbands white as snow
Tied round their brows. These the Sibyl now addressed
As they bustled close around her, Musaeus
In particular, outstanding at the centre of the crowd,
Looked up to, towering head and shoulders
Over them. ‘Tell us, happy spirits,’ she began,
‘And you, the best of the poets, tell us
Where does Anchises dwell, what is his district?
For his sake we have crossed the mighty waterways
And are here.’ Her question the great hero answered
Briefly: ‘None of us has one definite home place.
We live in the shade of woods, bed down on riverbanks
And on meadowland in earshot of running streams.
But you, if heart is set upon it, ascend this ridge
And I’ll direct you soon on an easy path.’ He spoke,
Walked on ahead and opened his arms wide
Above the fields of light.

 

The Aeneid is a founding fiction of Rome, which Heaney revered for its descriptions of nature and which you can read in his rendering of the Elysium in “The Fields of Light.”

The setting is Aeneas’s journey to the underworld to seek the shade of his father and so hear an augur of the future of Rome.

The water-meadows of Heaney’s version are however all Co. Derry, the cadence of Virgil’s lines swung gently to the northern countryside in mid-summer.

They remind us too that home is a state of mind, in gentle repose by running streams, the greater peace found in fellowship.

Heaney was a lifelong devotee of Virgil, viewing the Roman poet as a kindred spirit who understood the complexities of living through civil unrest and sectarian division.
“The Fields of Light” captures Aeneas’s journey into the Underworld, where he reunites with his father Anchises and witnesses the peaceful, sunlit homes (the domos placidas) of the virtuous dead.
The Heaney Touch
Heaney’s rendering of this classical underworld is distinctively grounded in his native Irish landscape.
Instead of relying purely on Mediterranean imagery, Heaney infuses the Elysian Fields with the sensory details of his youth in County Derry, blending classical mythology with the water-meadows and “Moyola-breath” of his Irish

Stories and Tales

Another special musical treat

Click below to view and click the speaker for sound

 

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The Brehon Laws
submitted byLawrence Mahoney
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It is the most successfully exported cultural institution in the world. And it started as a legal obligation.
In ancient Ireland, the Brehon Laws required every household of means to practice fladh — the tradition of hospitality to strangers. Travelers could not be turned away. Food, shelter, and warmth had to be provided. The penalty for refusing was a fine.
From this legal requirement grew the bruidhean — ancient Irish hostels positioned at crossroads and boundaries across the country, maintained specifically to receive travelers. These were the ancestors of the Irish pub.
By the medieval period, drinking houses had become central to Irish community life — places where news traveled, disputes were settled, music was played, and the business of the community was conducted.
The pub was never simply a place to drink. It was the living room of Irish public life.
When the Irish emigrated, they brought the pub with them. To Boston, to Sydney, to Buenos Aires, to Tokyo.
Today, there are an estimated 7,000 Irish pubs in Ireland and over 7,000 more in the United States alone. Versions of the Irish pub exist in virtually every country on earth.
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Tommy mak here….
“And the best bruidhean is located right nearby.
Tim Finnegan’s Irish Pub keeps up all the Irish traditions.
From hospitality to strangers, to Irish food, music, and dance, they have fulfilled all the requirements Brehon Laws.
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They have supported us; Let’s support them
Click the link below to check them out.

Céad Míle Fáilte, and welcome to your Letter from Ireland for this week.

It is a soft grey morning here in Cork as I write, the kind of morning where the hills disappear into low cloud and the world shrinks down to the lane outside the window and the warmth of a cup of Barry’s tea. A good morning, I think, for a letter about something close to all of our hearts: how our Irish ancestors married, and the rather surprising story the records sometimes tell.

How are things in your part of the world today? I do hope you’ll join me with a cup of whatever you fancy as we start into today’s letter.

Why Did Our Irish Ancestors Marry So Late?

Last week I received a message from Claire in Melbourne, who had been attending a local history talk on Irish emigration. The historian had mentioned, almost in passing, that Irish men and women in the nineteenth century tended to marry very young, often at sixteen or eighteen years of age. Claire was intrigued, and a little uncertain about his statement. It did not quite match what she had been finding in her own family research. Had she been reading the records wrong?

I have to say, Claire, my experience matches yours. And I think the historian may have been carrying a common assumption that does not quite hold up when you look closely at the Irish evidence, especially in the period after the Great Famine. So let us spend a little time today with that evidence, because the real picture is, I think, far more interesting.

Marriage Was Not Quite What We Imagine

The first thing to set aside, when we look at Irish marriage in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, is the modern idea that people married simply for love. They did, sometimes, and both attraction and affection did matter. It is true that human feeling has always had a way of finding its way through even the most practical of arrangements.

Marriage, for many of our ancestors, was an economic and family arrangement, a serious, considered and often negotiated arrangement on which the survival of a household could depend. Two things above all else determined a family’s security in much of rural Ireland: productive land, and the labour to work that land. Everything else followed from those two things.

What this meant in practice was that a man and a woman typically brought different things to the arrangement. The woman brought her youth, her family connections, her work, and the possibility of children who would carry the family forward. A dowry, where one could be assembled, also helped. The man brought land, or the prospect of land, or the right to farm it, or the financial means to support a household. This is where the story gets especially interesting for those of us tracing Irish families.

