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A bee-line into town! Dublin Bus is a hive of activity…

A bee-line into town! Dublin Bus is a hive of activity…

Extra.ie​22-05-2025

When you're buzzing around town on the bus, please spare a thought for the busy bees hard at work back at the depot… literally.
Two Dublin Bus staff – mechanic Paul Granger and driver Irwin Bannon – have set up bee hives in two depots which are now home to some 250,000 bees.
And as well as helping conserve the native Irish black bee, a species that is in increasing need of support, they are producing close to 1,000 jars of the sweet stuff in a good year. Beekeepers (L to R) Irwin Bannon and Paul Granger. Pic: Tom Honan
The honey is harvested and fed back to the bees to ensure they survive over winter and any remaining is raffled off to staff in the depot eager to try the sweet taste.
Paul is a beekeeper back at his home in Offaly and a few years ago went to management to suggest installing a few hives on some unused ground at the Phibsborough depot. Bosses thought it was a great idea, so he cleared a patch and installed two hives.
The successful project has now grown to a second depot nearby in Broadstone, and there are now five hives at the two depots. Pic: Tom Honan
The bees forage far and wide, buzzing up the Botanic Gardens in Glasnevin and the Phoenix Park and all over north Dublin in the hunt for food.
Irwin said: 'Our bees here would be O'Connell Street, all the local hanging baskets, flowers outside pubs, Phoenix Park, Botanic Gardens. Anywhere within three or four kilometres, where they can find a sustainable amount of forage, i.e. pollen and nectar.'
Back at the hive in complete darkness, the bees do a 'waggle dance', which tells the other bees where they have found food, how much, and where it is located in relation to the sun. Beekeeper Irwin Bannon. Pic: Tom Honan
Irwin helps with the hives' weekly inspections – but admits it is not a risk-free venture, adding: 'I do get stung but it's the nature of the beast.
'Maybe 150 times throughout the year, but bees don't have any interest in stinging anybody.
They're just happy to go about their own business, but if you aggravate them by waving your hands, all of a sudden, you're in trouble.'
To mark World Bee Day on Tuesday this week, Dublin Bus invited photographer Tom Honan into the Phibsborough depot to see the bees in action.
Dublin Bus spokesman Blake Boland said: 'This is a fantastic initiative being driven on a volunteer basis by our employees like Paul and Irwin.'
Dublin Bus is keen to expand the hives to more depots to promote sustainability. The company also harvests rainwater from rooftops and has rolled out more than 100 electric buses.

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We used to vilify unwed mothers. Now we criticise women who don't want to be mothers
We used to vilify unwed mothers. Now we criticise women who don't want to be mothers

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

We used to vilify unwed mothers. Now we criticise women who don't want to be mothers

According to the Central Statistics Office, the average age of Irish first-time mothers is now 31.7, while births to women aged over 40 have increased by 21.5 per cent in the last decade. Public discourse on the growing numbers of women electing not to have children is loud, insufferable and generally asking the wrong questions. The real story behind declining birth rates and elective non-parenthood in the West is unsurprisingly more complicated than we give it credit for. It is not just that women are too busy 'girlbossing' their way to Beyoncé gigs in fringed cowboy boots to think – quite literally – of the children. Some are choosing not to become parents. In a society that considers parenthood the default, this choice is usually made with care and clarity. After all, the social cost alone is a powerful disincentive. More would like to be parents but can't see how it might be possible under their present conditions. The situation is often reduced to personal selfishness or cultural decline – laziness, greed, convenience – resulting in women failing to do their duty. What's missing from the discourse is legitimate curiosity about why this decision appears to be becoming more common. We still treat readiness for parenthood as a sort of universal personal milestone, but that is no longer the world we actually live in. Desire isn't a primary factor in decision-making if you can't afford rent, if childcare costs more than the salary you require in order to live, and if there isn't a stable partner with whom to coparent or family or community support nearby. Many increasingly common material limitations are dismissed as a general unwillingness to inconvenience oneself in order to be a parent. But lacking the money, the housing or the support (let alone all three) to raise a child is more than sufficient disincentive. We are living in a time in which there is no guarantee that the future will look anything like the past. While it's in our collective interest for people to have more children, it isn't in the interest of many individuals or their prospective families. Chastising people for having the rationality to notice this and act accordingly is not an effective means of changing it. READ MORE [ Childcare in Ireland: 'Even as well-paid professionals, it was an exhausting struggle. The numbers never added up' Opens in new window ] In Ireland, we have a long history of disguising structural problems as moral ones. This is how we justified institutionalising more of our population than any other country in the world in the 20th century. It is arrogant of us to presume we've outgrown the sophistic habit we've long used to avoid looking too closely at ourselves. Until recently, we looked at mothers who had children outside the conditions we considered appropriate as moral failures – selfish abnegators of their collective duty. Now, we repurpose that same impulse and direct it at non-mothers. In both instances, we fall prey to the same error – a failure to look around at the conditions and society in which women live, and the incentive structures around them, and to consider how we are collectively contributing to the outcomes many claim to disapprove of. The reluctant mother is a shameful, piteous figure in our culture. She garners our disgust in a way we often spare fathers of the same inclination. It's the happy, fulfilled, enthusiastic mother our culture idolises. The 'natural' mother. We ignore the fact that only women who desire to be mothers are likely to feel fulfilled by the role, and even then, not all will feel that way – because women are people, and need more than a relational identity in order to value themselves. Young Irish women were taught to value autonomy by a generation of women who advocated and struggled to create a freedom they didn't enjoy themselves. The point was always choice. Now, women are choosing, and we're still blaming them. Not everyone is suited to parenthood, and it's better for all when those people choose to live childfree. There are valuable and meaningful ways to live a good, fulfilled life, make a contribution and invest in others beyond perpetuating one's own family line, obviously. It's a good thing that fewer people are raising children they don't want, and that fewer children experience this harm. Increasingly, there are people who don't feel hopeful about the future or cannot find stability – rejecting parenthood is both rational and compassionate under those circumstances. There are also those who would rather do other things with their time. It makes no sense for this fact to be personally offensive to people who have nothing to do with them – this is a coercive impulse that will not be remedied by a stranger having a baby. [ So, you want children. But can you afford them? Opens in new window ] However, declining birth rates are still a material problem. If the survival of humanity depends on women embracing motherhood (it does, but not to the exclusion of all other factors – we just like focusing on this one), then our discourse is incoherent. Why is there so little curiosity about why more women seem to find the prospect of motherhood unappealing, inaccessible or both? Why do we expect people – but specifically women – to choose parenthood despite all of the compelling reasons not to? This is a question we should be asking. 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