Friday, December 31, 2010
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Moon
Got up this morning to dark skies and the moon still out at 8.45am never seen that before. Not before long it began to snow again...
10 years to walk to local shop!
Well yesterday was another day of being stuck in due to the snow cabin fever kicked in again so for the first time in ten years myself and my son decided to walk to the nearest shop... the road is usually very busy and is quite dangerous to walk but with little or no traffic we braved it. The walk involves a number of hills up and down but after an hour we arrived. The treat at the end was a bar of chocolate for the journey back another hour.... very nice indeed. So with two days to Christmas, I have managed not to get caught up in the Christmas shopping hype and I'm having a very chilled out time. The bank balance is also looking healthier than ever before at Christmas I suppose not so bad after all... Happy Christmas to everyone I hope its a good one at least Santa can still get around.... so I might get a present after all.. Here are some more snow pics of our walk.
Please Touch Exhibition 16th December
The exhibition went very well a lot of hard work and effort went into making it happen. The atmosphere on the night was great. Artist Sean Hillen http://www.seanhillen.com/ opened the exhibition and he gave a really good speech. Thanks to everyone for their support the lecturers, sponsors and fellow students. Below is the work I displayed I use a variety of mediums from oils, acrylic and gouache.
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Community Based Learning Project....
This is a short posting to-day unfortunately due to the bad weather over the last two weeks I was unable to get down to visit the project in Wexford. Hopefully after the Christmas break we will get stuck in. Looking forward to working on this project as it is very different to the community work I have done before. This one will be hands on helping to make a boat so can't wait to get started. Due to a 3rd year Art exhibition this week at the Grainstore, Paul's Quay, Wexford it will be a very busy week in preparing for that. So watch this space for further postings!
The Grainstore was renovated in recent years and is a fabulous building full of history and it's fantastic that such buildings are kept and not allowed fade away.
The Grainstore was renovated in recent years and is a fabulous building full of history and it's fantastic that such buildings are kept and not allowed fade away.
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Friday, December 3, 2010
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Another Day!
Monday, November 29, 2010
Snow
A little bit of snow fell last night and more to come to-night just a few pics from the garden. The snow in rural areas is so picturesque it's funny in the City it becomes slush so quickly, with the traffic and pedestrians, the only cars able to pass my house are 4x4's or tractors. I made a snowman for the first time a few years ago, there was never enough snow on the streets in Dublin to make one!
Sunday, November 28, 2010
March Saturday 27th November 2010
Unfortunately, I woke to a blanket of snow and was unable to March in Dublin on Saturday. Now considering the population in Ireland and the total mess we are experiencing I would have thought the numbers for the march would have been greater than the 55 thousand as reported, I think all the various groups should join together to take to the streets rather than each individual group fighting for there own cause! Anyway lets hope this snow doesn't last too long as I'm snowed in with two hills either side of the house.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ing8xH3Qj-k
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ing8xH3Qj-k
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Mature Students
I'm writing to-day on the basis of an article a fellow student showed me during the week from the newspaper and it revolved around the free fee's for students. The article expressed that all students were only interested in boozing and partying and why should fee's be paid by the taxpayer. Now as a mature student while driving to college this opened a number of thoughts for me. While I know that mature students are in the minority within the third level education system (possibly changing due to the downturn) it bothered me that I was stereotyped into a particular category and that the term student brings up very many notions and myths for people. I am not saying that all my younger fellow students should be categorized in this way either but to me seems a very shallow opinion considering the amount of work that is involved in college life. Many mature students have to come to terms with computer skills, time management skills etc. and to be stereotyped into a category of drunken louts is not good. Another programme I watched on funding students stereotyped students into those posh wealthy kids from Foxrock. In my experience of college life I haven't seen too many rich wealthy people or too many boozy students. For some mature students a college social life sometimes doesn't exist due to family commitments and the workload of college.
Unfortunately, in the past college was not an option for many families and it was just a matter of getting out to work to make a living and work at anything in order to get an income, no such thing as a career didn't feature, working in factories the minute you turned fourteen for some on your birthday. I think it is fantastic that mature students can now go to college and experience what it is like. While it can be very hard with family and juggling life in general it can be a valuable experience. For mature students termed as over 23 there are many avenues into college life through Vocational Training Opportunity Schemes and Post Leaving Certificate courses which are all open to mature students.
With the cuts it would be sad to see college life becoming only for the minority and not providing everyone with an opportunity in life that they would like to experience so for all those myths about students all being of the ages of 18 & 19 and drinking their way through college is unfair. Of course our young people party like I did at that age, but this is also not confined to the student community. By creating this impression of student's it only adds to further resentment from the working taxpayers etc. Many students have to commute long distances to find a facility to cater for what they want to study and pay for accommodation, food etc. so I think students should get the break they deserve, after all society benefits from an educated community and other countries want these students as part of their societies so why aren't they valued. Please find attached an article about mature students and lifelong learning.
http://www.ucc.ie/publications/heeu/Mature/mature_6.htm
Unfortunately, in the past college was not an option for many families and it was just a matter of getting out to work to make a living and work at anything in order to get an income, no such thing as a career didn't feature, working in factories the minute you turned fourteen for some on your birthday. I think it is fantastic that mature students can now go to college and experience what it is like. While it can be very hard with family and juggling life in general it can be a valuable experience. For mature students termed as over 23 there are many avenues into college life through Vocational Training Opportunity Schemes and Post Leaving Certificate courses which are all open to mature students.
With the cuts it would be sad to see college life becoming only for the minority and not providing everyone with an opportunity in life that they would like to experience so for all those myths about students all being of the ages of 18 & 19 and drinking their way through college is unfair. Of course our young people party like I did at that age, but this is also not confined to the student community. By creating this impression of student's it only adds to further resentment from the working taxpayers etc. Many students have to commute long distances to find a facility to cater for what they want to study and pay for accommodation, food etc. so I think students should get the break they deserve, after all society benefits from an educated community and other countries want these students as part of their societies so why aren't they valued. Please find attached an article about mature students and lifelong learning.
http://www.ucc.ie/publications/heeu/Mature/mature_6.htm
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
At Last!
Delighted to have seen the 9 o'clock news to-night and at last some coverage of the brutality inflicted on students last week and about the complaints that have been raised. It is terrible when you see something that is so unfair and to feel powerless to do something about it. I'm still really annoyed and disappointed at the way people were treated and I hope some justice and answers are forthcoming. The footage is there to be seen and marvelous we have such technology to document such events on small devices such as the mobile phone. It's amazing looking at the footage how many people were recording the event as it was happening.
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Day of the March, 3rd November

