logo
Haunted house? Dracula author's Dublin birthplace available for €400 a night on Airbnb

Haunted house? Dracula author's Dublin birthplace available for €400 a night on Airbnb

Irish Times15 hours ago
Are
short-term lets
sucking the lifeblood out of Ireland? The
debate rages on
, with a new data point to consider: you can now rent
Bram Stoker
's house on Airbnb.
The Dracula author, the only true northsider among Dublin's 19th century literary greats, was born at 15 Marino Crescent, beside the aptly named Bram Stoker Park at the point where Clontarf, Fairview and Marino join.
The Crescent, built in 1792 by the enjoyably named Charles Ffolliott as a means of blocking his enemy's view of Dublin Bay, is a pleasantly curved street of classic Georgian houses that seems a nice enough place to spend a Dublin holiday.
The Airbnb listing is disappointingly light on references to Count Dracula, citing instead 'elegant sash windows' and 'fresh towels' as selling points of the three-bed.
READ MORE
Halloween is already unavailable, but a sample Thursday-to-Sunday stay in September would set you back €1,641. That's €413.67 a night plus a €400 fee for professional cleaning – which seems a lot, but vampirism can be a messy business.
Seo libh canaig'
'Have modern fans lost their respect for true Gaels past?' Photograph: Ryan Byrne/ INPHO
One of the more curious aspects of attending matches at
Croke Park
these days is the lecture that precedes the playing of the national anthem, chiding people for any cheering they might be tempted to do before the final word is sung.
'When we sing our national anthem before we play our national games, we take pride in our unique identity and the culture that has been entrusted to us,' says the disembodied voice of the GAA. 'We all have a duty to honour that tradition and to set an example for others and for future generations to always give our anthem at our games the respect it deserves.'
Have modern fans lost their respect for true Gaels past, fallen under gunna scréach and lámhach na bpiléar? One other possible explanation: they don't know the words.
Sinn Féin TD Conor D McGuinness has pointed out that Amhrán na bhFiann isn't actually in the curriculum for Irish children, at primary or secondary level, something he considers 'shameful', 'outrageous' and, of course, a 'disgrace'.
In response to a parliamentary question from McGuinness, the Minister for Education
Helen McEntee
suggested that 'curricular frameworks provide clear pathways for schools to include Amhrán na bhFiann'. They 'might choose' to teach it in primary school history class or 'could choose' to teach it under the heading of Song Singing in primary music class.
Secondary school history 'enables study' of the anthem at various points, and in Junior or Leaving Cert music, students 'may wish' to sing the anthem as part of their practical performance exam.
Which is all to say that, no, it is not on the curriculum.
'Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael are actively undermining Ireland's republican heritage,' McGuinness said, citing also the possible conversion of the GPO into a shopping centre.
'Amhrán na bhFiann should be taught to every child in every school. It's a basic expression of national identity and civic belonging.'
They could include a 'no whooping during the second last line' rule on the curriculum while they're at it.
The rocky road to Dublin
Presidential candidate Catherine Connolly arrives to a count centre in Salthill during a previous election. Photograph: Joe O'Shaughnessy
Meanwhile,
Catherine Connolly
, the left-wing independent vying to inherit the Áras, is no stranger to the trappings of power. Though seen more often these days sailing through Galway on her trusty bicycle, the firebrand was once used to a more opulent mode of transport.
In 2004, as mayor of Galway, she racked up a bill of €650 – €900 or so in today's money – on a trip in the mayoral car to see the county's minor hurlers win the All-Ireland at Croke Park. Leaning on the services of Limo Corporate Hire Irl Ltd, as the Galway City Tribune reported at the time, she was paying a rate of €25.20 per trip, plus €34.98 for waiting time.
Her markedly unsupportive deputy mayor at the time, Padraig Conneely, noted that it would have been cheaper to fly to Los Angeles – although the Galway minors weren't playing there at the time.
Trips to Croke Park to see her county should be cheaper if she wins the presidency: it's well within cycling distance up the North Circular Road.
Never say never
RTÉ's Dáithí O'Sé, 2012 Rose of Tralee Nicola McEvoy and Leo Varadkar, then Minister for Transport, Tourism and Sport, on board a replica Famine ship for the Gathering. Photograph: Alan Betson / The Irish Times
With choppy waters ahead and the Ireland's small boat at risk of being capsized once again by global waves, the Government has kept an important lifebuoy on hand. Remember The Gathering?
The 2013 'initiative' largely entailed the diaspora being wheedled into coming to Ireland and spending money in order to lift the economy out of the doldrums.
Despite not offering anything in particular other than the general idea of welcome to affluent third-generation Irish-Americans, it did actually work. Fáilte Ireland's final report found that around €21m of Government and third-party cash was spent to make an estimated €170m for the flagging economy, with 250,000 more tourists than would otherwise have been expected.
Like many a figure from folklore, The Gathering disappeared from view once its job was done, but it remains ready to creak back to life when it is needed most. The company set up by the Government to run it is still alive, filing accounts, dormant but available if needed by tourism chiefs or ministers.
Its directors, according to its accounts, are Deborah Nolan and Michelle McEvoy, heads of operations and finance respectively at Fáilte Ireland, and it has assets, liabilities, income and expenditure of zero. For now.
Grimefighter
Signsy is a masked man who has taken to cleaning up graffiti and grime. Image: Signsy/ YouTube
Is it a bird? Is it a plane? Is it a council worker? No – it's Signsy, a masked man who has taken to cleaning up graffiti and grime on the streets of
Northern Ireland
.
A version of Superman who is more concerned with the cleanliness of the public realm than crime per se, he uses WD40 and the superpower of being willing to actually do it himself to return obscured road signs to their shining-metal glory, among other amazing feats.
'I've become a hero in disguise cleaning signs, graffiti and maybe even fixing some of the potholes that seem to be everywhere,' he told Belfast Live this week. 'I may do it at any day any time in the cover of darkness to remain hidden.'
He uploads his resulting clean-up and repair videos to YouTube with his voice disguised and his face covered. He doesn't have a cape 'yet', he says. He even pledges to tackle spray-painted slogans that 'cause division within our community'.
A positive force for his locality no doubt. If he tires of anonymity, that combination of unity rhetoric and pothole-fixing ability sounds like electoral dynamite.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sharlene Mawdsley shares tender moment with Tipperary GAA boyfriend Michael Breen after emotional All-Ireland final win
Sharlene Mawdsley shares tender moment with Tipperary GAA boyfriend Michael Breen after emotional All-Ireland final win

