Ireland Journal 4
Posted by: Nik in Weblog, tags: airport, Arnotts, aviary, beach, Birmingham, Bray, bus, City Tour, commentary, Debenhams, Dublin, duck, Dun Laoghaire, flight, Gap, Guinness, Holiday, hotel, Ireland, kids, lunch, Phoenix Park, rain, shopping, shorts, Temple Bar, Topman, traffic, view, walking, zooThe next part.
Wednesday
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After all the walking I’ve been doing the last few days my calves feel like lead and I have an annoying blister on my foot which has been bugging me the past few days. Today I decided to take it easy…well that was the plan…there aren’t many enjoyable things to do on holiday anywhere which involve sitting down all day.
Got up about 9am after a good nights kip. Been a little bit cooler so it’s easier to sleep but still too warm to use the duvet.1030: After breakfast I thought I would do the City Tour, which involves plenty of sitting! Shame that this morning it had started raining lightly, which is not ideal on the upper deck of an open top tour bus, but bearable. Obviously the covered front few rows were taken when I joined at stop No.1, and sitting downstairs on a tour is not right. I would have thought that the presence of rain meant the tour would be generally quiet but no, the bus soon filled right up! Bearing in mind the tours are ever 10 minutes (for Dublin Bus’s City Tour alone, there is also a City Sightseeing one which run about every 10 minutes also!) they must have carried millions of passengers today. OK maybe I exaggerated a little, but you get the idea. Needless to say, about two-thirds of the passengers got off at Guinness, and as it was early few got on, so after that was pretty quiet.
The driver does live commentary throughout, which was very interesting and light hearted, and very well done considering he has to fight the Dublin traffic at the same time.1115: Decided to get off the tour bus at stop No.16 (it’s a hop-on hop-off service), which is for Phoenix Park. I wanted to visit the zoo while i was in Dublin as I love animals. Again, I decided to do the zoo mid-week as sunday would have probably been packed. Probably a mistake; it was full of kids on school trips! Must have been at least half a dozen groups. You can probably picture the scene, each and every viewing area where you can see the animals, kids were there. Kids were running around everywhere in between. If one group moved on, another would move in. They sometime clash - two groups getting in the way together! They are noisy (although seemed pretty much well behaved, you know what kids are like). Shouting ‘wake up hippo’ will NOT actually wake the hippo. I should not hear kids in the birdhouse - from their footsteps in the next room.
Otherwise, it was a nice zoo. Not as big as Twycross (my ‘local’) but with a good variety. There was a free-flight aviary, this would be great with more birds! They will be putting bats in here but they aren’t there yet. If they are, they were hiding. The elephants could only be seen through holes in a fence, as they are working on creating some mega elephant enclosure. There was a ‘city farm’ but most of the animals couldn’t be stroked which was a shame as most were in full size cages (Twycross has pens you can reach into!), apart from one pony. The few others which did have reachable pens, the animals weren’t close enough (can’t blame them for keeping back with all those kids around!). Plus the zoo contains the usual; tigers, lions, penguins, sea-lions, flamingoes, mara, chimps, gorillas, reptiles, zebras, giraffes, meerkats (didn’t see any, must have been hiding) and lots of duckies, etc. But no owls. Twycross has owls…
You can probably guess, the zoo involved plenty of walking! Not just that, but half way round the spitting rain turned into a downpour. All doorways and indoor areas were…yes…full of kids! So whipped out my jumper and hat (still had shorts and sandals on, always optimistic! Well, not always…) and braved it. It wasn’t all that cold so was actually quite nice and refreshing.
Had lunch at the zoo which tasted terrible, so won’t eat there again! Back to the bus stop (not actually a bus stop, but the ‘first lamp post after the roundabout’ the driver informed us as they aren’t allowed to put a sign up in Phoenix Park). A bus came straight away which was nice, although the rain had pretty much stopped by this point. Either way, back on top deck and got a covered seat. The problem wasn’t the rain now, but who’d want to sit on an already wet seat! Most people were on lower deck. Bless. By the time we were back in O’Connell Street top deck was otherwise empty. Of course I stayed on board until it returned to stop No.1 as to complete the full tour. I’d recommend the tour to any visitor.By now the rain had started heavily again, and it was time to walk round town. My sun hat was soaked through so just chucked it in my bag and managed without. When you’ve been walking in heavy rain so much it’s running down your face it doesn’t seem to make any difference any more! Still, it was a good excuse to hit the shops, as I hadn’t really done any yet. Is it wrong that the first bit of shopping I did in Ireland was from the um most Irish of stores…um…Gap. OK it was a branch within an actual Irish department store (Arnotts) so that makes it OK. But after that I really had no excuse to go to Debenhams did I! Except they might sell umbrellas, and I needed an umbrellas, and they had umbrellas, so again, perfectly acceptable. Then went to Topman…just for a browse really, and there were two top girls on the tills…so again all is good. I did pop into a couple of other British shops but balanced it out by visiting Irish ones too. I even refrained from going to Costa and went to a proper Irish coffee shop. No, not ‘Irish coffee’. I saved the alcohol for Temple Bar a bit afterwards. Temple Bar pubs are better visited in the afternoon, as in the evenings they get totally packed. The whole area does.
I’ll probably do most of my shopping on Friday, or even at the airport on Saturday (after the weight checks!). I also wanted to return to Bray, to finish off my sunbathing. And possibly see if Katie O’Holmes is still around (ok maybe not!). But the forecast is rain for the rest of the week. But as long as I get to the beach somewhere before I go back, even if it’s chucking it down, I’ll be happy. I don’t know what it is but there’s a certain magic of being by the sea.
1930: With plenty of time left, and my foot and legs easing off to make the act of walking less of a chore, I went to Dun Laoghaire for a bit. Public transport in Dublin is great, reliable and frequent, so it’s possible to just go off somewhere without worrying about getting back. But I only stayed in DL for about an hour, as it was now getting nippy, especially that sea breeze, my jumper had been left in the hotel room a couple of hours ago (when it stopped raining and I’d got the brolly). So returned to Dublin, changed into jumper/trousers and went into town for dinner. I’m trying my hardest to leave my coat on it’s hanger for the whole week! I even carried my coat before leaving Birmingham Airport, carried it on the plane and not worn it at all since. I can carry it back then it’ll be good. Yes I am very odd!


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