Dublin for the day
We got cheap flights from Ryanair to fly to Dublin and back. Only £10 return and we were most indignant when they charged us airport fees! We paid a grand total of £20 each for the return flights......When you consider I pay £8.60 return to travel from Weston to Bristol by train,it was a bit of a bargain.
I've never flown Ryanair before and have heard the horror stories so I was pleasantly surprised. Yes, there was a bit of a scrabble to get on first and as the seats aren't numbered and allocated, you just have to sit where there's a free seat, there's no guarantee you'll sit with your friends. We were dotted all around the plane, but it was a short flight, so it didn't really matter. There wasn't much leg room but the seats were comfortable.
When we got to Dublin we got the shuttle bus right outside the airport to O'Connell St. We walked past The Spire, which is incredibly tall new monument, built to replace Nelson's Pillar, destroye by the IRA. Sorry, I couldn't fit it all in one shot!
Here's the bottom:
And here's the top!
Then we had breakfast in Bewley's in Grafton St, famous for being the hang-out of Irish writers, like James Joyce, Sean O'Casey and Samuel Beckett and it's mentioned in Joyces Dubliners. The original decor with stained glass windows is still there and they do a good full Irish breakfast.....Potato farl, bacon, sausage, tomato,black and white pudding, mushrooms, poached egg, toast, orange juice and tea. OK, I was a wimp and didn't eat my black and white puddings........
Then we walked around the shops, all to the sound of Irish music from the gift shops, and passed the statue of Molly Malone, also known to the locals as he Trollop with the Scallops............
Then we took a boat trip on the Liffey,
Ha'penny Bridge |
Samuel Beckett Bridge. |
There was an art installation by Fergal McCarthy on the Liffey. It is Monopoly style houses and hotels, which light up at night, it's a comment on the homeless problem in ireland and the vast amounts of money speculated by the banks on housing projects which now stand empty.
And here's the culprits, the AIB, whose speculating in property led to the banking crisis and a bail out by the Irish taxpayers.
The we walked back along the Liffey by the very moving memorial to those who board ships to America to try to escape the potato famine.
So, by then, our legs were hurting and we were all sight-seeing'd out so we adjourned to a pub in Temple Bar. This bit is full of pubs, clubs and restaurants and is the centre of night life in Dublin. We had a pub meal, a few drinks, and we all had some Guinness, even those of us who don't drink it, all to the tune of a live Irish band. Yes, we did make it back on the plane..........
My favourite song to get you in the mood!
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