Why Many Irish Men Married Late

In post-Famine Ireland, especially among farming families, a man was often not considered a serious marriage prospect until there was land, a holding, or a viable livelihood attached to him. Not merely land he might one day inherit, but land he actually held, or had some secure claim to.

In much of rural Ireland, this could mean waiting for his father to die, or for the land to be formally signed over to him. Fathers, being human beings, weren’t always in any great hurry to do this.

The result was that Irish men frequently married much later than we might expect. Many did not marry until their thirties. Some married later again. Others never married at all. This was not necessarily unusual or scandalous, but simply how the system worked. A man of twenty-two with no land, no holding and no settled livelihood was not yet a marriageable proposition, no matter how personally attractive and charming he may have been.

The woman was often younger, sometimes considerably younger, though the gap in ages varied from place to place and family to family. In some families the difference between a husband and wife might be only a few years. In others, particularly where a man had waited a long time to inherit or secure a farm, the gap could be ten years or more.

When Carina and I look back through our own family, this pattern repeats itself with remarkable consistency. Among our grandparents and great-grandparents, we find men in their thirties marrying women in their twenties, and age gaps of ten, twelve or fifteen years are not at all unusual. Once you begin looking for it in the records, you may be surprised how often it appears.

The Consequences That Followed

This difference in age had consequences that you might already have noticed in your own research. A woman who married a man much older than herself might find herself widowed while she was still relatively young. Her husband might die years, or even decades, before her, and what happened next was not always straightforward.

In many farming families, the land passed to the eldest son. The widow, after a lifetime of work, could find herself in a complicated position in a house that was now, legally and practically, no longer quite hers. Some remained, perhaps living with a son and daughter-in-law. Some moved in with another child, while others, particularly as they aged, went back to their own people. Back to the area they had come from as young women. Maybe back to brothers and sisters, nieces and nephews, or the family home place that had never quite stopped being home. When they died, they were sometimes buried there, among their birth family, rather than beside their husbands.

If you have ever found a husband and wife buried in separate graveyards, perhaps even parishes apart, this is one possible explanation. It is not proof of estrangement, or necessarily a mystery. It may simply be the geography and timeline of a life lived between two families, and the pull of home when everything else was over.

Separate burials can happen for many reasons, of course. Family plots, remarriage, migration, grave space, parish boundaries, the decisions of surviving children. But it is worth bearing this possibility in mind if you come across it. A woman’s married life may have belonged entirely to one place, while her final resting place brought her back to another.

What the Records Are Really Showing You

So, to come back to Claire’s question. No, Irish men and women did not typically marry at sixteen or eighteen in post-Famine Ireland. That may have happened in individual cases, and earlier patterns were different in some places and periods. But it is not the general picture most Irish family historians will find in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century rural records.

In fact, the evidence points firmly in the other direction. Irish people, especially in post-Famine rural Ireland, belonged to one of Europe’s late-marrying populations. Men often married later than women, while many never had the opportunity or means to marry at all. In farming families, the timing of marriage was shaped above all else by land, inheritance, labour and survival.

When you find a marriage in your Irish family tree, it is worth asking the questions behind the record. How old was he? How old was she? Was there a significant gap between them? Who held the land, and had he recently inherited or taken over a holding? Where did she come from? And when they died, where were they buried? Were they together, or did each return in death to a different family story? The answers, I think, may tell you more about your ancestors’ lives than any single record on its own.

Thanks so much to Claire in Melbourne for prompting this letter.

So, here’s a question for all of our readers this week. Have you noticed large age gaps between married Irish ancestors, or cases where husbands and wives were buried in separate graveyards? Have you wondered why that might be?

Slán for now,

Mike

Will You Keep This Letter Going?

Your Letter from Ireland is entirely reader-supported. There’s no large publisher behind us – just Carina and me here in Ireland, a few cups of tea, and a deep commitment to sharing the stories, customs, and history that bring Irish family life to light each week.

A small number of readers choose to become Letter from Ireland Plus supporters. Their support allows us to keep the weekly letter free for everyone, while continuing to research and share the deeper context behind Irish family history.

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It costs little more than a weekly cup of tea, yet it makes a real and lasting difference.

With sincere thanks,

Mike & Carina

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John Lennon was getting ready to retire to Co Mayo before his tragic death

John Lennon had purchased Dorinish Island off the coast of Co Mayo – he and Yoko Ono had planned to build a cottage there.

John Lennon and Yoko Ono not long before The Beatles legend was tragically killed.

John Lennon and Yoko Ono not long before The Beatles legend was tragically killed. Getty Images

 

Beatles legend John Lennon, who was deeply proud of his Irish heritage, planned to buy Dorinish Island, off Co Mayo, and might have spent his later years right there if tragedy had not struck.

“I hope we’re a nice old couple living off the coast of Ireland, looking at our scrapbook of madness,” Lennon said, not long before his death, of what he hoped his future would be with Yoko Ono.

Indeed, had Lennon not been killed by Mark Chapman in 1980, he could have gone through with plans to turn a remote Irish island off of Co Mayo into a hideaway retreat, according to his Irish lawyer.

Lennon bought Dorinish Island off the Mayo coast in 1967 and got planning permission from Mayo County Council to build a house there, but that permission later lapsed.

