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Updated: Sep 14, 2020

29 November to 1 December 2019


Dublin's fair city

This weekend we are gathering in Dublin’s fair city for the annual reunion of our Frankfurt gang. If anyone thinks this sounds odd, the first rule of such reunions is that we have lots of fun. The second rule is that we congregate in a place that’s not called Frankfurt. To be clear, that’s not because we think Frankfurt isn’t fun or otherwise THE top tourist destination in Europe, but because some of our group still live there and it wouldn’t be a weekend away. That’s our excuse anyway and we’re sticking to it.


The trip starts badly when we find we have been misled by British Airways. Although we have booked our flight on the BA app and it has a BA flight number, we find ourselves unable to select our seats, check in or do anything further via BA as it is apparently a flight “operated by Aer Lingus on behalf of British Airways”. We don’t even have a choice of seats when we use the Aer Lingus website, so more or less find ourselves allocated the loos at the back. Not that I’m bitter. Once at Gatwick, I still feel confident of flashing my Silver card to access the BA lounge, but no - apparently, a Gold card is required if the flight is operated by a code share partner. What a con.


In search of solace (or failing that, sliced avocado and poached eggs on toast), we head for Wonder Tree - actually my favourite eaterie at Gatwick South Terminal, as the service is always friendly and lightning fast. It is again today, so I stop ranting about BA’s shortcomings for a few glorious seconds. And so it is that I shall remember Wonder Tree for ever more as “where I was when I heard that Roland Duchâtelet had sold Charlton Athletic”. Finally! At this moment everything else pales into insignificance, time stands still, my eggs go cold, tears of relief and joy are shed. Jayne also enjoys her breakfast (I think).

Christ Church Cathedral has its very own rainbow

The flight is pleasant enough and we’re soon in an Uber to Dublin city centre, having teamed up with Jamie and Nicky. (Apparently they were also in Wonder Tree, but decided to give anyone blubbing into their coffee a wide berth). Our driver is a lovely guy, as old as the hills, and regales us with some fine anecdotes about his city and Irish history. This bodes well for our weekend here, as does the striking view of a rainbow over the cathedral opposite our window at Jurys Inn Christchurch.


We agree to meet for an afternoon stroll, but - predictably - don’t actually make it outside before Jamie spots a first Guinness opportunity nestling in the hotel bar. When in Rome and all that. Duly fortified, we head out for the first cultural visit of the trip - a “self-guided” tour of Dublin Castle. Originally built in the 13th century beside the “Dubh Linn” (dark pool) that gave the city its name, the castle became the seat of the British government’s administration of Ireland before being handed over to the new Irish government in 1922. Although the modern government is based at Leinster House, every President of Ireland is still invested here (we learn that the President is head of the upper house, as opposed to the unpronounceable Taoiseach, who is the executive head of the lower house).

At last, a Dublin Castle exhibit I can relate to

A helpful information board tells us of famous visitors to the castle, including Queen Victoria (four times) and the omnipresent Charles Dickens. Surprisingly, Queen Elizabeth II has only visited once, in 2011, putting her level with Nelson Mandela, John F. Kennedy and Charles de Gaulle. As the latter three are unlikely to add to their total, I reckon Brenda has her sights set on a stoppage time winner, possibly VAR-assisted. Otherwise, the rooms and exhibits shed light on the lives of various aristocratic families that lived here over the years, in particular Thomas and Lady Betty Cobbe, who seemed to like porcelain and accountancy in equal measure (whatever floats your boat). All in all, I would say Dublin Castle is well worth taking an hour out of the day to visit.


We stroll into nearby Temple Bar in search of further refreshment, which turns out to be plentiful in this busy area of town bordering the River Liffey. Another couple of Guinness slip down nicely in Paddy Mac’s, where there’s also a band playing live music at 4.30pm on a Friday - an excellent idea. When we return to the hotel, we have only a short turnaround before reuniting with the whole of our group in the hotel bar - yet another Guinness to add to the tally, but who’s counting?

Service with a scowl at Ireland's oldest pub

Tonight’s dinner venue is The Brazen Head, which prides itself on being the oldest pub in Ireland, dating from 1198. The joint is certainly jumping as we enter on ground level, but we find that the restaurant is located in a more sedate room upstairs. Already guinnessed out (no spell-check on this verb, so it must exist), we move onto wine - and later a fine Irish whiskey - to accompany an array of traditional Irish fare, all tasty enough. The one downer is that our Polish waitress doesn’t crack her face once the whole evening, only acceding reluctantly to our request for a group photo while simultaneously chewing on a passing wasp. We leave with the distinct impression that The Brazen Head is leaning too much on its “oldest pub” label - any atmosphere (or cheery Irish welcome) in the main downstairs bar certainly doesn’t make it up one floor to us.


