Irish Seisiún Newsletter
This Week’s Session 3
Tom,
Find out what’s happening at Tim Finnegan’s this month.
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Click here to view calendar
Click either event below to view
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
I believe this is an old Irish schoolhouse. Possibly early 1900s.
Notice, not a pair of shoes to be found!
Can any of our Irish speakers (Anita) translate the sign?


Recent Mail

Travel in Ireland

Ireland unrushed makes May the perfect time to slow down
From greenways and wild coastlines to lively cities and blooming gardens, Ireland in late spring invites travelers to linger longer and experience more.

May brings long evenings, vivid color, and a gentler pace across the island, creating the perfect backdrop for a restorative getaway shaped by authentic local experiences.
The key to the perfect Ireland getaway? Slow down, stay longer, and savor every moment. Because here, the pace is relaxed, the attitude is easy, and joy lives in life’s simple pleasures: a coastal train ride, a quiet greenway, a seafood lunch that stretches into the afternoon, or a night spent under the stars in a cozy yurt.
May is when the island truly leans into that spirit. The long evenings return, hedgerows burst into bloom, and the whole landscape glows with a softness you only get at this time of year.
Across the island, color scatters across the landscape like paint on an artist’s canvas. Wildflowers bloom in meadows and on cliff paths. Coastal villages brighten with their painted shopfronts and window boxes spilling over with early geraniums. Even the skies get in on the act with those late spring sunsets that linger and set fire to the sky.

This is Ireland Unrushed: when you give yourself time, Ireland gives you more. It lets you settle into the idea that the best, most authentic moments come when you take the time to appreciate your surroundings and truly take a vacation.
Walk or cycle along a greenway or a quiet boreen, and you’ll notice how it will quiet your mind as the only things you can hear are the birds and the breeze around you.
See how many colors you can spot, between the yellow flare of gorse, the delicate whites and pinks of hawthorn, the first foxgloves rising on the banks of a hill – it is a kaleidoscope. Orchids appear like tiny surprises for anyone who pauses long enough to look.

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It’s the perfect backdrop for journeys like:
- Carrick‑on‑Shannon in County Leitrim – drifting along the Shannon–Erne Waterway, where life naturally settles into a gentler rhythm.
- Westport in County Mayo – cycling the Great Western Greenway toward Achill Island, with sea cliffs, sheep crossings, and Atlantic air that feels like a reset.

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And no matter the journey you take, the local partners deepen the experience: The Boatyard Distillery in Fermanagh (where you can find the perfect Gin for any occasion and a true local story), Burren Smokehouse (which brings farm to table to a new level), and Connemara Equestrian Escapes, each offering a way to connect with the land through flavor, craft, or activity.
Along the coasts
Along the coast, seal pups bask on rocks, foals wobble through their first weeks in the fields, and the rhythm of the Atlantic has a restorative power over it.
Coastal journeys that shine in May include:
- The Causeway Coastal Route is a 115-mile adventure stretching from Belfast to Derry, with ancient castles, towering cliffs, and areas of unparalleled natural beauty along the way.

- Waterford tracing the Copper Coast, a UNESCO Global Geopark of cliffs, coves, and quiet beaches.
- Cork from Kinsale’s seafood havens to wild peninsulas and island fortresses.

Partners like Atlantic Sea Kayaking and Strangford Lough Activity Center offer ways to experience the coastline from the water, gliding past sea caves, seals, and stories etched into the shoreline.

Cities and towns
As the days stretch, music spills out of the pub door and into the street. A busker warming up or a festival tent glowing at dusk. May is when Ireland’s cultural calendar begins to hum again.
Urban journeys that feel especially alive this time of year:
- In Dublin, wandering from the Liberties to the coast, where you can find distilleries, street art, and sea air all within a commutable radius.

- In Galway, you can drift between cafés, craft shops, quayside music, and the pull of the Aran Islands.
- In Belfast, you can find creativity, history, and green spaces that all blend seamlessly into our UNESCO Music City.

- In Kilkenny, you will find medieval streets, craft studios, and riverside walks that invite you to take your time.
And throughout these cities, partners like Taste and Tour, EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum, and the Peacemakers Museum add depth, flavor, and storytelling to every stop.

Gardens, makers and moments of stillness
May is also when Ireland’s gardens and growers come into their own. Mount Congreve Gardens in County Waterford, one of the world’s great gardens, is in full bloom. Local makers from the Burren Smokehouse to artisan distillers and cheesemakers offer tastes rooted in place. And in Northern Ireland, Strangford Lough Activity Centre and Tracey’s Farmhouse Kitchen connect visitors great memories and new skills to take home with them.

When you move through Ireland unrushed, the details the ones that stay with you rise to the surface.
A final note for travelers
If you’re dreaming of a trip that feels restorative, spacious, and full of quiet color, May is one of the most beautiful months to experience the island. Come for the landscapes, stay for the authenticity, and leave with the feeling that only Ireland can give you.

Ireland is not just a destination, it’s a feeling. Follow your heart to Ireland and discover the adventure that awaits you. Whether you decide to wander through 5,000 years of history in Ireland’s Ancient East, breathe in Ireland’s magnificent west coast along the Wild Atlantic Way, embrace a giant spirit in Northern Ireland, or enjoy the unspoiled majesty of Ireland’s Hidden Heartlands.
This article is presented proudly in partnership with Tourism Ireland. To learn more about Tourism Ireland and get inspired for your next visit to Ireland, check out their website at Ireland.com.
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, taimid uainn thu, we miss you!
If you’re feeling a little less confident on your Irish language skills journey, here is a little video to teach you “cupla focal” to help you communicate when the going gets tough! Keep going!

Is fearr gaeilge briste na bearla cliste (iss far gaelge brishte naw bearlah clishte)
Broken Irish is better than clever English!
Gaeilge mas feidir, Bearla mas ga (Gaelgeh maws fayjir, Bearlah maws gaw)
Irish if possible, English if necessary!
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/NHf3hQ2a9pM
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Na biodh eagla ort! (Naw bee-ooh agla ort) Don’t be afraid
Labhair an teanga gaeilge liom (lao-irr on changa gaelge lom) Speak irish to me!
Ta me ag foghlaim (taw may egg fowl-im) I am learning
Sin e a chairde!
Slan go foill!.
Anita

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]
What is this book, and where is it located

Answer in Next Week’s Newsletter
Last week’s answer

Statue of Robert Emmett in Saint Stephens Green in Dublin
This week’s Irish Recipe
Kick off summer with this BBQ spare ribs recipe from our Irish chef
Our Irish chef shares his secret sauce recipe to top off these mouthwatering BBQ ribs!

