
Storm Eowyn: Heavy winds and rain lash Galway Aquarium in 'worst weather ever seen‘
A popular Irish tourist attraction has warned people to stay indoors and not venture out as it is lashed by Storm Eowyn's heavy wind and rain.
Galway Atlantaquaria shared footage as the floods hit in the early hours of Friday (24 January).
Staff member Matt Hawkins has been onsite all night to make sure the animals are safe.
An aquarium spokesman said: 'Matt is safe but this is some of the worst we've seen. Please stay indoors and stay safe.'
Rare red weather warnings have been issued for Northern Ireland as Storm Eowyn is likely to damage buildings, uproot trees and cause power cuts, the Met Office said.

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"We had flown to London on Friday morning from Belfast for a meeting with the BBC, and we were to fly home from London to Dublin and then get the bus up to Belfast as that was the cheapest option, and it is something we would do all the time," she explained. Christina along with her baby She added: "We were travelling with our five-month-old baby, and it was important that we got home early enough, as he is quite unwell and has to have medication twice a day. For our free daily briefing on the biggest issues facing the nation, sign up to the Wales Matters newsletter here "When we went to check in on the app, it wouldn't let me click through to our booking at all and I thought the issue was with my phone so when we got to the airport, we had to check in at the desk where we then had to pay a fine for not checking in online." Article continues below Christina recounted that after settling the fine, the Ryanair staff requested to see their passports. She informed them that they had travelled to London with easyJet using their driving licences but did have their passports, which had recently expired. Sharing her travel woes, Christina recounted the passport predicament they faced: "My husband has an Irish passport and I have a British one which have both recently expired. With the baby due, we were waiting until he was born to renew them so that we could just do it at the same time. "We informed the staff that we had flown over on our driving licences so he took them away and came back with a man who told us that because my husband has an expired Irish passport, he would be allowed on the flight to Dublin but as my passport was a British one they couldn't let me on the plane." She continued to detail the confusion with airline personnel, explaining the rights under the Common Travel Area: "The staff informed me that as a UK citizen I would need a visa to travel to Ireland as it is in the EU and I tried to explain to them that that wouldn't apply due to the Common Travel Area. "I told him that we lived in Northern Ireland and he then questioned how I had a British passport and couldn't seem to understand that it was a pretty common thing for people to fly to Dublin then travel on to Belfast. He also said that we would need to have evidence that we had booked onward travel from Dublin to Belfast." Christina's frustration grew as the situation escalated: "As I questioned it, he said that he was speaking to someone on the phone who told him that if they let us on the plane and if we arrived in Dublin we would be stopped at passport control and the airline would be fined between £500 and £1000 for allowing me on the plane without a valid passport." 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"It is each passenger's responsibility to ensure that their passport is valid for travel in line with the relevant State requirements at the time of travel. Article continues below "These requirements are clearly set out on and passengers are reminded with pop-up messages during booking. Passengers travelling between Ireland and the UK are required to carry a valid passport for travel. Therefore, as these passengers did not present a valid passport for this flight from London Stansted to Dublin Airport, they were correctly denied boarding."