Author Archives: Bodger

Saturday.

An operation by The Revenue Customs Service, the Garda National Drugs & Organised Crime Bureau and the Wicklow/Wexford Garda Divisions resulted in a vehicle being stopped in Dublin Port and in a subsequent search of a refrigerated unit, ‘Laddie’ the Customs Dog. located 20kgs of Cocaine concealed among a cache of melons.

The drugs with an estimated value of € 1.4 million  were subsequently seized. The melons, with a street value of approx €2 each (analysis pending), were also taken.

One male aged 22 years is currently being detained under Section 2 of The Criminal Justice (Drugs Trafficking) Act 1996 at Blanchardstown Garda Station.

So far, questioning has proved fruitful.

Ithankyew.

Garda press office

From top: The Guardian, July 2020; Stephen Donnelly (right), Minister for Health, and Paul Reid, Chief Executive Officer, HSE, launching the HSE Covid Tracker App on July 7, 2020

This morning.

Via Irish Times letters

The article “Covid tracker app used by few to identify close contactsmay lead some to believe that individuals are to blame for the low usage of the HSE Covid app for contact tracing (“Only 20,946 had used the Government app for the purpose for which it was intended by uploading close contacts”).

The likely reason that people aren’t using the HSE’s contract tracing app for contact tracing is, ironically, because the HSE won’t let them. A six-digit code from the HSE is required in order to automatically notify any close contacts.

I recently got Covid and this code wasn’t provided to me by the HSE. I couldn’t use the app to notify close contacts, even though I wanted to.

The HSE should be giving these codes to every infected person. If it isn’t, why not? How often are they being given out? How many people that have been given a code successfully uploaded their contact tracing data?

The Covid tracker app isn’t being used to anywhere near its full potential.

Only the HSE can tell us why.

Nick Bell, Dublin 8.

Anyone?

Irish Times Letters

RollingNews

From top: Russian navy ships; Russian Ambassador to Ireland, Yury Filatov

This morning.

Via RTÉ News:

Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney will brief his EU counterparts on Russia’s plans to hold naval exercises 240km off the southwest coast of Ireland.

Mr Coveney told reporters in Brussels he had made it clear to the Russian ambassador that the Government did not welcome the move.

He was speaking ahead of a meeting of EU foreign ministers which will be dominated by escalating tensions over Ukraine.

Mr Coveney said the planned Russian naval exercises were in international waters, “but it is also part of the exclusive economic zone of Ireland.”

Russia told naval exercises off Irish coast not welcome – Coveney (RTE)

RollingNews/AFP

‘sup?

Before Christmas, with a signed A3 giclée ‘Creature Comfort’ prints from Claudine O’Sullivan on offer, we asked you to share an obscure fact about an animal of your choosing.

It was quite a stampede, but alas only one winner…

Liam Deliverance writes:

‘I watched a documentary recently about the Poison Dart Frog, found in parts of tropical Central and South America. So called because their toxins were harvested and used in the tip of blow-darts by Native Americans in their hunting techniques. Visually they are famous for very bright colours and stripes, referred to as aposematicness, and is an advertising function to tell would-be predators to keep walking so to speak.

‘Some frogs which display these bright colours and striping have no toxicity but are just mimicking their dangerous cousins without having to go to all the trouble. The poison dart frogs do not produce the toxins themselves, but instead derive them from eating a rich diet of toxic mites, ants and centipedes, a magnificent evolutionary step to not become victims themselves and instead take the sustenance and process the toxins into defensive patches of poisons contained on areas of their skin.

‘The most poisonous of all these frogs, the Golden Poison Frog, has enough toxin on average to kill 10 to 20 men or about 10,000 mice. This is all the more remarkable when you consider their size, weighing in at an average of 28 grams and measuring 1.5 cms in length, comfortably fitting on the average thumbnail. The extracted chemicals they produce have some medical applications with one such poison used to make a painkiller 200 times as potent as morphine.’

Fascinating.

Well done, Liam.

Meanwhile

Nostalgia by Fuchsia Macaree

Also before Christmas…

…with a print from the new collection of limited edition A2 giclée prints by 8 of Irish based artists all based around the theme of Nostalgia on JamArtPrints.com on offer, we asked you for your favourite Christmas memory.

Paul took the print with this gem:

‘My favourite memories of Christmas are usually centred around video games and me being a giant sap. The three that stand out concern the NES, the Gameboy and the Playstation 1. This is the NES one.

‘The NES was my first videogame system. I didn’t know about it when it released and I doubt my parents could have afforded one. But when the SNES was about to came out and my cousins were offloading their NES, I did every job imaginable during that summer holiday for my parents, neighbours, extended family etc, all to earn the money to pay for it and pay for it I did (came with Duck Hunt and a few other bits). Magic, pure magic.

‘At this time, we would spent alternating Christmas’ at home in Dublin or with the rest of my family in Cork. We were lodged with my Grandparents and it was jobs, jobs, jobs for all of us. Old country people, idleness was the Devil etc. They’re all dead now but I remember them very fondly. The idea of getting to play my new console was out of the question but on Christmas morning, set up in the back store room of my Grandparents house was our family telly (my Dad had snuck it down, tiny little Mitsubishi 13 inch), my NES (I must have been a dense child, I didn’t notice it being packed) and a new game from Santa, Wrath of the Black Manta.

‘For the rest of that morning, my parents ran interference on my Grandparents, telling them I was gathering turf from the shed, changing my socks, tidying the bed etc, so they wouldn’t wonder where I was and give me a job. It was only an hour or so before we were hustled off to Mass but that time was magical. Whenever the game was off, I was like a puppy to my parents, hanging around them, trying to help them with everything they were doing for the rest of the holiday as I knew the work that had gone into that Christmas.’

Thank you, Paul.

Jam Art Factory

Jam Art Prints

The Jam Art Print competition appears here every second Thursday.

Tonight.

Doheny and Nesbitt’s, Baggot Street, Dublin 2.

Turn that off.

Meanwhile…

Right so.

Earlier…

]

This evening.

Earlier…

This afternoon.

It’s a new dawn.

It’s a new day.

And I’m feeling good.

Hic.

Cabinet set to end almost all Covid restrictions from 6am Saturday (irish Times)

RollingNews

Meanwhile…

Ah here.

To mark the 100th anniversary of the taking of the Rotunda Round Room at the Rotunda Concert Hall, now the Ambassador cinema, by a group of unemployed Dublin workers – in protest of the “apathy of the authorities” – and who flew a red flag from one of the windows.

Gathering the top of O’Connell Street at 1.30pm.

Liam And Tom O’Flaherty Society (Facebook)

Rotunda seizure?

Thanks Diarmuid

This afternoon.

GPO, O’Connell Street, Dublin 2.

Cosplaying patriot Barra de Rossa, claiming to represent the sovereign people of Ireland, celebrates the anniversary of the declaration of Irish Independence on January 21, 1919.

Earlier…

This afternoon.

Dawson Street, Dublin 2.

A group of protestors who identified themselves as “Citizens Marking independence day” gather outside the Mansion House.

Anyone?

Sam Boal/RollingNews