Get grillin’ with this recipe for BBQ spare ribs and a very special secret sauce from our very own Chef Gilligan!
Summertime is finally here – what better way to celebrate than with some positively tantalizing BBQ ribs?!
Even better, Chef Gilligan is sharing how to whip up his secret sauce.
There are three ways to put this tasty dish together.
BBQ Spare Ribs recipe
Ingredients:
- 3 pounds of pork spareribs cut into two rib pieces
- Salt and black pepper
- 1 quart of the secret barbecue sauce
Oven Method:
Salt and pepper the ribs.
Place the ribs in a roasting pan with the inside down.
Place the ribs in a 300-degree F oven until browned (about 1 hour).
Drain fat from the pan.
Spoon about 1 cup of the sauce over the ribs to coat them with a thin layer.
Turn the ribs over and coat with more sauce.
Bake 45 minutes.
Turn and coat the ribs with the remaining sauce.
Bake until tender (about 40-60 minutes more).
Slow Cooker / Crock Pot method:
Salt and pepper the ribs.
Brown the ribs in a skillet over medium-low heat.
Pour enough sauce in the crockpot to cover the bottom.
Put one layer of ribs in the cooker, then pour a thin layer of sauce over them.
Put one more layer of ribs in the cooker, then pour a thin layer over them.
Continue layering until all the ribs are in the cooker.
Pour the remaining sauce over the ribs.
Cook on high heat for one hour.
Turn the heat down to low and cook for about 6 hours or until very tender.
Boiling method (Spareribs are sometimes boiled, and it does speed up the cooking time):
Place the ribs in a large stockpot and cover with boiling water.
Bring to a boil, reduce the heat, and simmer for 30-45 minutes or until the ribs are tender.
Drain and place ribs in a shallow or low roasting pan.
Pour my secret barbecue sauce over the ribs, cover, and refrigerate for 2 hours.
Drain excess sauce into a bowl (do not leave excess sauce on the ribs or they may burn while grilling)
Grill ribs for 30 minutes, basting with the sauce frequently during the last 15 minutes of cooking.
The Secret Sauce
And now for the sauce to make your ribs stand out! Whatever you wish to grill or barbecue, this sauce recipe is what you need to please your palate.
The restaurant recipe was developed by one of my chefs and me a number of years ago and has been a favorite restaurant recipe ever since. I even have restaurant guests who request to buy it in bulk for use at home.
Now, you can make this secret restaurant recipe at home.
Secret Sauce Ingredients (makes one quart):
- 1/2 cup finely chopped onion
- 1 tablespoon butter
- 3 cups of tomato puree
- 2 tablespoons Lea and Perrins Worcestershire sauce
- 2 tablespoons A-1 Sauce
- 2 tablespoons Heinz 57 Sauce
- 1 tablespoon yellow mustard
- 1/2 cup brown sugar
- 2 1/2 tablespoons honey
- 2 1/4 teaspoons liquid smoke
- 2 1/4 teaspoons red wine vinegar
- Cayenne to taste (optional – start with 1 teaspoon)
- Salt and pepper to taste
Method:
Heat a large sauté pan or saucepan over low heat.
Add butter and onions and cook until the onions are soft.
Add all other ingredients, turn the heat up to medium-low, and bring to a boil.
Turn the heat down to low and simmer the sauce for 20 minutes, until flavors blend.
Remove from heat, taste, and correct seasoning.
Store in the refrigerator, uncovered, until cool, then cover or use immediately.
To thin the sauce, use any of the following: water, beef or chicken stock, white or cider vinegar, apple juice, wine, or beer.
To thicken the sauce, mix 1/4 cup cold water or another liquid (above) with 2 tablespoons of cornstarch, then add to the sauce a little at a time until you have achieved the correct consistency.
* Originally published in August 2016. Updated in 2026.
Poem of the Week

June
by Francis Edward Ledwidge (19 August 1887 – 31 July 1917)

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Broom out the floor now, lay the fender by,
And plant this bee-sucked bough of woodbine there,
And let the window down. The butterfly
Floats in upon the sunbeam, and the fair
Tanned face of June, the nomad gipsy, laughs
Above her widespread wares, the while she tells
The farmers’ fortunes in the fields, and quaffs
The water from the spider-peopled wells.
The hedges are all drowned in green grass seas,
And bobbing poppies flare like Elmo’s light,
While siren-like the pollen-staind bees
Drone in the clover depths. And up the height
The cuckoo’s voice is hoarse and broke with joy.
And on the lowland crops the crows make raid,
Nor fear the clappers of the farmer’s boy,
Who sleeps, like drunken Noah, in the shade
And loop this red rose in that hazel ring
That snares your little ear, for June is short
And we must joy in it and dance and sing,
And from her bounty draw her rosy worth.
Ay! soon the swallows will be flying south,
The wind wheel north to gather in the snow,
Even the roses spilt on youth’s red mouth
Will soon blow down the road all roses go.

Francis Edward Ledwidge (19 August 1887 – 31 July 1917) was an Irish war poet and soldier from County Meath. Sometimes known as the “poet of the blackbirds”, he was killed in action at the Battle of Passchendaele during World War
The Irish poem June is like a breath of fresh air. Francis Ledwidge used fantastic imagery in this poem I particularly like the last two lines(or couplet as it called in Poetry terms)
Even the roses spilt on youth’s red mouth
Will soon blow down the road all roses go.
Stories and Tales

The First Swallow: An Irish Welcome to Summer
There are certain moments in Ireland that never quite leave us. The smell of turf smoke drifting on an evening breeze. The first stretch in the evenings after a long winter. The soft rain falling across fields that seem greener than anywhere else on earth.
And then there is the first swallow.
My father always watched for them.

Long before weather forecasts and calendars became part of daily life, people in Ireland looked instead to the land, the sea, and the sky. My father belonged to that older tradition. Each spring he would glance upward, searching the roads, fields, and farmyards for the quick dark shape of a swallow returning from the south.
When the first swallow appeared, summer had truly begun.
It was never announced loudly. Sometimes he would simply say over tea:
“The swallows are back.”
And somehow the whole world felt lighter.
Watching for the First Swallow
For generations, Irish people eagerly anticipated the arrival of the first swallow. In country communities, spotting one of these graceful birds was often considered the true beginning of summer, far more meaningful than any date on a calendar.

The swallow’s return marked a turning point in the year. The days were growing longer, lambs filled the fields, and the landscape seemed to awaken after the quiet months of winter.
Even today, many people in Ireland still speak of seeing the first swallow as a special moment, a small but significant sign that brighter days lie ahead.
Summer Visitors from Distant Shores
The swallow is one of Ireland’s most familiar summer migrants. Each spring these remarkable birds travel thousands of miles from Africa to nest throughout Ireland and Britain.
They usually arrive between April and May, building their cup-shaped nests in barns, sheds, stables, and under the eaves of houses.

For centuries, Irish farming families welcomed them. Their presence was so closely linked with summer that many people viewed them almost as seasonal neighbours who faithfully returned year after year.
Irish Folklore and the Lucky Swallow
The swallow holds a cherished place in Irish folklore.
Throughout the countryside, it was considered bad luck to harm a swallow or disturb its nest. A swallow building its home under your roof was believed to bring blessings, prosperity, and protection to the household.