According to Lennon’s lawyer, Michael Browne, the world-famous musician was looking into renewing the permissions before he was shot and killed in December 1980.

Yoko Ono had no doubt they would have returned to their island in Ireland.

“It was a place where we thought we could escape the pressures and spend some undisturbed time together. But because of what happened our hopes never came to be,” Ono has said.

“We often discussed the idea of building a cottage there. It was so beautiful, so tranquil, yet so isolated, it seemed a perfect place to get away from it all.”

After Lennon spotted an ad for Dorinish Island in 1967, he sent Alistair Taylor, The Beatles’ manager, to purchase it at an auction for about £1,700.

Later, local man Paddy Quinn was hired to take Lennon to the island off the coast of Co Mayo.

“It was only afterward that I discovered it was John Lennon,” Quinn told the Irish Independent in 2005.

“As far as I was concerned, he was a customer. Beatlemania and the Swinging Sixties had not quite reached the west of Ireland.”

They spent an hour and a half surveying the 19 acres of Dorinish Island.

Browne said: “He had a cine camera with him and was taking shots of the scenery all around the area. He was very impressed with Clew Bay.

“I found him very practical and business-like. He was completely in command of himself and interested in the logistics and the cost of building a house out on the island. He was worried about further erosion on the island. He was concerned that something should be done to prevent it.”

In 1970, he handed the island over to a hippie commune, which made it their summer camp.

In 1980, just before he died, Lennon made inquiries about the island again and was in the process of planning a visit. Then came Mark Chapman and that dreadful night on December 8, 1980.

Dorinish Island was sold in 1984 to a local farmer named Michael Gavin, who still grazes sheep there.

After she sold the island, Yoko gave $50,000 of the proceeds to a local Irish orphanage.

Here is some incredible aerial footage of Dorinish Island, off the coast of Co Mayo:

* Originally published in Oct 2010. Updated in June 2026. 

 

The Irish landscape that inspired Johnny Cash’s “Forty Shades of Green”

Johnny Cash wrote ‘Forty Shades of Green’ in Ireland, drawing his inspiration from the beauty of the Irish landscape.

Johnny Cash (1932 - 2003) singing on stage in a still from the film, \"Johnny Cash - The Man, His World, His Music,\" directed by Robert Elfstrom, 1969.

Johnny Cash (1932 – 2003) singing on stage in a still from the film, “Johnny Cash – The Man, His World, His Music,” directed by Robert Elfstrom, 1969. Getty Images

 

Johnny Cash’s greatest hits may be remembered as “Ring of Fire,” “I Walk the Line,” and “Folsom Prison Blues,” but there’s one Johnny Cash song that stays dear in the hearts of Irish people and lovers of Ireland.

Johnny Cash began penning “Forty Shades of Green” in 1959 during a trip to Ireland and completed it in 1961 as a B-side on his album “The Rebel – Johnny Yuma.”

While he lists a number of the most popular destinations in Ireland – Dublin, Shannon, Dingle, Skibbereen – local lore has it that he got the initial inspiration for the song in the Kockmealdown Mountains in County Tipperary.

Cash allegedly asked his Irish contacts where he could go to see the true beauty of Ireland and was told to head for the Vee Pass, which divides the Knockmealdown and Galtee mountains in southern Tipperary. He kept that stunning view in his mind and sought to capture the lush greenery and beauty of the Irish landscape in song.

The legendary singer would continue to perform the song throughout the rest of his career.

His daughter, Rosanne Cash, also has her own gorgeous rendition.

Lyrics to Johnny Cash’s “Forty Shades of Green”

I close my eyes and picture the emerald of the sea

from the fishin boats at Dingle to the shores at Donaghdee

I miss the River Shannon and the folks at Skibbereen

the moorlands and meadows and their Forty Shades of Green

But most of all I miss a girl in Tipperary town

and most of all I miss her lips as soft as eiderdown

I long again to see and do the things we’ve done and seen

where the breeze is sweet as shalimar and there’s Forty Shades of Green

I wish that I could spend an hour at Dublin´s churning suft

I long to watch the farmers drain the bogs and spade the turf

to see again the thatching of the straw the women clean

I´d walk from Cork to Larne to see those Forty Shades of Green

But most of all I miss a girl in Tipperary town

and most of all I miss her lips as soft as eiderdown

I long again to see and do the things we´ve done and seen

where the breeze is sweet as shalimar and there´s Forty Shades of Green

What’s your favorite song about Ireland? Tell us in the comment section!

* Originally published in 2017, updated in June 2026.

The prolific bard of Erin, Thomas Moore

From relatively humble beginnings in Dublin, Thomas Moore became celebrated across Europe for his poetry, his prose, and most of all his Irish Melodies.

The Bard of Erin, Thomas Moore.

The Bard of Erin, Thomas Moore. Wikimedia Commons

 

From relatively humble beginnings in Dublin, Thomas Moore became celebrated across Europe for his poetry, his prose, and most of all his Irish Melodies. 

In his heyday, Thomas Moore became known as The Bard of Erin, with a prolific output of poetry. He also had a sensitive side, for when a literary critic castigated one of his poetic collections, which contained coy eroticism, he challenged him to a duel.