The atmosphere was very different up around the Dail very tense and the Gardai were uneasy and on alert, the students were forced down the one side of Merrion Square and a large truck i.e became a stage and also a barricade between the Dail and the Students.

Thousands were squashed into the Street which we tried to get into but the heat and crowds were unbearable, and if a push happened people would have been seriously crushed! All students were very good humoured but obviously cheesed off with the idea of registration fee hikes and many seen the dismal prospect of the dole queue as an option. TV3 tried to report from the venue but the many interruptions of students jumping behind him, this really annoyed the reporter and he gave up, telling me he was hours trying to make a report and was failing miserably. I asked him to make sure he would report the correct figures for the march, he said they always report the truth.
The rally ended and the students began to disperse from were they were contained unfairly in my opinion I think as Irish citizens we should have been allowed to be in front of the Dail gates, I seen no evidence of students with any missile's. As I proceeded up towards Ely Place I noticed the atmosphere was becoming more stressed for the Gardai and I wondered what was happening. As I got to Merrion Row a number of Gardai on horses came out of Ely Place. I had to leave at that stage and I could not see over the horses or see what was happening ahead.

Subsequently I have looked at footage on U-Tube and found it very distressing and disturbing because from what I can see many students were observing the few that entered the Department of Finance the riot squad came onto the seen which I think was very unnecessary and this provoked the tension. Students were pleading not to be hit and still they were batoned because they would not move. This was a peaceful protest that was over policed and control was abused and the right to be were you wanted to be in the City was denied.
Should you decide to watch the U-Tube footage no weapons etc. were used by students, all they did was sat on the ground bully boy tactics that were not required and to add to it all what did this exercise cost? a few eggs thrown boo hoo! a few students sitting in the lobby of the Department of Finance making a peaceful protest, young women and men hit with batons, do our young people need to be treated like this. Once the fee's increase there is no going back and college will only be for the elite few again! Let's hope the forty two thousand students in attendance exercise their right to Vote and don't have to become the next generation to emigrants.
The U-Tube video has been removed maybe for legal reasons or possibly it showed us too much?
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