Many old folk beliefs encouraged people to care for nesting swallows. Their arrival was seen as a sign of good fortune, and their departure in autumn marked the passing of another summer season.
Like many creatures in Irish tradition, the swallow occupied a place where nature and folklore met. It was admired not only for its beauty but also for what it symbolised, hope, renewal, and safe return.
A Bird Touched by Legend
Christian folklore added another layer to the swallow’s story.
One old tradition claimed that swallows tried to remove the thorns from Christ’s crown during the Crucifixion. Another suggested that the bird’s dark markings were the result of carrying the sorrow of that sacred event.

While these stories cannot be traced to a single Irish source, versions were shared throughout Ireland and helped reinforce the belief that swallows were birds deserving of kindness and protection.
Whether rooted in faith, folklore, or simple affection, these tales reveal how highly the swallow was regarded by previous generations.
The Beauty of the Swallow’s Flight
No bird moves quite like a swallow.
They do not simply fly, they glide, swoop, twist, and dance through the air. Their long forked tails give them extraordinary agility, allowing them to change direction in an instant as they chase insects across fields and streams.

My father particularly admired that distinctive tail. Whenever swallows appeared overhead, he would point them out and marvel at their graceful flight.
As a child, I did not fully understand his fascination. Today, I find myself pausing to watch them too.
There is something mesmerising about a swallow skimming across an Irish summer sky.
Swallows and Memories of Rural Ireland
For many people, swallows evoke memories of a simpler Ireland.
They bring to mind old farmyards with open barn doors, hay drying in fields, stone cottages, and warm evenings that seemed to stretch endlessly into twilight.

Children watched them gathering on telephone wires in late summer before their long journey south. Adults noted their arrival in spring and their departure in autumn as naturally as they observed the weather.
The swallow became woven into the fabric of everyday life.
The Meaning of Their Return
Perhaps this is why the swallow remains so beloved.
Its annual journey reminds us that the seasons continue their timeless cycle. No matter how long or difficult the winter, the swallows return.
Year after year.
Generation after generation.
Their arrival connects us with those who came before us, and remind us of parents, grandparents, and neighbours who watched the same skies and looked for the same signs of summer.

Looking Upward Once Again
Ireland has changed enormously over the years, yet the sight of a swallow still captures our attention.
Each spring, these small birds return from distant lands carrying with them more than the promise of warmer weather. They bring memories, traditions, and a sense of continuity that links the past with the present.
Whenever I see the first swallow of the year, I think of my father looking skyward, searching for that familiar silhouette.
And I find myself doing exactly the same.
For a fleeting moment, as a swallow sweeps across the Irish sky, summer arrives, memories return, and the old traditions live on.
PATRICK ODEA, a chara,

Cén chaoi a bhfuil tú? An bhfuil aon scéal agat inniu? We’ve made great progress over the past few weeks, reconnecting with our Irish and picking up plenty of new phrases along the way. Last week, we chatted about all things weather-related, and expanded our vocabulary, learning how to describe different weather conditions and talk about the forecast.
This week, we’re focusing on opinions – learning how to give them and ask for them, another key skill for everyday conversation and small talk. We’re also going to talk about our feelings, and how we express them in Irish.
Léigh agus éist leis na nathanna thíos agus scríobh i do loga foghlama iad.
Stór Focal – Lesson Five
Scríobh na nathanna thíos i do loga foghlama 📝

Tuairimí (opinions)
- An maith leat ____?
Meaning: Do you like ____?
Freagra (Answer):
Is maith liom/Is aoibhinn liom/Ní miste liom/Ní maith liom/Is fuath liom.
Meaning: I like/I love/I don’t mind/I don’t like/I hate.
- Aontaím (leat).
Meaning: I agree (with you).
Ní aontaím (leis sin).
Meaning: I don’t agree (with that).
- I mo thuairim…
Meaning: In my opinion…
- Ceapaim/Sílim/Measaim…
… go bhfuil an leabhar an-suimiúil.
… go raibh an scannán an-leadránach.
Meaning: I think…
…that the book is very interesting.
… that the film was very boring.
Listen to it here
Mothúcháin (emotions)
We generally describe our emotions as being ‘on us’ as Gaeilge, instead of identifying as being that emotion. While in English we will say that we are happy or sad or excited, in Irish we say that happiness or sadness or excitement is on us.
- Tá áthas orm.
Meaning: I am happy. [Happiness is on me. (orm = on me)].
Tá áthas an domhain orm!
Meaning: I am delighted/over the moon! (The happiness of the world is on me).
Tá brón orm.
Meaning: I am sad/sorry. (Sadness/sorrow is on me).
Tá tart orm!
Meaning: I am thirsty.
- An bhfuil tuirse ort?
Meaning: Are you tired? (Is tiredness on you?).
- Níl ocras orm inniu.
Meaning: I am not hungry today. (Hunger is not on me today).
- Mothúcháin eile:
- Faoiseamh
- Sceitimíní
- Tuirse
- Imní
- Eagla
- Fearg
- Frustrachas
Meaning:
Other emotions:
- Relief
- Excitement
- Tiredness
- Worry/anxiety
- Fear
- Anger
- Frustration
Dúshlán na seachtaine
1 Fill in the blanks in the opinion phrases in Section 1, to talk about things you like/don’t like/don’t mind.
Bain úsáid as an stór focal nua a d’fhoghlaim tú le déanaí (that you learned recently).
2 Scríobh iontráil dialainne (diary entry) gach lá an tseachtain seo (this week).
Pléigh (Discuss) rud amháin is maith leat (one thing you liked) sa lá agus mar a mhothaíonn tú (how you feel) ar an lá sin.
More articles as Gaeilge
Get to know Dublin as Gaeilge
3 great ways to use your Irish in Dublin’s Fair City. Read more
Australia’s ambassador to Ireland on learning Irish for the role
Chantelle Taylor, Australia’s new Ambassador to Ireland, on her role, her goals, and her plan to start learning and using Irish within her first two weeks. Read more
Slán go fóill,
Old Irish Ways Heritage Museum
Located just outside Bruff, County Limerick, Old Irish Ways is a folk heritage museum, where memorabilia from our past is lovingly restored and preserved.

Old Irish Ways – Rural Irish Life On Display
Denis O’Connor, the founder of this wonderful museum started off with only a few precious pieces of vintage Irish treasures, but over the years he has gathered many more.
Today his collection of priceless keepsakes from Ireland’s past ranges into the thousands .
Denis’ goal is to recapture what life was like over 100 years ago, to give people a sense of how our forefathers lived. With items dating back as far as the 18th century, this exhibit truly spans the generations.