Fortunately, it never took place because the police arrested both of them. However, the incident prompted Moore to reflect on where his muse was taking him, so he took a new artistic direction, resulting in musical compositions that radically transformed his reputation – The Irish Melodies.

The ten immensely popular collections of songs (1808 to 1834) contain such classical gems as The Last Rose of Summer, The Meeting of Waters, Believe Me If All Those Endearing Young Charms, The Minstrel Boy, and Silent, O Moyle.

The publication was so successful that Moore was offered a contract of £500 a year (a huge sum in those days) for a further series, providing the 27-year-old author with his first regular income.

Cover of "The National Moore Centenary Edition including the Irish Melodies".

Cover of “The National Moore Centenary Edition including the Irish Melodies”.

 

Despite their widespread popularity during the poet’s lifetime and right up into the 20th century, most of the 124 songs are unknown today. The unique effect of Melodies and Moore’s poetic genius can be attributed, in part, to the music he chose.

As well as popular appeal, Moore’s music and lyrics also captured the imagination of such august composers as Robert Schumann and Hector Berlioz.

From an ordinary Dublin upbringing, Moore moved to association with the 1798 Rebellion, patronage of his poetry by the Prince of Wales, friendship with Lord Byron, the leading English poet of the day, and flight to Europe over debts contracted in Bermuda. He also married and raised a family, but sadness walked in step with him on that front.

From there, he moved to London, where literary success came almost instantly. He dedicated his first book, a translation of odes by the Greek poet Anacreon, to the Prince of Wales, and as he rose in English society, he was granted a civil service post in 1803 in Bermuda by his patron, Lord Moira.

This nearly proved Moore’s undoing, however, for he quickly became bored with his posting, and instead toured North America, where he met President Thomas Jefferson, before returning to London, leaving a deputy in his place. In 1811, Moore married Bessy Dyke, an actress he met in Kilkenny, and they had two daughters, both of whom died as infants. Then he learned his deputy in Bermuda had absconded, leaving a huge debt. Moore was legally responsible for it but could not pay, so he fled to Europe to avoid jail.

He was helped financially by Lord Byron, and after several years spent mainly in Paris, was able to return to England. His pen was always active; in addition to Melodies, he wrote biographies of playwright Richard Brinsley Sheridan and United Irish rebel Lord Edward Fitzgerald.

To repay the kindness of Byron, he wrote a celebration of that poet’s life, and also classic historical fiction, Memoirs of Captain Rock, described as ‘a funny and scathing indictment of English misrule and Irish misdeeds’, which sold widely.

Sadly, personal tragedy continued in his life. His and Bessy’s third daughter died, and then their two young sons, both soldiers, also died; the effect apparently was to shorten Moore’s life, and he died at his home in Wiltshire in 1852.

His family grave is marked with a high Celtic cross, on which is inscribed Byron’s words: “The poet of all circles and idol of his own.”

Also inscribed on the cross are lines from one of Melodies:

Dear Harp of my country! In darkness I found thee,

The cold chains of silence had hung o’er thee long,

When proudly, my own island harp, I unbound thee,

And gave all thy chords to light, freedom and song.

As is well known and recorded, the harp was central to Moore’s work and muse. He was given a Royal Portable Harp, painted green with an interlaced decorative pattern of gold shamrocks, by renowned Irish harp-maker John Egan, which he played to accompany his singing.

In more recent times, Nana Simone and Nana Mouskouri both recorded “The Last Rose of Summer” in the 1960s; The Corrs released an instrumental version of “The Minstrel Boy” in 1995; the song was performed by U2 on their 1997 tour; and Joe Strummer, formerly of The Clash, did a version in 2001 and another version for hit movie “Black Hawk Down” the same year. And there are those who believe that we have not heard the last of Moore’s melodies.

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* Originally published in 2018 and updated in June 2026.

When Irish clowns defeated orange Toronto cops

A bunch of Irish clowns beat the daylights out of Orange members of the Toronto Fre Department in a brawl that took place July 2, 1885, in a brothel. Police and firefighters, seeking revenge, attacked the circus, creating enormous mayhem

 

Writer Sean Kernan of Medium.com seems to have uncovered one of the most bizarre yet true Irish stories in North American history.

He wrote about the extraordinary fallout after a bunch of actual Irish clowns beat the daylights out of the Toronto Fire Department in a brawl that took place on July 2, 1885, in a brothel.

Police and firefighters seeking revenge, in turn, attacked the circus, creating enormous mayhem and making it clear that Catholic Irish were their intended targets.

The upshot was the complete disbandment of the Toronto police department and the creation of a professional police force.

The brawl would end up changing Toronto forever and bring about professional policing, which replaced rampant cronyism.

Up until the time of the brothel battle, Toronto police were heavily drawn from the Orange Irish who had immigrated to the Canadian colony and established a firm base in Toronto.

Brothel payoffs, crime, theft, underhanded dealings, all were going on, but especially anti-Catholic bashing.  The Orange Irish hated the Catholic Irish immigrants.

The brothels boomed during circus time as thousands flocked to the entertainment and took advantage of the sex workers while they were at it. Kernan wrote, “Local authorities didn’t crack down because they were also loyal customers.

“July 2nd, 1885, was supposed to be an evening of relaxation and hedonism. It would be anything but.”