The Irish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Sharlene Mawdsley shares tender moment with Tipperary GAA boyfriend Michael Breen after emotional All-Ireland final win

TIPPERARY'S victory in the All-Ireland final was sealed with a kiss in a tender moment between Sharlene Mawdsley and boyfriend Michael Breen. Breen and his 2 Tipperary's Michael Breen celebrated winning the All-Ireland final with girlfriend Sharlene Mawdsley Credit: Stephen McCarthy/Sportsfile 2 Mawdsley gave him a kiss as they held the trophy Credit: Stephen McCarthy/Sportsfile The players and staff were cheered on by their friends and family in the stands at That included relationship with corner-back Michael Breen. After the game, Sportsfile captured the moment Breen brought the iconic trophy over to his girlfriend, who gave him a kiss on the cheek in celebration. The all-star couple have been an since shared a pic of themselves at . Read More on GAA But they have known each other for a whole lot longer judging by a precious The 26-year-old shared a photo collage of the couple, including a throwback photo. The pic is an eye-catching one, as it showed the 2024 Olympian with brown hair , with the Newport AC export best known as a blonde. Conveniently, the Ballina man's birthday also fell on Sharlene's grandmother's 90th birthday which yielded a similarly emotional post. Most read in GAA Hurling The photograph which signalled that they had gone But that wasn't the first time she'd been in attendance to cheer on Liam Cahill's side this year. Watch RTE pundits' contrasting reaction to full-time whistle of Tipperary's epic win over Kilkenny In the wake of the sprinter's relationship update, her previous matchday experience makes even more sense even leaving aside that she is a Tipperary native herself. She So it's no wonder why a few more in the know people who commented on her post felt a relationship announcement was overdue. Stephanie wrote: "Awwwww Shar about time (love heart emoji)." Meanwhile fellow Olympian Cathal Doyle added: "Loving the hard launch Sharlene." Elsewhere, Mike hailed: "Two of Tipp's finest athletes. Magic." And lastly, Since going official, Mawdsley and Breen have been He previously The Premier hurler has also been a And when she was Mawdsley hurling final with a After the semi-final victory, the corner-back posted a photo on Instagram of them all smiles. Breen captioned it: "First time in Croke Park is it?" To which the sprinter replied: "And not my last!"