Here’s how Denis describes his museum on his website, Old Irish Ways ….
“Old Irish Ways is a collection of various artifacts and collectibles which were used as part of everyday life down through the years in an Ireland long past. From the kitchen to the farmyard, the collection built up by Denis over a number of years, represents an Ireland of bygone days.”
Denis’ exhibits are for all of today’s generations to enjoy. Younger people see a collection of items from a bygone era, enlightening them about how diligently our forebears worked to survive.

But many of us will step through the doors of this amazing museum only to rekindle memories of days gone by.
The Irish Cottage Kitchen
The Irish cottage kitchen with a traditional open fire, for me, is an iconic symbol of my homeland. “Bean an tí” (pronounced ban-on-tee) or the woman of the house cared for the fire both day and night, those eternal flames vital for her labors and her rest.

The fire was not simply a means of heating the home, but the central hub of the household. Used for many tasks, the bean an tí baked breads, boiled bacon and root vegetables for her family, and simmered corn for animals. Sick animals were nursed in front of the fire.
My own granny used her hearth as a neonatal intensive care unit. When my uncle was born prematurely back in the 1930’s she wrapped him in swaddling clothes and hung him in a horse harness beside the fire to keep him warm. And he survived thanks to her ingenuity.

In the kitchen display at Old Irish Ways,
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Denis has recreated an old Irish family kitchen, including the dresser, an attractive yet functional piece of furniture. Decorative plates and china, cups, plates, coffeepots and jugs adorn the dresser.
At Old Irish Ways, papal pictures decorate the walls, together with the traditional Sacred Heart picture.
The Old Pub
Old Irish pubs were at the heart of Irish village life, many also incorporating a local shop.
Denis has gathered many commonly seen items from old pubs around the country and recreated his very own Irish pub where he now serves visitors a lovely cup of tea.

Here you will find vintage earthenware jars and beer bottles, an array of trays and bottle tops, water jugs and the famous Guinness timber barrel.
You can sit back on an old tractor seat high stool, sipping your tea and enjoying a chat, in this highly detailed Old Irish Bar.
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Old Irish School
School life in 20th century Ireland is recreated in the classroom exhibit. If you went to school in Ireland anytime upto the 1970’s, then the classroom at Old Irish Ways will bring back many memories.

Wooden desks stand beside the black board or chalk board as we say in America. The map of Ireland beckons on the wall and the desks are laid with old school books and workbooks.

The time spent in recreating this learning space from days gone by is clearly evident.
The Blacksmith’s Forge
In days gone by the forge was a meeting place, where locals chatted and shared stories.
Politics of the day and the welfare of the local community often dominated the talk at an Irish Forge or “Smithy.” Plots and plans for rebellion were often forged at the forge.

A raised brick hearth or fireplace dominated the forge.
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Here, bars of iron were heated until yellow-hot. There was always a container of water to cool the iron. Heat permeated the air. The hammer hit the anvil and horses hooves were shod.
Typically the inside of the forge was very dark to allow the blacksmith see the variety of colors of the heated iron which indicated the temperature of the heated metal.
Denis shares all these stories and more in The Forge Exhibit.
Other Displays
The Irish Creamery is another highlight, with various implements used in the production and processing of milk and butter on display. You all know how much I love Irish churns.

Other displays in Old Irish Ways include a carpenter’s workshop, a typical old Irish hardware shop, a display of old farming implements, and turf cutting tools.

For the motoring enthusiast there is one of the largest displays of motor oil cans, advertising signs and associated memorabilia.
Visiting The Old Irish Ways Museum
This award-winning museum represents a true and unique reflection of a forgotten Ireland.
So why not stop by if you find yourself in County Limerick and want to get off the well worn tourist track and visit a friendly welcoming museum full of vintage Irish treasures.
The museum is located about 16 miles or 25 kilometers outside Limerick city, and only 3 miles or 5 kilometers from the town of Bruff, the maternal ancestral home of President John F, Kennedy.
And remember, you can visit Lough Gur if the sun is shining.
Open 7 days a week from 9 am to 5 pm, Denis recommends you give him a call before you visit, so that you can confirm a tour.
Here’s the contact information for Old Irish Ways.
Address: Caherguillamore, Bruff, Limerick
Phone: 0861541078
Email: [email protected]

Thank You
A big thank you to Denis and his family for all their wonderful work in preserving this important piece of Irish rural history. They are to be commended for their dedication, and commitment to preserving Ireland’s past.
This is a private museum and a labor of love for Denis and his family. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for kindling wonderful childhood memories. I really appreciate you giving me permission to share your lovely museum photos with my readers.
Next time I visit my family home in Kildorrery, County Cork, I’ll be sure to stop by for a chat and a cuppa tae in your Irish pub.
Blessings to you and yours from Kentucky.
Slán agus beannacht,
(Goodbye and blessings)
Mairéad –Irish American Mom
Pronunciation – slawn ah-gus ban-ock-th
Mairéad – rhymes with parade


The Irish Navvies:
The Men Who Built Britain’s Roads

Screenshot
Five facts you didn’t know about Arthur Guinness
From servant roots to 21 children, and only one portrait! You may think you know Arthur Guinness, but we bet you’ve never heard these facts.

In 1759, Arthur Guinness, the son of a farmer, and himself a servant, signed a 9,000-year, lease on St. James’ Gate Brewery in Dublin, he was so confident in his beer, Guinness.
Do you think you know everything about Arthur Guinness, the father of the black stuff? Think again!
Read on for some interesting facts about the man behind Ireland’s, and possibly the world’s, most famous beer.
A servant who inherited £100 and started an empire
Guinness’ parents, Richard and Elizabeth, were both the children of tenant farmers in Dublin and Kildare. Richard worked as an agent for the cleric Dr. Arthur Price, A Church of Ireland Archbishop, and some say he brewed beer for the house.
Dr. Price died in 1752 bequeathing £100 each to Richard and his son, the 27-year-old Arthur Guinness. In the will, they were described by servants. That £100, which was the equivalent to four years’ wages at the time, allowed Arthur to set up his first brewery, in 1755, on a site in Leixlip, County Kildare.