The action took place at the house of Mary Ann Armstrong, who ran a brothel and bar from her premises at the corner of King and Jarvis streets.

The circus had come, and the carousing was underway.

Three men from the Orange bastion of the fire department walked in and were told to seek their pleasure.  They huddled at the bar eying up the talent.

Then the clowns walked in.

All were Irish Catholics, far from the harmless clown stereotype we all know today. They were roustabouts, tough men who followed the circus around, doing many dangerous jobs and doubling as clowns.

It wasn’t long before trouble bubbled, and a riot ensued after a clown demanded an apology from a fireman for knocking off his hat.  The Irish clowns handed out a mortal beating to the firemen, who all fled.

The Orangemen would not take the beating lying down, and they enlisted their fellow Orangemen in the cops to plan revenge.

A week later, the firemen and the police surrounded the circus and demanded the clowns turn themselves in.  The circus owners, fearing an all-out riot, refused to hand over the clowns.

As Kernan wrote, “This led to a brawl, with rocks and debris being thrown in both directions. The fireman set fire to the circus wagons and supplies and then assaulted several circus employees.”

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The militia was called in to restore order.

The Toronto mayor, Dublin-born Alexander Manning, while Protestant, was considered a relatively fair man.  He demanded answers about the behavior of the police and fire forces, both in the brothel and at the circus site riot.

The upshot was a major investigation.  However, police and fire refused to cooperate.

The investigations revealed that fire department leaders would haggle with building owners over which unit would fight a fire while the building was ablaze, and police just looked on.

Recruits had only to show an Orange Order membership card to fire or police recruiters, and they were hired on the spot.

Following the upheaval, a new police commission was established.  “The commission took the draconian step of firing all police officers and starting from scratch,” Kernan wrote.

It was the beginning of professional policing in Canada.

Kernan concluded, “A clown brawl in a brothel got Toronto’s entire police force fired in 1885. Be very careful when picking a fight with a clown.”

Especially an Irish one.

* This article was originally published in 2022 and updated in June 2026.

How WB Yeats’ connection to Sligo stretches back through generations

An extract from the book “Arise And Go: W.B. Yeats and the People and Places That Inspired Him” by Kevin Connolly.

William Butler Yeats: Irish poet, dramatist, prose writer and one of the foremost figures of 20th-century literature.

William Butler Yeats: Irish poet, dramatist, prose writer and one of the foremost figures of 20th-century literature. Getty

 

The relationship between W.B. Years and Sligo stretched back generations and can be discovered through the life of his father, John Butler Yeats 

Yeats always maintained that Sligo was the domain and landscape of his poetic imagination. The influence that the people and places of Sligo had on the poet may never be understated, for they sowed in that sensitive and creative mind the seeds of the muse that was to sustain his poetic endeavor for the remainder of his life. It was there that the young poet was first moved to explore the mysteries of the Celtic Sagas and was inspired and excited by the riches contained within the folklore and tales that were related to him by the people of Sligo.

Though the substance and subject matter of Yeats’s poetry and other writings were to explore other landscapes, both real and imaginary, Sligo would remain with him throughout his life and in his final poems re-emerge as the spindle in the wheel of his creative and emotional existence as it turned full circle.

The Sligo connection was not only on his mother, Susan’s side. On completing his studies at Dublin University, W.B. Yeats’s paternal great-grandfather, John Yeats, took orders in the Church of Ireland, and in 1805, he was sent to the parish of Drumcliff in Sligo, where he remained until his death in 1846. The narrow three-storied rectory he occupied still stands close to Drumcliff Church and the round tower and cross. The family connection and his desire to be forever in the shadow of Ben Bulben would lead W.B. Yeats to request that Drumcliff be his final resting place too.

Parson Yeats, according to T. O’Rorke’s History of Sligo, was a fine scholar; he fished, kept horses and enjoyed convivial company. Indeed, when he died, he left an outstanding wine bill of the then substantial sum of four hundred pounds for his heirs to pay. He was also a very popular man and highly regarded locally, not only by those of his own religious persuasion. It is said that once, after having been away in Dublin for a protracted period, bonfires that were lit on the orders of the local Catholic priest blazed all over the county in honor of his return.

 

W. B Yeat's Grave at Drumcliffe Church.

 

John Yeats reared a large and academically illustrious family. One son, Thomas, was considered a mathematician of the highest order. The poet’s grandfather, William Butler Yeats (a recurring name in the family tree), was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, and was both a notable scholar and a sportsman. In the family tradition, he left college and entered the church, becoming a curate in the parish of Moira, Co. Down.

 

Trinity College, Dublin.

 

He married Jane Corbet of Sandymount in 1836 and was then appointed Rector of the parish of Tullylish near Portadown. His wife gave birth to the poet’s father, John Butler Yeats, in 1839. JBY was sent to school at the Atholl Academy in the Isle of Man, and it was here that he met George Pollexfen, the son of a shipping magnate and mill owner from Sligo. JBY was later to write in his letters that he was ‘intrigued by the slow and tedious’ George, who was at once dull enough to freeze conversation and, at the same time, capable of making up long, imaginative stories that would amuse his schoolmates.