Man to run circumference of Ireland in aid of lifeboat volunteers
Man to run circumference of Ireland in aid of lifeboat volunteers

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Man to run circumference of Ireland in aid of lifeboat volunteers

'If you want to achieve big things, you gotta take risks,' says Vini Cardoso (41), who will be undertaking a 2,200km run around Ireland this August. Having moved to Ireland in 2008, the Brazilian wants to express his 'gratitude to Ireland for all these years that I've loved this country'. He will be running around the circumference of Ireland to raise money for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) . Mr Cardoso's journey, which he estimates will take two months, will be just be him and his backpack containing his tent, food and water. He is fundraising for the RNLI to pay homage to his friends who volunteer for them. He spoke of his admiration for one friend who, in some instances, has been eating dinner before getting a call to rescue someone. READ MORE 'Many times he would come back at six, seven in the morning when I was waking up for work the next day.' Another friend, Ronan Murphy, has been volunteering for the RNLI for almost 13 years. He divides his time between working as a firefighter, a paramedic and running a gym in Howth, where he met Mr Cardoso more than 10 years ago. Mr Murphy said even though Mr Cardoso is from Brazil 'he's more Irish than most people I know'. He said Mr Cardoso will be 'seen as one of our own' in the RNLI for taking on the challenge. Ronan Murphy volunteering for the RNLI Mr Cardoso will be using the RNLI lifeboat stations as 'supply stations', which he will send food and water to in advance, to be collected along his journey. Mr Cardoso, an artist and Brazilian Jiu Jitsu teacher, began running long distances following the death of his father a few years ago. He 'needed something different' to focus his attention on and 'started running around the fields in Howth'. [ 'Deep and rich' story of medieval high rulers and nobles determined by archaeologists in Galway Opens in new window ] 'I always knew that for me, I would never be able to run and win races, but I understand that there is something about the long distances. I like that long journey, it's a very mental thing.' Last year, he ran The Ireland Way, a 1,000km walking and cycling trail which took him from west Cork to the Giant's Causeway in Co Antrim. He said the journey led him to notice 'how welcoming people were' in many parts of the country. 'Some people invited me to come into their house, offered me a place to stay, a nice comfortable bed, shower, dinner. For me, that was something beautiful to experience.' Since moving to Ireland, a country he says he fell in love with, Mr Cardoso has been teaching himself Irish. He has 'learned a few words and sentences here and there', and in the past year has been 'going deeper, learning the structure of the language'. He hopes to put it to use on his upcoming run. 'If I pass through the Gaeltacht in Connemara, Galway, I would try to immerse myself into the culture, at least learn a little bit. Maybe order some báinne [milk] or uisce [water].' Vini Cardoso trains for his 2,200km coastal circumnavigation run around Ireland, fundraising for the RNLI. Photograph: Alan Betson The mental preparation he has undertaken for the journey has been considerable. He says it is 'about understanding where my mind is gonna go, how my feelings or my mind is gonna react when I find myself sitting in a tent with nobody to talk to'. He says the journey will force him to 'be present in the moment and appreciate the solitude'. 'Being alone is a very powerful thing'. However, Mr Cardoso is used to being alone in such a way, spending many Fridays after work camping in the Wicklow mountains on 'a little night out'. To physically prepare, he runs between 15 and 20km a day, going further on weekends. He wears a heavy backpack to ready himself for what he'll be carrying during the journey, which he says will be between 14 and 18kg of supplies. He also does strength training with a friend who is a coach, and mobility training to stay flexible. He will 'go with the flow', and if there's a day where he can't keep going, he will allow himself to rest, he says. [ Dog is euthanised after attacking owner in Cork incident Opens in new window ] His family in Brazil are 'big supporters' of his plan. His mother is encouraging, but remains cautious and worries about his safety. 'This is life, we gotta take risks,' he said. His friend Mr Murphy will be checking in with Mr Cardoso every day through texts and calls. Mr Cardoso will be posting daily video content of his progress on his Instagram, @vini_on_earth.