A Protestant, a Unionist and against Home Rule
Arthur Guinness was a Protestant, a Unionist and against Home Rule.
In the 1780s and 1790s, Guinness supported Henry Grattan, an Irish politician and member of the Irish House of Commons, who campaigned for legislative freedom for the Irish Parliament. This was not least because Grattan wanted to reduce the tax on beer.
Guinness was in favor of Catholic Emancipation from 1893 but did not support the United Irishmen during the 1798 rebellion. In fact, in 1797, Arthur Guinness was named by The Union Star newspaper as a suspected informer. He was described as:
“A brewer at James’s Gate, an active spy. United Irishmen will be cautious of dealing with any publican who sells his drink.”
The Guinness family became Irish Unionists and Arthur Guinness accepted the system, with Arthur “directly opposed to any movement toward Irish independence” and wanting “Ireland to remain under English control.”
Love Irish history? Share your favorite stories with other history buffs in the IrishCentral History Facebook group.
Guinness had 21 children
In 1761 Arthur Guinness married Olivia Whitmore. Olivia had 21 children during their marriage but sadly only 10 survived to adulthood. They were:
- Elizabeth (1763–1847) m. Frederick Darley, builder and Lord Mayor of Dublin in 1809
- Revd. Dr. Hosea (1765–1841), Rector of St. Werburgh’s Church, Dublin
- Arthur (1768–1855), brewer and banker
- Edward (1772–1833), a solicitor in Dublin
- Olivia (1775–1809)
- Benjamin (1777–1826), brewer
- Louisa (1781–1809)
- Mary (1787–1809)
- William (1779–1842), brewer
- John (1783–1850), Captain in the Madras Army
Social welfare entrepreneur
Arthur Guinness, from humble roots himself, was what might be called a social welfare entrepreneur of his time and also a massive philanthropist.
Arthur donated to charities, worked to ensure the poor had affordable health care, promoted the Gaelic arts to help preserve the Irish identity, and advocated tolerance in a religiously polarized community.

His work on working conditions at Guinness and elsewhere lasted long after his death, in 1803. Right into the 19th and 20th centuries having a job at Guinness meant you and your family were looked after – the board continued with evolving health insurance, subsidized meals, pensions, higher wages, and more. The perks of working at Guinness were unparalleled and even included a drink before you headed home in the evening!
The only portrait of Arthur Guinness
Despite the fact that Guinness started a beer brewing dynasty with the famed stout being brewed in 49 countries across the globe it seems he was not one for the limelight. Although he became exceedingly wealthy during his lifetime (Guinness eventually floated on the stock market raising £6m, a colossal amount at the time) there is only one portrait of the man.
To Arthur! And his Guinness!
* Originally published in 2018, updated in 2026.
On This Day:
Msgr. Edward Flanagan, the Irish founder of Boys Town, passed away
Monsignor Edward Joseph Flanagan, the founder of Boys Town, was born in Co Roscommon on July 13, 1886.

Born in Co Roscommon in 1886, Edward Flanagan built Boys Town into a world-renowned home for boys before returning to Ireland in 1946 to condemn the treatment of children in institutional care. He died in Berlin on May 15, 1948, and his message still feels urgent today.
Monsignor Edward Joseph Flanagan, the founder of Boys Town, was a lone voice in condemning Ireland’s industrial schools back in the 1940s and the treatment afforded to orphans and those born outside marriage generally. He was viciously castigated by the Irish Church and the Irish government for doing so.
His treatment at the hands of clergy and politicians makes it very clear that both powerful arms of the state were determined to stick to secrets and lies, and cover-ups when it came to the mistreatment of youths and babies.
When he arrived back in America after a 1946 trip to Ireland, he let it be known he was appalled by the abuse of children in the institutions he had visited. Though he mainly focused on the industrial schools, which worked young children to the bone, he widely criticized the entire range of Catholic institutions that dealt so viciously with the most vulnerable of Irish children.
When he came back to America, Flanagan, addressing the Irish clergy and political leaders, said: “What you need over there is to have someone shake you loose from your smugness and satisfaction and set an example by punishing those who are guilty of cruelty, ignorance, and neglect of their duties in high places . . . I wonder what God’s judgment will be with reference to those who hold the deposit of faith and who fail in their God-given stewardship of little children.”
However, his words fell on stony ground. He wasn’t simply ignored. He was taken to pieces by the Irish establishment. The then-Minister for Justice Gerald Boland said in the Dáil (Ireland’s parliament) that he was “not disposed to take any notice of what Monsignor Flanagan said while he was in this country because his statements were so exaggerated that I did not think people would attach any importance to them.”
Flanagan was a devout Catholic, a man who Catholics and non-Catholics worldwide had deemed a hero. He was the Mother Theresa of his day.
Flanagan was born on July 13, 1886, in the townland of Leabeg, Co Roscommon, to John (a herdsman) and Honoria Flanagan. In 1904, he immigrated to the United States.
Unlike many others, Flanagan became a priest after he had arrived in America. He was ordained in 1912. In 1917, he was living and working in Omaha, Nebraska, when he hit upon the idea of a “boy’s town,” which would offer education and a home for the poor and wayward boys of Omaha.
However, demand for the service was so great that he soon had to find bigger premises. Boys Town, built on a farm 10 miles from Omaha, was the result.
The center was open to all. There were no fences to stop the boys from leaving. Fr. Flanagan said he was “not building a prison.”
“This is a home,” he said. “You do not wall in members of your own family.”
Boys Town eventually became so well-known – and so well-respected – that Hollywood and the U.S. President came calling. Spencer Tracy and Mickey Rooney starred in the 1938 movie “Boys Town,” and it made a national hero out of Fr. Flanagan. He was internationally renowned as “the world’s most foremost expert on boys’ training and youth care.”
When World War II ended in 1945, President Truman asked Flanagan to tour Asia and Europe, to see what could be done for the many children orphaned and made homeless by the war.
Flanagan decided to return to the land of his birth in 1946 to visit his family and to visit the “so-called training schools” run by the Christian Brothers to see if they were “a success or failure.”
The success of the film “Boys Town” meant Flanagan was treated like a celebrity upon his arrival. His visit was noted by the Irish Independent, which said that Flanagan had succeeded “against overwhelming odds,” spurred on by the “simple slogan that ‘There is no such thing as a bad boy.’”
But Flanagan was unhappy with what he found in Ireland. He was dismayed at the state of Ireland’s reform schools and blasted them as “a scandal, un-Christ-like, and wrong.” And he said the Christian Brothers, founded by Edmund Rice, had lost their way.
Speaking to a large audience at a public lecture in Cork’s Savoy Cinema he said, “You are the people who permit your children and the children of your communities to go into these institutions of punishment. You can do something about it.” He called Ireland’s penal institutions “a disgrace to the nation,” and later said, “I do not believe that a child can be reformed by lock and key and bars, or that fear can ever develop a child’s character.”
Despite that, the Irish church and the Irish government felt comfortable ignoring Fr. Flanagan, ignoring the fact that he was considered to be an expert in the matter of providing for the education and upbringing of boys who were otherwise considered to be “lost causes.” Again, his efforts fell on stony ground.
What was it about the Irish church and the Irish government that made them so insular that they felt comfortable dismissing someone of Fr. Flanagan’s stature? Even though Fr. Flanagan was a popular hero to many Irish people, his words had no sway with those in authority, whether in the government or the church.
And, once those who endorsed the industrial school model survived Fr. Flanagan’s broadsides, they must have known that no one would challenge them again. They were right, for 50 years anyway.
*Originally published in July 2021. Updated in July 2025.
Gráinne Ní Mháille: The kind of power England could not contain
How Gráinne Ní Mháille became a threat to the Tudor State.