Family tradition presumed that John Butler Yeats would become a clergyman. However, a lack of curiosity about God and other theological matters led him to realize that perhaps he should pursue another career. He studied classics, metaphysics, and logic at university and later won a prize of ten pounds in political economy. On the strength of this money, he set off to visit his friend George in Sligo.

On his home soil, George was a much happier man than JBY remembered from their school days. He bubbled with conversation as they walked the coastline around Rosses Point, where the Pollexfens and their close relations, the Middletons, had summer houses. It was during this visit that JBY met George Pollexfen’s sister, Susan, to whom he proposed marriage in the summer of 1862.

She and the Pollexfens were delighted to be marrying into the grand Butlers of Ormonde – this illustrious family lineage could be traced back to the Anglo-Norman invasion in the late twelfth century – and JBY was, at that time, pursuing a career as a barrister, which his in-laws saw as an honorable and secure profession and an acceptable alternative to life as a clergyman, for he had social status and prospects and was destined to inherit land and an income.

 

Sunset at Rosses Point, in County Sligo.

 

Their marriage took place on September 10th, 1863, at St. John’s Church in Sligo. Later, in Reveries, Yeats quoted his father as saying, ‘We [the Yeatses] have ideas and no passions, but by marriage with a Pollexfen we have given a tongue to the sea cliffs.’

During the night of June 13, 1865, their first child, William Butler, the poet, was born in Sandymount Avenue, Dublin.

 

Sandymount Strand in Dublin.

 

JBY’s legal career was, however, short-lived. In 1867, he finally announced his decision to quit the bar and take up art. He took his family to Sligo to stay with his in-laws until he could find suitable accommodation for them in London, where he would attend art school.

By this time, Susan’s parents, William and Elizabeth Pollexfen, had moved their large family from a towered house on Wine Street in Sligo town, which also served as the head office of the Sligo Steam Navigation Company and from whose tower William Pollexfen could observe the comings and goings of his vessels in the quays below, into a large house and estate called Merville. Susan, then aged twenty-six, had eleven siblings. JBY considered the atmosphere at Merville oppressive and was worried about its effect on the young Willie. He later wrote that, whereas the Yeatses were a charming, fun-loving, optimistic, and demonstrably affectionate people, the Pollexfens were serious and silent, obsessed with property and position; the two families were the contrast between idealism and cynicism.

Writing to his daughter Lily many years later, JBY said of the Yeatses, ‘You would be proud to have their blood. They were so clever and so innocent. I never knew and never will know any people so W.B. Yeats at age seven, with his uncle Fred Pollexfen and Spot the dog, Sligo, 1872 attractive’ (J.B. Yeats: Letters to His Son W.B. Yeats and Others, 1944). He also wrote that the Pollexfens ‘despised literature and poetry as being part of that idleness which they regarded as so calamitous to morals’ (Prodigal Father, 1978).

JBY lived in the shadow of financial failure for most of his life, and his decision to pursue a career as an artist caused his family great hardship. His views of the Pollexfens might well have been prejudiced by their relative financial success and their disapproval of his career change. Susan Yeats worried about money throughout her life and eventually had four children to care for (two others died in infancy) and a husband who could not sell his paintings. The situation caused unavoidable stress, which no doubt contributed to her suffering a series of strokes that caused her to spend the last 12 years of her life as an invalid. When she died on January 3, 1900, in London, aged fifty-nine, she had not known the happiness she expected when marrying John and was estranged from the people and places she had loved as a girl. She also didn’t live long enough to see the astonishing impact her children would have on the world and the phenomenal impression they would make on literature and art.

Since they could not rely on family finances, the Yeats children had to learn to support themselves, and this they did by various means. Willie wrote and later became a senator. Jack painted and married fellow art student Mary Cottenham White, who came from a well-off family, thus removing himself from impunity at a stroke. Lily embroidered, and Lolly became a printer, founding the Dun Emer Press and later the Cuala Press, which produced many fine prints of Jack’s paintings and editions of Willie’s poems. When Lily went to New York in 1907 to attend a trade fair of Irish industrial products, she took her debt-ridden father with her. He refused to return to Ireland and remained there until his death in New York City in February 1922. He is buried at Chester Rural Cemetery in New York State.

An interesting footnote to the relationship between JBY and his in-laws is that once, when the more prosperous W.B. Yeats sent his father a large sum of money for his support in New York, JBY wrote to Lily that though it was like a Yeats to send the money without request and without fuss, it was like the Pollexfens to have had the money to send in the first place.

Extract from “Arise and Go” by Kevin Connolly. Find out more via O’Brien Press.

 * Originally published in 2021, updated in June 2026.

 

News From Ireland

Police deploy water canons as riots continue overnight in Belfast

Water canons were deployed by police in Northern Ireland on Wednesday night amid another evening of unrest in the area.

 

It comes following a horror stabbing attack in Belfast, which happened on Monday night.

Protestors took to the streets for a second consecutive night on Wednesday – many of which turned violent.

Among the vicious acts include vehicles being burned out, bricks and flares being thrown and a ‘hit list’ for homes to be targeted.

South Belfast MLA [Member of the Legislative Assembly] for the Alliance Party Kate Nicholl confirmed the PSNI [Police Service of Northern Ireland] were aware of the list, and had been in touch with some of the property owners.