The next stop is also deemed unsuitable - a very odd pub on the way back downtown that smells like a deep fat fryer. We walk out en masse. Approaching Temple Bar again, we pile into The Oak which not only offers excellent live music (a contemporary mix, not the touristy folksong stuff) but its air is pleasingly fat-free. A fun end to the night. It’s only the next morning that we notice that The Oak is located right next to another pub - which is also called The Oak (no Irish jokes please, that would be racist).

The Long Room at Trinity College Dublin - absolutely stunning

Saturday morning dawns crisp and dry - perfect conditions to walk the city. Our starter for ten (geddit?) is Trinity College, Dublin’s famous university and also the home of the Book of Kells, described - albeit by its own guidebook - as “one of the great treasures of medieval Europe”. Created by Christian monks around 800AD, its pages were made from vellum taken from “the skin of 150 calves” and filled with the most amazing calligraphy and illustrations. Impressive stuff, but - sadly - we titter like schoolboys as we read of “monks dipping their massive quills in the communal ink-pot” (or something like that). Smutty innuendo aside, the Long Room of the library is an awe-inspiring sight, containing over 200,000 books on two floors and looking as old as time itself (the foundation stone was laid in 1712). The silence is regularly broken by stern warnings not to use flash photography, as this has been proven to damage the ancient books. The library is an absolute “must see” when visiting Dublin - a beautiful and historic place.

George Salmon - no pink panties today, just a pink bicycle

Trinity College was originally founded by Queen Elizabeth I in 1592 - a half-decent riposte to the Pythonesque question “what have the British ever done for us?” Its spacious grounds include a statue of George Salmon, Provost of Trinity College from 1888 till his death in 1904. Fearsomely conservative, he was the guy who allegedly decreed that women would be admitted to the college “over my dead body”. Ironically, his wish later came true as, after being overruled by the college board, he conveniently snuffed it just before the first female student arrived. As if to celebrate his enduring commitment to women’s rights, it’s now the custom to adorn his statue with assorted lingerie.

Nobody can say Jamie doesn't suffer for his art

Moving from the sublime to the ridiculous, we head off in search of some coloured umbrellas suspended over a side street between two buildings. Jamie declares himself “whelmed” by this sight but still prostrates himself in the road for the greater good (in this case, a group photo with multi-coloured umbrellas). “Why?” seems a reasonable question.


Onwards we trek for a more forensic examination of Temple Bar after yesterday’s reconnaissance missions. We chance across some marvellous street art dedicated to Ireland’s writers, poets and other notables such as Molly Malone (who, the wall art informs us, is also known as the “Tart with the Cart” - affectionately, we assume). It could have been worse - the great author James Joyce is, alternatively, the “Prick with the Stick”. Only Samuel Beckett escapes without an amusing Dublin sobriquet - possibly because he was a miserable sod who preferred to live in Paris. Having once suffered a performance of his definitive Waiting for Godot, we are amused that he once re-read his own script many years later and opined “this thing needs a good edit”. You’re not wrong, Sam!

Much maligned was poor Molly

After lunch (and the odd Guinness) at Quays Bar, where the friendly and prompt service contrasts favourably with that of Ireland’s oldest pub, we set off for the Guinness Storehouse. My experimental navigation via some “historical Dublin backstreets” (with slum characteristics) fails to find favour with Jamie, who lowers his satisfaction rating to “underwhelmed”. But all appears forgiven when the welcoming portals of St. James’s Gate loom up ahead. It’s busy though - a 40 minute queue for those who haven’t pre-booked online (i.e. us) - and certainly not cheap at €25 a head. We’re learning that nothing in Dublin comes particularly cheap.




Many a true word....

The Storehouse (also known as the Guinness Museum) is very much on the tourist trail - and deservedly so. Housed in a spectacular building reminiscent of the Centre Pompidou in Paris, the tour takes us up six floors of circular walkways which somehow lessen any feeling of over-crowding. We learn all about the vital ingredients - especially barley, which reminds me of Gareth Malone and his amateur choir singing about fields of the damn stuff. Really irritating but I can’t get it out of my head. We also learn that the perfect roasting temperature for the barley is 232 degrees Celsius, as it’s only at this heat when it transforms into the black colour and taste of Guinness we know and love. At least now I have a different annoying song in my head (“232 is a magic number”). Everyone then stands cross-legged as we learn that Mrs Arthur Guinness bore 21 children - sadly the high infant mortality of the time meant that only 10 survived into adulthood, a shocking statistic.