In the fourth installment of this five-part series, writer, producer, and actor Keelin McCool, currently in development with the period drama feature “Mama Pirate,” traces the world that forged Gráinne Ní Mháille into one of Ireland’s most formidable figures.
What has long fascinated me about Gráinne is her absolute courage and nimbleness. In an era with no electricity, GPS, or even acceptance of a woman’s autonomy, she built a reputation as a fearsome seafarer, feeding her clan and holding back the violent incursion of the English in her territory. She commanded sometimes 200 men at a time, inspiring their fierce loyalty—with many of them following her when she left her combative husband’s clan after he died in a skirmish.
Her independence and dexterity, pivoting when necessary, made her difficult for the English to keep track of, let alone dominate. She adjusted to circumstances. She brought not only force but strategy borne out of decades of experience on the sea. She learned from the time she first sailed with her father, reading the wind and the waves, navigating through storms. She earned a living trading, collecting tolls, and plundering, while commanding men and earning their respect in the process.
But courage and seamanship alone don’t explain how she lasted as long as she did. Resisting England for 50 years during a century of systematic violent incursion and land theft required multiple approaches. While she could fight, then vanish into the sea and reappear somewhere else unexpectedly, she could also negotiate, petition, and argue her case in writing, in their own language, and on their own terms. This audaciousness, and the fluidity with which she maneuvered, were a form of power that no title or system could easily contain. It is what also made Sir Richard Bingham, who eventually became Governor of Connacht, so obsessed with bringing her to heel.

By the time Bingham was appointed governor in 1584, England’s approach to Ireland had hardened quite a bit. Its earlier policy of surrender and regrant, employed first by King Henry VIII, which persuaded Gaelic chieftains to trade in their ancestral authority for English titles, was giving way to more forceful tactics. The 1500s Plantation era was now gathering speed, and operating on a colder, more avaricious principle: confiscate the land, remove those who had always lived on it, and replace them with Protestant settlers who would be loyal to London. Over half a million acres in Ulster alone was eventually stripped away this way. Ireland’s landscape was changing hands, plot by plot and field by field, and its “ownership” recorded in and defined by a ledger in an office across the sea.
The impact on Gráinne’s way of life was calculated and deliberate, as it aimed to dismantle what she had spent her life building. Her way of life and her authority depended on movement: boats, routes, trade, collecting tolls, the ability to appear and disappear along a coastline she grew up alongside and knew far better than the foreigners sent to subdue her. The significance of this resistance had made her dangerous to the English state, because it represented a different way of organized power. Far outside offices and administrative policy, she was living proof that there was authority that could not be contained.
Bingham was acutely aware of this threat, and it made his campaign against her all the more relentless and personal. He had one of her sons, Owen, killed; conspired to turn her second son, Murrough, against her; and had her youngest thrown in jail and threatened with hanging. She learned that Owen had been bound, strung up and stabbed with daggers, contrary to Bingham’s account that he had been killed while trying to escape. And this difference in accounts was not incidental–it was intentional. It was a battle for who got to erase legacy, and whose account would survive.
He also stripped her of her cattle, ransacked her castles, had her imprisoned, and called her someone who “imprudently passed the part of womanhood.” So, according to Bingham—and by extension, the state—a woman with ships, men, and maritime authority (and the nerve to use all three) was not, according to the Crown, a “ruler.”

But even with Tibbot in the Tower, her property gone, and few options left, she didn’t disappear into the sea. She wrote a letter to the Queen. She then answered Lord Burghley’s eighteen preliminary questions in detail – about her life, her marriages, her operations, her alliances. She presented herself not as an outlaw but as a woman of stature, driven by circumstance. Then she sailed to England and put her case directly to Elizabeth.
That is not simply survival. It is a kind of intelligence that tends to get written out of the histories of people who are regarded as “inconvenient.”
The document survives. So does she—and my film, “Mama Pirate,” will make sure of it.
*Keelin McCool is a writer/producer/actor. As co-producer of the gender equality in Hollywood documentary “This Changes Everything”, she enlisted Meryl Streep, Shonda Rhimes, Cate Blanchett, and others to participate. She is currently in development with the feature “Mama Pirate.” For more, stay up-to-date on the project on Instagram @MamaPirateFilm.
News From Ireland
Ireland poised to break its May heat record for the third time this week
With high temperature warnings in place for Wednesday, the temperature record for the hottest May day could be broken for a third time this week.

The record for the hottest day in May ever in Ireland was broken on Monday … and again broken on Tuesday. With temperatures forecast to hit 31°C on Wednesday, the record could yet again be broken.
Until this week, the record for the highest temperature ever recorded in May was 28.4°C (83.12°F), which was recorded in Ardfert Liscahane, Co Kerry, on May 31, 1997.
That record was broken on Monday, May 25, when a temperature of 28.6°C (83.48°F) was recorded at Shannon Airport in Co Clare.
That record was then broken on Tuesday, May 26, when the temperature reached 30.6°C (87.08°F), also at Shannon Airport.
📢 A new record high temperature for May has been provisionally recorded as 30.5°C in Shannon Airport, Co. Clare today! 🚨
🌡️ As with all provisional figures, this value will be quality controlled & extensively verified to confirm the record. ✅️ #NewRecord #SunSmart pic.twitter.com/OWLUJ8MsxQ
— Met Éireann (@MetÉireann) May 26, 2026
The record-breaking heat wasn’t confined to Co Clare on Tuesday, though. Oak Park in Co Carlow and Gurteen in Co Tipperary both recorded temperatures of 29.7°C (85.46°F), while Athenry in Co Galway reached 28.7°C (83.66°F) on Tuesday.
Max temperatures for Tuesday 26th May pic.twitter.com/4oNjljATi9
— Met Éireann (@MetÉireann) May 26, 2026
High temperature warning
Earlier on Tuesday, Met Éireann issued a Status Yellow – High Temperature warning for Cos Clare, Kerry, Limerick, Tipperary, Galway, Kilkenny, Laois, and Offaly.
Maximum temperatures in excess of 27°C (80.6°F) combined with night-time minima in excess of 15°C (59°F) are expected, Met Éireann said in its warning.
Potential impacts include heat stress, uncomfortable sleeping conditions, water safety issues due to increased use of lakes/beaches, and forest fires.
The Status Yellow – High Temperature warning will be in effect in the eight counties until 6 pm on Wednesday.