It comes as 27 people were made homeless on Tuesday night due to their homes being targeted.

A water cannon was deployed by the PSNI [Police Service of Northern Ireland] as tensions rose at the Sandyknowes roundabout in north Belfast.

Traffic was brought to a standstill as hundreds gathered. Masked protestors fired projectiles, bricks and flares.

 

One articulated lorry, caught up in the traffic, had their front windscreen smashed, but later passed through the crowd following negotiations.

As the night progressed, a Department of Environment council vehicle was among the items set on fire at the roundabout.

Armored police vehicles and officers in riot gear formed a cordon and pushed crowds back from the roundabout.

Footage circulating online sees protestors moving back quickly once the water canon was deployed.

 

On Wednesday afternoon, two police were injured when an 18-year-old man allegedly threw a petrol bomb at them in Carrickfergus.

Chief Superintendent Stephen Murray confirmed the arrest of the man, adding that it was ‘fortunate’ the officers weren’t more seriously injured.

“Our investigation is picking up pace and we will be making more arrests in the days ahead,” the Chief Superintendent confirmed.

The riots come amid an appeal from the family of the man injured in the stabbing attack, who said they were “disgusted by the scenes.”

A statement from the family of Stephen Ogilvie said: “We want to make it absolutely clear that to do this in response is not supported by our family, and peaceful protest is only ever the way forward.

“We have many migrants who make a deeply valuable contribution to our country, including from within our healthcare system and hospitality sector, and we depend on them to make our country work.

“We do not want this terrible tragedy to be used to divide people or fuel hostility — do not do this in the name of our loved one as we do not share the same values.”

* This article was originally published on Extra.ie. 

Aisling Bea set to star alongside Kate Hudson

in new “Sleepless in Seattle” rom-com

Comedian Aisling Bea is set to star alongside Kate Hudson and Javier Bardem in a new romantic comedy film.

Irish writer, comedian and actress, Aisling Bea.

Irish writer, comedian and actress, Aisling Bea. WeeMissBea / Instagram

 

According to The Hollywood Reporter, Aisling is set to star alongside Phil Dunster, Gemma Chan and Marianne Jean-Baptiste for the upcoming romantic movie, “Hello & Paris”, which is being produced by Amazon MGM Studios.

It comes after Javier Bardem, Kate Hudson and Steve Zahn were previously announced to star in “Hello & Paris”, which is loosely inspired by author Deborah McKinlay’s 2014 novel, “That Part Was True”.

“Hello & Paris” is currently in production and is reportedly described as being in the same vein as titles like “Sleepless in Seattle”, “When Harry Met Sally” and “You’ve Got Mail”.

The film centers on a landscape architect and a best-selling but embattled novelist who have a prickly first meeting in Paris before gradually getting to know each other as they exchange books and recipes while residing on opposite sides of the Atlantic.

Aisling is known for the series “This Way Up”, for which she won a BAFTA TV Craft Award for writing, and she can soon be seen on the Netflix series “Grown Ups” that adapts Marian Keyes’ novel.

* This article was originally published on Evoke.ie.

 

Trinity College Dublin adds a literary new draw for summer 2026

The campus will pair a guided walking tour with a live Oscar Wilde theatre performance, while also expanding multilingual visitor tours.

Long Room Library at Trinity College Dublin

Long Room Library at Trinity College Dublin Tourism Ireland

 

Trinity College Dublin has unveiled a new summer 2026 experience that combines the Trinity Trails Literary Walking Tour with the live stage production Oscar Unwritten in the Samuel Beckett Theatre. The limited seven-week offering begins on June 10 and will also be joined by new guided tours in French, Spanish, Italian and German.

 Trinity College Dublin recently named Europe’s Leading Academic Tourist Attraction at the World Travel Awards, has announced a new cultural experience for summer 2026, combining a literary walking tour with a live Oscar Wilde theatre performance on its historic campus.

Running for a limited seven-week season from 10 June, the new Trinity Trails Literary Walking Tour invites visitors to explore the stories and settings behind some of Ireland’s most celebrated writers, before culminating in a live theatre performance in the Samuel Beckett Theatre.

Led by expert student guides, the experience brings visitors through the 47-acre city-centre campus, following in the footsteps of world-famous alumni including Oscar Wilde, Samuel Beckett, Bram Stoker, Eavan Boland and Sally Rooney.

Along the route, visitors will see the Rubrics, the College’s oldest surviving building and a filming location for the television adaptation of Sally Rooney’s Normal People – as well as the Old Library, home to the Book of Kells and the world-famous Long Room.

The experience concludes at the Samuel Beckett Theatre with “Oscar Unwritten”, a 60-minute play exploring the life of Oscar Wilde through the perspective of his close friend Robbie Ross, bringing Wilde’s story vividly to life on stage.

A global literary legacy brought to life

Drew Duggan, Head of Tourism at Trinity College Dublin, said: “Trinity has always been renowned for literary greats. Some of our world-famous alumni – Wilde, Beckett, Stoker, Boland, Rooney – are names that have shaped global literature, and we are incredibly excited to bring those stories to life here on campus in a way that has never been done before. The Trinity Trails Literary Walking Tour combined with the Oscar Wilde Theatre Show is a truly unique cultural experience, and one that we believe will resonate with visitors from all over the world.”