The calm after the storm (including near death)

The history of the iconic brand’s advertising is fascinating too - I’m not sure what that toucan was all about but it was certainly memorable at the time, while the “fish on a bicycle” gag is just odd (even if arguably true). What sticks most in my mind is the older and very simple slogan “Guinness is good for you”, a nailed-on medicinal fact I have been keen to test at every opportunity this weekend. And the next one quickly presents itself at the tour’s finale - a free (yeah, right) pint of Guinness for every Storehouse visitor at the rooftop Gravity Bar, which provides a spectacular 360 degree view across Dublin (if you can see past the crowds). Our visit is rounded off by a very entertaining horse and cart ride back to the hotel - at least until the young horse slips on some cobbles and almost turns the cart over. The driver explains that it’s only the horse's second day in service, as “he’s only t’ree, y’know”, but still fleeces us, or more exactly Denise, €45 for the privilege of this near-death experience.

Well, it seemed like a good idea at the time

Saturday evening is epic from start to finish. We start with an hour’s “Escape Boat” experience - exactly like an “Escape Room”, the new team-building craze, but on a boat - who knew? Located east of the city centre at Grand Canal Dock, it’s moored next to a floating Thai massage parlour, an auspicious start. It’s great fun until Jayne’s team wins and mine doesn’t. To add insult to injury, the winning team enjoy a view of our incompetence on the captain’s TV monitor and are encouraged to hurl abuse over the intercom, but Nicky's not standing for any of that nonsense. Standing closest to the camera, I'm later told my facial expression is - at best - “unsportsmanlike”. The losers’ mood only improves when we leave the scene of our miserable defeat and head the few hundred yards down the road to Osteria Lucio. Their Christmas dinner menu (€49 a head, gulp) offers a table selection of tasty hors d’oeuvres followed by a choice of five sumptuous mains - my saltimbocca of monkfish is divine - and the desserts are equally special. The restaurant is full to bursting - and no wonder, it’s superb. The people are lovely too. My wallet feels much lighter.


The evening ends either with a taxi ride back to the hotel bar, or - for six of us - a walk to clear the head, which conveniently takes us via Molly Malone’s statue into a very lively part of town on the south side of Dame Street. By now it’s 11pm on Saturday night and all the pubs are bulging at the seams. We enjoy a nightcap outside the Dame Tavern, assuming we are safely in a pedestrian zone until a tiny car rounds the corner and tries to inch its way through the crowds, one of the revellers helpfully opening one of its rear doors as it passes. The atmosphere is amazing - ebullient and super-friendly - everyone is out for the craic.

Group portrait ... with multi-coloured umbrellas

Sadly we need to say our goodbyes straight after breakfast on Sunday, foregoing the final treat of a "Viking Splash Tour" - it looks fun though, basically a duck tour wearing silly hats with horns on. The trip home is uneventful, as I’ve long since priced in the lack of lounge access or choice of seating (we get the tail fin this time). I celebrate our return to Blighty by immediately turning the wrong way at Gatwick and doing a lap of honour through the same car park we just left. Jayne’s whelm index turns negative, as apparently I did this last time as well.


Aside from my team's devastating defeat on the Escape Boat, it’s been a trip packed with fun and laughter in the company of some of our oldest and best friends. Dublin has been just about the perfect venue for a reunion weekend and even the weather was kind to us. Looking forward to Madrid sometime in 2020!


Acknowledgements: The decent photographs were taken by Jayne Burton and Jamie Russon (thanks!), the naff ones by me.



  • Writer: Richard
    Richard
  • Dec 14, 2010
  • 4 min read

Tuesday 14 December 2010


After six days touring, I'm now back in the big city - specifically Perth, host to the Third Test starting on Thursday. Here's a brief run-down of my experiences in the meantime:

Kangaroo Island: some truly Remarkable Rocks

Kangaroo Island: Even if Oprah decided to give it a miss, a tour of this huge but unpopulated island is worth at least a day or two out of a largely city-based schedule. Approximately 3 hours by coach and ferry from the centre of Adelaide (or a very short flight), KI is easily accessible but far enough removed from mainland life to generate an inner calm as soon as you step onto its shores. As well as providing a home to some of the iconic species of Australian wildlife, the island also features some spectacular – but relatively little known – sights, such as the Remarkable Rocks and the Admiralty Arch.


Despite getting up close and personal with sea lions, seals, koalas, wallabies and an iguana during my guided tour of the island, I was beginning to think that the only kangaroo I was destined to see on Kangaroo Island would be a dead one in the middle of the road. But no – my guide Keith skilfully waited till the afternoon heat had dissipated before taking me to a deserted stretch of farmland which had been taken over by – quite literally – hundreds upon hundreds of kangaroos as far as the eye could see. Breath-taking stuff!


