[vimeo 45786661 w=640&h=480]
We’ve been meaning to play this all day.
No Monster Club’s music Video Feat. A Singing Dog Around Dublin (Nialler9)
Thanks Nialler
[vimeo 45786661 w=640&h=480]
We’ve been meaning to play this all day.
No Monster Club’s music Video Feat. A Singing Dog Around Dublin (Nialler9)
Thanks Nialler

Anonymous, a former Irish runner, writes:
Imagine.
You’re a young girl and you love to run, to race, and to win. It’s not necessarily an ego thing – it’s a personal, lung-busting pleasure of becoming the best that you can be at something. It almost validates you, to a frightening degree.
You manage every hour of your time, you make huge sacrifices, you prime your body over years. You watch older athletes improve, break records, win major championships and you feel inspired. Inspired to follow their lead – and compete in the biggest event of all, the Olympics.
It only comes once every four years. So there’s no time for messing about. But there’s also no time for being messed about – which is why the Irish women’s 4 x 4 relay team you’re-on-team-no-you’re-not-on-the-team-oh-maybe-you-are-on-the-team fiasco is a disgrace.
Athletics Ireland announced Catriona Cuddihy, of Kilkenny City Harriers, was chosen as a member of the six-member squad. Joanna Mills, of Ballymena & Antrim AC, appealed that decision and Cuddihy was then dropped – four days after she modelled the Irish kit (above).
Now Cuddihy is appealing this appeal and a decision by the Olympic Council of Ireland is due on Monday – five days before the London Olympics begin. How is this fair to either of the girls involved?
And what about the other four girls – surely this is unnecessary stress and distraction as they get ready for possibly the biggest race of their lives – not to mention fulfillment of their dream.
Granted four will only actually race on the track but that’s not the point.
Catriona’s sister Joanne, who is on the relay squad and will also run the 400m flat as an individual, was right when she said a few weeks ago: “The relay (situation) has been heart-wrenching for her and for absolutely everyone on the team, it’s just been unfair. ‘m just a bit baffled by the whole thing. So many things should, and could, have been done differently. The way it’s happened has just been cruel.”
Mills’ coach Ian Neely said: “The AAI have shown themselves to be amateurish — they made the mistake and now they’ve wrecked it for two girls instead of just one.”
I would argue they’ve wrecked it for more.
(Photocall Ireland)
Gillian writes:
My cousin is part of a TCD-based project which is encouraging Dubliners to share gardens and give those with a lack of green space the chance to grow some of their own food. Plug plug plug.
Turn The City Green workshop, Saturday July 21 (Science Gallery)
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sr9re5WKLHo
A(crap)ella – Some Tuna That I Used To Know
Just thought I’d send this on: The heart-breaking tale of the love between a man and a can of tuna, set to one of this year’s most popular tunes, which has been “expertly” re-created in a cappella form. Either that, or I’ve completely lost it. One of the two.
YOU decide.
Dallas Nagata White and her husband were visiting a Kilauea lava flow in Hawaii and, sez she:
…(we) hiked up to what was formerly the Royal Gardens subdivision above Kalapana, Hawaii, where the last standing house was just recently taken over by the active lava flow. While waiting for the rain to pass, we started taking back-lit portraits of each other in front of the lava flow after I set up my camera on the tripod. For the last photo, my husband spontaneously dipped me in a kiss. It was a truly once-in-a-lifetime moment!
Click the image for full epic effect.
Youtuber AyalaAndChen discovered a huge nest of bees inside the walls of his house.
Rather than exterminate the invaders, he called in experts and had all 50,000 removed and relocated. The whole process you see fast-cut here took five hours.
Speakers against, there were none,
And all parties voted as one,
Both the left and right,
And the daft the bright,
Think they need their two months in the sun.
John Moynes
(RTE)