Tim Scott, Director of the Samuel Beckett Theatre, added: “Oscar Wilde, a globally recognised name in theatre and literature, is brought to life in our new play ‘Oscar Unwritten’, which tells Wilde’s story from Trinity student to literary genius. This exciting production from a stellar creative team is not to be missed.”

 

Trinity College Dublin.

 

Expanded multilingual tours for international visitors

In addition to the new literary experience, Trinity has introduced guided walking tours in French, Spanish, Italian and German, allowing more international visitors to discover the campus in their own language.

These multilingual tours operate alongside the existing English-language Trinity Trails experience, offering a more accessible and welcoming visitor experience for overseas audiences.

 

Trinity College Dublin.

 

 A must-see cultural highlight in Dublin this summer

Located in the centre of Ireland’s capital, Trinity College Dublin is home to iconic attractions including the Book of Kells and the Long Room library, alongside its historic squares and gardens.

The combination of a literary walking tour and live theatre performance offers visitors a uniquely Irish storytelling experience, blending history, literature and performance in one of the country’s most iconic settings.

Tickets for the Trinity Trails Literary Walking Tour and Oscar Wilde Theatre Show are available to book now at www.visittrinity.ie.

 

Summer of strikes: Every European walkout that could wreck your holiday flights this summer

Several countries are seeing rolling walkouts by air traffic controllers, ground staff and rail workers.

Extreme travel disruptions across Europe due to a wave of strikes are expected to continue in the weeks ahead.

Extreme travel disruptions across Europe due to a wave of strikes are expected to continue in the weeks ahead. Getty Images

 

Irish holidaymakers are being warned to brace for disruption as a wave of strikes continues to sweep across Europe in one of the busiest summers of industrial action in years.

Several countries are seeing rolling walkouts by air traffic controllers, ground staff and rail workers.

With the school holiday season now underway, the timing could not be worse for many with extreme travel disruption set to continue in the weeks ahead.

Here’s what’s coming:

Paris airports: Thursday, June 18

The most immediate concern for anyone flying in the next week.

An inter-union group of airport workers has called a strike across all three Paris airports (Charles de Gaulle, Orly and Le Bourget) on June 18.

The main risk is ground disruption: longer queues, baggage delays and slower operations.

Anyone flying to, from or connecting through Paris that day should check their flight status closely and allow extra time.

Italy: Thursday, June 26

Italy faces a nationwide ground-handling strike on June 26, the latest in a series of disruptions across the Italian aviation sector this summer.

Italian strikes are usually time-limited, often a single day or part-day, but can still cause significant cancellations and delays, particularly at the bigger hubs.

Airlines often rebook passengers ahead of these confirmed dates, so watch for contact from your carrier.

 

iStock

 

Spain: Ongoing through June 30

Spain has seen rolling disruption for weeks, with an air traffic control dispute (involving the SAERCO body) extended through to at least June 30, affecting a number of airports.

Ground-handling action has also been reported on certain weekdays.

Larger airports such as Madrid, Barcelona and Málaga have generally kept operating, but delays remain possible.

Italy again: Sunday, July 5

Looking a little further ahead, a separate Italian airport-sector strike has been called for July 5, involving staff across air, airport and airport-related services.

Worth noting now if you’re booked to travel to Italy in early July.

 

RollingNews.ie

 

What’s already happened

A punishing few weeks included a French national rail strike on June 10 that hit TGV, Eurostar and international services.

Earlier action saw a Belgian air traffic control strike on June 2 force Ryanair to cancel around 100 flights, affecting nearly 20,000 passengers. The move was slammed by the airline.

A Portuguese general strike on June 3 also grounded hundreds of flights.

While those disputes have largely settled, further action across all these countries cannot be ruled out as the summer goes on.

What are your rights?

Under EU Regulation 261/2004, if your flight is cancelled, you’re entitled to a refund or re-routing to your destination.

However, strike-related cancellations are often classed as ‘extraordinary circumstances,’ meaning you’re unlikely to get additional cash compensation.

Check your flight status before travelling, keep all receipts for meals and accommodation, and review whether your travel insurance covers industrial action.

And if an airline offers you a voucher at the gate, remember you’re not obliged to accept it. A cash refund or rebooking is your entitlement.

* This article was originally published on Extra.ie.

Jokes

Kerry Jokes

Ireland’s smartest rural county with a reputation for cleverness!

 

Question asked of a Kerry man: “Is it true when you ask a Kerry man a question he answers by asking another?

Kerry man: “Who told you that”?

 

The Kerry man told his friend he’d invented a spaceship to go to the sun.

“But you’ll burn up it’s way too hot,” the friend said.

“No problem we’ll go at night,” the Kerry man replied.

 

Two Kerry men got lost on a dark night and stumbled into a graveyard.

“Where the hell are we?” said one.

“No problem, I know by this signpost,” said the other, looking at a gravestone, “it says ‘Miles from Dublin.’”

 

An unpopular Kerry man died, and the priest could get no one to say a kind word. Eventually, after an awkward silence, a little man at the back of the church volunteered, “His brother was worse.”

Funnies From My Wife

 

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Funny Statue Photos

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Our obesity issues are no longer a secret.

Good night to you all….Tommy Mac

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