I stayed at the Kangaroo Island Seafront Resort at Penneshaw, a short hop from the ferry terminal. Straightforward comfortable accommodation with an ocean view, supplemented by an excellent restaurant managed by an exiled Brit called Richard, one of island's 4,500 residents. The hotel is also a stone's throw from one of the island's premier attractions – the "Little Penguins" which live on Penneshaw's beach and are best viewed after nightfall. Incidentally, their name until recently was "Fairy Penguins" but this was no longer deemed an acceptable name for modern times – now that really is political correctness gone mad.


Adelaide foothills and McLaren Vale: After returning from KI, I enjoyed a convivial weekend with Sally, Fiacre and Ronan at their home in the Adelaide foothills (thanks guys!). This included a tour of some of McLaren Vale's finest vineyards, a thoroughly agreeable way to spend a Saturday afternoon, followed by an informal neighbourhood party where I found the Adelaide people without exception warm and inviting (unlike the weather which had suddenly turned decidedly British). On the Sunday, we did a whistle stop tour of some of Adelaide's beaches. Turning off the main road towards Hallett Cove, we rather unexpectedly had to give way to a kangaroo hopping down the middle of the other carriageway, apparently on its way to a Christmas shopping outing in downtown Adelaide. If that's not quintessentially Australian, I don't know what is.

Nullarbor Plain: 2,000 kms of this view

Indian Pacific: The experience of travelling from Adelaide to Perth by train was both awe-inspiring and surreal. From the vastness of the Australian continent to the sheer desolation of the 2,000 kilometres across Nullarbor Plain, this was an unmissable travel experience. Nullarbor literally means "no tree" but in reality there was no tree, no water, no anything at all. At one point we passed a former prisoner of war camp - possibly one of a kind in that it had no fences to deter escape (the prospect of certain death on the Nullarbor Plain was deterrent enough).


Aside from several waits at a passing point to let a freight train go by in the other direction (the railway is single track only), the only two scheduled stops were at Cook and Kalgoorlie. Cook was once a thriving outback town with its own school and hospital, but today exists only to service the rail traffic – effectively a ghost town, with dire warnings issued against entering its motley collection of condemned buildings. By contrast, Kalgoorlie remains a hive of gold-mining activity despite being long past its heyday of the early 20th century. However, judging from the barmaids' outfits at one of the local hostelries, there must be a severe shortage of cotton and denim affecting the town.


Accommodation on the train ranges from "red" or economy seats (on which two nights need to be spent) to gold or platinum cabins with silver-service dining cars and lounge areas. I had the good fortune to be upgraded from a single to a double cabin all to myself. One cautionary note though – this is not a good option for anyone with the slightest hint of impatience to get to their final destination or who would rather not listen to serial life stories of elderly folk over breakfast, lunch and dinner. But overall, I would give the Indian Pacific experience a big thumbs up.


Now I have crossed half a continent to arrive in Perth, I feel ready for the comforts of a city hotel again. Since arriving I have learned that Perth is geographically closer to Singapore than it is to Sydney and that you could fit the equivalent of 13 United Kingdoms into the state of Western Australia alone. This is not a small country.


[Original comments]


Strewth mate & that's a brief run-down!!!?? Must be that the Nullarbor Plain lived up to it's "Nullar-boring Plain" tag.... or maybe you ran into the "Nullabor Nymph" and thought you'd better write a good cover story :))

Anyway, looking forward to test match service resuming...


No worries Glenn - I'll email you the longer version - just for you!

  • Writer: Richard
    Richard
  • Dec 12, 2010
  • 1 min read

Sunday 12 December 2010


The Indian Pacific at Cook (Population: 4)

Just a quick warning of likely radio silence till Tuesday, as I am just about to board the Indian Pacific from Adelaide to Perth. Renowned as one of the world's great train journeys, the Indian Pacific traverses the vast Nullarbor Plain, taking around 40 hours and 2 nights to reach its destination. The route also includes the world's longest completely straight section of track - covering 478 kilometres. As some of the largest towns en route only have a population of "4 humans and about a zillion flies" (to quote my cousin Steph, who lives in Perth), it seems unlikely that the wireless networks will be particularly well developed. So blogging may be out of the question. Reading a good book while sipping a glass of chilled white wine and occasionally gazing out at the animals bounding across an endless desert sunset, on the other hand, will be positively encouraged. Oprah Winfrey will definitely not be on the train, as far as I know. Not sure about her fan club though. Anyhow, judging from the people sat in the waiting room with me, my presence will lower the average age of the passengers by a considerable margin. And it's not very often these days I can claim that.


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