Another record May day?
On Wednesday morning, Met Éireann meteorologist Andrew Doran-Sherlock said another “very warm or hot day” was in store.
He cautioned that scattered thunderstorms could develop in some areas later in the day, which could be severe and potentially prompt warnings.
“Highs of 22°C [71.6°F] to 31°C [87.8°F], hottest in the Midwest and West, though a little lower for some east and northeast coasts,” he added.
Very warm or hot today🥵.
Generally dry & sunny until later in the afternoon☀️ with scattered thunderstorms moving up from the S⛈️.
Highs🌡️ of 22 to 31°C, hottest in the midwest & W, though a little lower for some E & NE coasts due to a mostly moderate easterly breeze🍃. pic.twitter.com/41ySNPSUuj
— Met Éireann (@MetEireann) May 27, 2026
Is Ireland having a heatwave?
Technically speaking, this week’s high temperatures don’t constitute a heatwave in Ireland – at least not yet, anyway,
According to Met Éireann, a heatwave occurs when five or more consecutive Summer Days – which are defined as days when the maximum temperature is higher than 25.0°C – are observed at a Met Éireann station.
The last time a heatwave was observed in Ireland was in September 2023; it lasted six days. The longest heatwave on record for Ireland was in August 1976; it lasted 14 days.
Ukrainians told to pay their own way to stay in Ireland
For Ukrainians who fled to Ireland since 2022, state-provided accommodation will be phased out, rent subsidies will be reduced, and a voluntary return programme will be developed.

Tens of thousands of Ukrainians receiving housing supports from the State will not be eligible to remain here under strict new rules.
Yesterday, the Cabinet approved measures to wind down the level of support given to those who have fled the Russian invasion since 2022.
State-provided accommodation will be phased out, while rent subsidies – which were at €800 – will be reduced to €400, and a voluntary return programme will be developed.
The programme will offer cash incentives to those who leave the country. A pathway to remain here beyond the end of the Temporary Protection Directive – which expires next March – will be offered, but only to those who can pay their own way.
Justice Minister Jim O’Callaghan said yesterday: “Not everyone will get permission to remain.”
Those who wish to stay in Ireland will have to meet strict criteria:
- They must be employed for the previous six months, and earning a minimum annual salary of €29,432;
- They must not be in receipt of accommodation supports from the State; and
- They must be resident in Ireland under the Temporary Protection Directive for at least one year.
There are over 50,000 Ukrainian refugees in receipt of State-provided accommodation, or the Accommodation Recognition Payment (ARP) subsidising rents, who would not meet the criteria to remain in Ireland.
That represents around 60% of the 84,000 Ukrainians here. Mr. O’Callaghan said: “We’re also putting in place proposals to enable those who are here from Ukraine, who are working, who may wish to stay in Ireland. The [Justice, Home Affairs and Migration] Department will develop a transition scheme to enable those who want to stay… and who have the capacity to stay… to stay here.”
He added: “The scheme that’s going to open up in September 2026 will have eligibility criteria for it, and one of the criteria will be employment or self-employment for a period of time and a salary.
“So, as a State, we’re perfectly entitled to set out criteria in [those] terms.”
Asked about the eligibility criteria and if those who do not meet it would have to go home, the Minister said: “Not everyone will get permission to remain, obviously.”

Applications for those wishing to stay will open in September under the Temporary Protection Transition Scheme, which the Department of Justice said is to “incentivise labour market participation, upskilling, and progression to independent living, while also providing clarity and certainty for people in advance of the expiry of Temporary Protection.”
Those who qualify will be granted permission to remain for an initial two years, which can be renewed for a further two years, opening up a path towards naturalisation.
The permission will be based on the inclusion of the whole family living here under temporary protection.
The average Ukrainian working here earns €540 a week, which is an annual salary of €28,080, just shy of the Government’s threshold.
Around 16,000 Ukrainians are still in State accommodation, while around 42,000 are in receipt of the ARP. Around 5,000 of those who are considered vulnerable will be allowed to stay in state-provided accommodation.
At present, if a recipient of Temporary Protection leaves a Designated Accommodation Centre, they can apply for standard social protection assistance, subject to meeting the eligibility conditions.
Government sources signalled they aren’t inclined to begin issuing deportation orders to those not entitled to remain, once the Temporary Protection directive is lapsed.
However, they could be directed towards a voluntary returns programme, which could include cash payments to assist with the cost of leaving the State.
Those impacted in the first phase will be notified in the coming weeks. Others will be notified as soon as possible, but not less than three months in advance. They will then need to make their own accommodation arrangements or alternative plans.
Junior justice minister Colm Brophy explained: “We’re not looking to send people home. We believe the majority of Ukrainians who are here, and want to remain in Ireland, will have the ability to support themselves and actually do want to work.
“We also have a vulnerability cohort where we’re recognising that, in circumstances where there is genuine vulnerability, we will be able to see how we can facilitate those.”

Mr. O’Callaghan admitted the Temporary Protection Directive may be extended at an EU level next year, depending on the war in Ukraine.
He said: “Regardless of Temporary Protection being extended or not, other EU member states have already implemented programmes of a similar nature, which run parallel to the current temporary protection status. So it’s not interlocked to [that] protection status.”
Under the plans, the Government has agreed to phase out accommodation that has been provided free to Ukrainians since 2022, starting with those commercially contracted by the State.
This will start in August and finish by March next year. There are about 16,000 Ukrainians in commercial State-supported accommodation, and over 40,000 in subsidised accommodation in private homes.
Once people leave State-contracted commercial accommodation and move to independent accommodation arrangements, they will be entitled to standard social welfare, subject to meeting the eligibility conditions.
The ARP will be reduced to €400 a month. Mr. O’Callaghan said he believes most of the 42,000 recipients will likely stay in the same accommodation.
With regards to the 16,000 in State-backed private accommodation, he said: “Very many of them may be vulnerable individuals. We calculate approximately 5,000 of them will continue… in State contracted accommodation.”
He said the extra 11,000, many of whom are working, will be able to seek accommodation through friends or in the market. He added that “it’s only fair” people who are working, and up to now getting free State accommodation, should provide for their own accommodation.
A spokesman for the Department confirmed that while the permission scheme will require people to be in independent accommodation, there is also provision being made for people who would find it difficult to achieve self-sufficiency and require ongoing accommodation.
The Department will reduce spending on Ukrainians from € 1.2 billion a year to €600 million.
*This article was originally published on Extra.ie.
WATCH:
Fresh look at Andrew Scott and Kerry Condon
in tense new D-Day drama “Pressure”
The newly unveiled clip from “Pressure” offers a glimpse at the high-stakes historical thriller ahead of its cinema release.

A fresh look at the upcoming war drama “Pressure” has been released, with Irish stars Andrew Scott and Kerry Condon taking centre stage in the tense countdown to D-Day.
According to StudioCanal, the film unfolds during the critical 72 hours before the Normandy landings, when weather forecasts became crucial to the success or failure of the Allied invasion.
The newly unveiled clip offers a glimpse at the high-stakes historical thriller ahead of its cinema release this September, with Scott playing Britain’s Chief Meteorological Officer James Stagg and Condon starring as Captain Kay Summersby, aide to Supreme Allied Commander Dwight D Eisenhower.
The synopsis reads: “In the 72 hours leading up to D-Day, all the pieces are in place except for one key element – the British weather.”
Scott’s character is tasked with delivering what the studio describes as “the most consequential forecast in history,” while tensions rise among Allied commanders desperate to launch the operation.