Remembering Ballinspittle and the moving statue
Remembering Ballinspittle and the moving statue

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Remembering Ballinspittle and the moving statue

Queuing for flat whites and skinny lattes being served through a street-facing hatch from a 'boutique' bakery in the small village of Ballinspittle, customers were there on a recent Saturday morning for their coffee fix rather than a gawk at the statue of Our Lady. Mention the 'moving statue' in the village and folk smile benignly but don't seem interested in talking about the phenomenon. Forty years ago, on July 22, 1985, a 17-year-old local girl, who was in the company of family members and a few neighbours, said she saw the statue of Our Lady, in the grotto just outside Ballinspittle at Sheehy's Cross, move. It was shortly after 10pm. Little did Claire O'Mahony know what she had unleashed while on a walk with a stop-off for prayers at the grotto. Thousands of both the curious, and the religious, descended on Ballinspittle, close to Kinsale in south west County Cork, to witness for themselves this oddity. READ MORE It was the start of a bizarre summer (also remembered for its poor weather) with at least another 30 sightings around the country of statues of Our Lady and other venerables 'moving'. On August 15th, the feast of the Assumption, gardaí estimated more than15,000 people came to Ballinspittle. I was working in the newsroom (a desultory portakabin) of ERI, a Cork pirate radio station at the time. We drove down in the station's van to the scene of the headline-grabbing silly story one evening to report on it. The place was thronged. The grotto is in a natural amphitheatre and the source of all the fuss stands 30 feet above eye-level with a halo of light bulbs around her head. Opposite the grotto is a sloping hill where we perched up among the hordes, recording vox pops. The next morning, live on air, chatting to presenter John Creedon (who was to go onto better things at RTÉ) I declared that I had seen the statue move. It wasn't a complete bid for attention. I actually did experience what the psychology department at Univesity College Cork(yes, the heavy hitters were roped in by the media) described as an optical illusion. Stare at something static long enough at dusk and you will perceive what appears to be movement. And those twinkling lights around the Blessed Virgin's head helped. But that didn't dampen spirits. A letter writer to the then Cork Examiner bemoaned the 'atheist mods' who dismissed the religious fervour and said that the moving statue was a sign sent to strengthen the nation's faith. Psychiatrist Dr Anthony Clare gave his opinion in the Irish Press, saying that the sighting in Ballinspittle 'occurs late in the evening to women of great religious devotion'. Others argued that the phenomenon was a response to an existential angst, exacerbated by the Cold War. And there was the stark reality of unemployment in Ireland at the time at 17per cent. Sociological factors explaining moving statues can be as relevant as deeply held religious conviction. Whatever the reasons, the world's media was enthralled by the story at Ballinspittle. Locals featured on the BBC's Newsnight. And in 2010, Terry Wogan visited the grotto to record a piece about it for a BBC show. Not everyone was charmed by the goings-on at the site of religious fervour and, no doubt, some mockery too. The Ballinspittle statue was vandalised by protestors against idolatry, led by Robert Draper who was found guilty of smashing other statues and went on to do six months in prison. The Ballinspittle statue was repaired. Today, the well-tended grotto includes a rail on which dozens of sets of Rosary beads hang. There is a caretaker's hut but no sign of life in it. There is out-of-date information about rosary gatherings for the month of May. A woman I spoke to who lives in Ballinspittle said that she sometimes hears the rosary being recited from the grotto, relayed by loudhailers. It sure makes a change from having your evening punctuated by social media alerts. Can you imagine the level of digital manipulation that would have been applied to photographs of statues of Our Lady had the internet been around four decades ago? After dropping into a few shops in Ballinspittle (including two great craft stores), and annoying the staff as I tried to extract moving statue lore from them, my companion said she needed to use the loo, so we left. First though, we drove back to the grotto where toilets had been installed to cater for pilgrims. They are in a grim grey-painted concrete building but a sign says they are out of service. A metaphor, perhaps, for the waning faith of the populace?

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store