The film description adds: “The wrong conditions could devastate the largest ever seaborne invasion, while any delay risks German intelligence catching on.”
Condon’s character, Captain Kay Summersby, is portrayed as one of the few people Stagg can confide in as pressure mounts before the historic operation.

Academy Award winner Brendan Fraser stars as Eisenhower, with Damian Lewis appearing as Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery and Chris Messina playing wartime meteorologist Irving P. Kric.
The film is directed by Anthony Maras, best known for “Hotel Mumbai,” and co-written with David Haig, who also wrote the original stage play on which the movie is based.
Haig previously portrayed James Stagg in the theatre production before the story was adapted for the big screen.
Pressure is scheduled to arrive in cinemas in Ireland on September 11, after the US release on May 29.
*This article was originally published on Extra.ie.
Ireland match forced to stop
as tennis balls thrown onto the pitch in protest against Israel game
This is one of the numerous protests that have taken place in recent times ahead of Ireland’s UEFA Nations League games against Israel later this year.

Ireland’s game against Qatar was forced to be stopped twice as fans threw tennis balls onto the pitch in protest against Ireland’s planned game against Israel later this year.
The incident took place after 10 minutes, as Jack Moylan was setting up to take a corner for Ireland when a Qatari player went down injured. The stand then began to flood down tennis balls onto the pitch, with the Palestinian flag embalzoned on them.
Tennis balls are launched onto the pitch here at the Aviva Stadium in Ireland vs Qatar, and the Palestine flag is hoisted in the stands, as fans protest against the Ireland vs Israel game, scheduled for this Autumn’s Nations League pic.twitter.com/9hLAgDhhOh
— Ben Symes (@bensymes01) May 28, 2026
Then, after the 20-minute mark, more Tennis balls were thrown onto the pitch while the ball was in play, and the players were taken off to the sidelines while the balls were cleared off the pitch. Multiple fans who were caught throwing the tennis balls were escorted out shortly after.
Ireland vs Qatar is stopped as fans protest against the potential Ireland vs Israel games in support of Palestine 🇵🇸
Security are clashing with the fans who are unfurling banners, flags and throwing tennis balls onto the pitch. pic.twitter.com/wYiliNxEFQ
— Ben Symes (@bensymes01) May 28, 2026
Even more tennis balls were thrown on after the 40th-minute mark, but this time at a much smaller volume, and it didn’t stop the game, with Hallgrimsson quickly clearing a few off the pitch. This is one of the numerous protests that have taken place in recent times ahead of Ireland’s UEFA Nations League games against Israel later this year.
The first half of Ireland’s friendly against Qatar in the Aviva Stadium was interrupted twice as fans threw tennis balls onto the pitch
Palestine flags waved in the stands, and sections of fans chanted “stop the game” pic.twitter.com/E5ZfFoy2BJ
— Balls.ie (@ballsdotie) May 28, 2026
Heimir Hallgrimsson’s side is set to face Israel twice this September and October after being drawn in the same group alongside Austria and Kosovo. The away leg to Israel is likely to take place at a neutral venue, while the home leg is, for now, set to be at Aviva Stadium, though there have been rumblings that it may be switched to a neutral venue.
The FAI and the Irish Government have both stated their intention to have the matches played, with a boycott unlikely to go down well with UEFA, especially ahead of Ireland hosting the Euros in 2028.
Read more
Despite that, a large number of fans and players have voiced their concerns with the Irish National Team playing the game, with the nation’s vocal stance against what’s going on in Palestine.
Speaking about the prospect of players potentially wanting to make a stand, Ireland captain Nathan Collins said he wouldn’t “stand against” anyone wanting to make a stand or protest.
Ireland manager Heimir Hallgrimsson also defended his players ahead of the prospective match, saying “it’s unfair for the players to be in this position and us to be in this position.”
*This article was originally published on Extra.ie.
Tears of joy as Irish peacekeepers return from Lebanon
The Irish peacekeepers who returned to Ireland this week were the last of the 127th Infantry Battalion to get home.

There were tears of joy in the arrivals terminal of Dublin Airport on Tuesday night as some 160 Irish peacekeepers returned from deployment in Lebanon.
The Irish soldiers were greeted by proud family and friends after the grueling six months with the United Nations Interim Force (UNIFIL).
During their time deployed, the 127th Infantry Battalion carried out a number of operations.
Among the events was the medical evacuation of a wounded Ghanaian soldier and resupplying other UN Posts.
Commanding Officer of the 127th Infantry Battalion, Lieutenant Colonel Mark Lennon, lauded the men and women under his command.
“The whole nation should be proud of them,” he stated, adding that the Defence Forces were “punching way above our weight.”
“Even in the conflict zone and in those dangerous missions, our troops are well capable — they thrived in that environment,” he said.
Lt. Col. Lennon explained that there were “mixed emotions” returning home due to the devastation imposed on the villages that were in the Irish area of operations.
He said: “It is war-torn, and it’s damaged — and in many ways, it was poignant and quite sad leaving today.”
Battalion Quartermaster Sergeant Paula Quinn was also amongst the homecomers, and also lauded her colleagues in Lebanon.
“The harder it got, the better people got on, they came together, their training came into it.”
BQMS Quinn was welcomed home by her son Jack, who had a “Welcome Home Mammy” poster in tow.
The peacekeepers who returned on Tuesday were the last of the 127th Infantry Battalion to get home.
Members of the 128th Infantry Battalion will take their place and have already been deployed to Lebanon with UNIFIL.
*This article was originally published on Extra.ie.
Jokes
Cavan Jokes
People from this county are allegedly especially flinty and careful with their money!
.
Q: Where does a Cavan father bring his kids on Christmas Eve?
A: To Santa’s grave.
.
Q: Why does a Cavan man get married in a farmyard?
A: So the hens can eat the rice.
.
Q: How was the Grand Canyon formed?
A: A Cavan man dropped a nickel down a rabbit hole.
.
A Cavan man and his wife were at the fair and a pilot was offering a free flight to anyone who would stay quiet while he did loop the loops in the small plane. If they screamed it would cost $50.
The Cavan couple climbed on board and the pilot did his worst to complete silence from the back of the plane.
Finally, he landed and he complimented the Cavan man on the two-way radio for staying quiet.
“Ah now, I nearly shouted when the wife fell out,” the Cavan man replied.
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Welcome to
Tír na mBláth
Tír na mBláth is one of hundreds of branches throughout the world of Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann (CCÉ) pronounced “kol-tus kyol-tori air-in“, the largest group involved in the preservation of Irish music, dance and song.
Our board and membership is made up of Irish, Irish descendants, and all those who support, celebrate and take pride in the preservation of Irish culture.
We also aim to promote good will and citizenship.
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