Friday, May 15, 2026

Move for Scouts storage container


A local business, John Cradock Ltd, stepped in to support the 9th Kildare Scout Group last Friday by helping to relocate the group’s equipment container to a new home on the scouts' site beside the Astro pitch, writes scout leader Kate Monks. The container had been stored for several years in the grounds of Scoil Bhride, for which the Scout Group thanks the school.
After being contacted by the group, John Cradock's managing director, Victor Smyth, inspected the site and confirmed the company could help. Director Paul Bagnall then met with scout leaders early on Friday morning, and by 8.15 am the container had been lifted, transported, and placed in its new location.

The container stores important Scouting equipment, including wooden poles used for pioneering activities such as building tables, benches, bridges, and wash stations.
With the longer, brighter evenings now here, youth members in their neckers and high-vis vests may be seen building structures, pitching tents, or taking part in a local litter pick. Say hello or give them an encouraging smile — they take pride in being part of the community. 
They'll also be busy in the coming months, fundraising to help reduce the cost to parents for the trip to the World Jamboree in the Netherlands next summer. Any local business that would like to support this with a donation, please contact any leader or email 9thkildaretreasurer@gmail.com. 
Also, anyone local interested in joining the troop in any capacity, please get in touch — all newcomers will be welcomed to the Group.



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Go Purple Day highlights domestic abuse


Today, Friday 15 May 2026, An Garda Síochána is marking Go Purple Day to raise awareness of domestic abuse and show support for victims, writes Brian Byrne. The campaign highlights that domestic abuse can take many forms, including physical, sexual, emotional, psychological, financial, and online abuse. 
It can happen within families, between current or former partners, and in relationships involving young people under 18.
The initiative also draws attention to the scale of the issue, with one in four women and one in seven men affected.
An Garda Síochána says supporting and protecting victims of domestic abuse remains a priority. Anyone in immediate danger or needing Garda assistance is urged to call 999 or 112
Further information can be found on this downloadable leaflet (available in 27 languages at Garda.ie). 

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Kilcullen cyclist represents Ireland


Kilcullen Cycling Club rider Fionn Killeen proudly represented Ireland last weekend in the Czech Republic, delivering a strong performance on the international stage. Fionn, pictured on the right above, finished an impressive third on one stage and placed 13th on another, underlining his talent and determination against high-quality competition.
The young rider will be back in action next week as part of the Irish squad in the Rás Tailteann, Ireland's best-known cycling race. It will pass through Kilcullen on Sunday, 24 May, the final day, giving local supporters a chance to cheer him on close to home.
Adding to the family’s proud cycling connection, Tadgh Killeen, Fionn’s elder brother, will ride with the Leinster squad in the same race.

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Kilcullen Fairy Trail Fun Day in June


A family-friendly Fairy Trail Fun Day will be held in Kilcullen on Saturday, June 6, writes Brian Byrne, promising an afternoon of entertainment and activities for children and adults alike.
The event, hosted by Kilcullen Community Action, will run from 12 noon to 4pm, and will feature Billy Bubbles Magician, Mrs Bubbles’ kids’ sprinkle and biscuit decorating, face painting, storytelling, and music from local artists and a DJ. There will be free ice cream for children.
Families are invited to take part in an optional fairy-themed fancy dress competition, with prizes for the best dressed. 
The day will conclude with a River Duck Race at 4pm, organised by Kilcullen Lions Club in aid of local charities.
The event is supported by Kildare County Council and Kildare Credit Union.

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Vintage Drive for Dunlavin to support Julie Kelly


A special vintage drive event will take place in Dunlavin, Co Wicklow, on Saturday, 13 June, to support treatment for Julie Kelly, who has been diagnosed with Motor Neurone Disease.
The family-friendly day, beginning at 11:30am, promises plenty of entertainment, with vintage cars, tractors, motorbikes, face painting, and live outdoor music, as well as music later in The Pumphouse Pub. All are welcome to take part in the drive, with an entry fee of €20 per vehicle.
Free camping will also be available for the weekend in the old sports field.
The event will be a great day out for all the family while raising awareness and support for an important cause.

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Kilcullen GAA plans Summer Barbecue and Field Day


Kilcullen GAA is inviting everyone to save the date for a special Summer Barbecue and Field Day on Saturday, 15 August 2026.
After many years of fundraising, the club says the event will be a chance for members, families, and the wider community to come together for a day of celebration, fun, and connection. It promises a traditional old-field-day atmosphere, with plenty of craic, community spirit, and summer enjoyment.
A sub-committee has been formed to organise the day, and the club is encouraging parents, guardians, and members who would like to help out to get involved. Anyone interested in assisting with the organisation of the event is asked to contact Caryl at secretary.kilcullen.kildare@gaa.ie.
The day promises to be a memorable occasion for the whole community.

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Thursday, May 14, 2026

Kildare Biodiversity Week brings nature-themed events

A diverse programme of free walks, talks, workshops and exhibitions will take place across County Kildare as part of Kildare Biodiversity Week 2026, running from 15 to 24 May, writes Brian Byrne. The programme aims to raise awareness of Kildare’s plant and animal life and encourage people of all ages to take a greater interest in protecting the natural environment. 
Events are scheduled in libraries, community centres, nature reserves, gardens and outdoor heritage sites, offering something for families, local residents, wildlife enthusiasts and community groups. Highlights include nature and bat walks, biodiversity talks, gardening workshops, butterfly events, exhibitions and citizen science activities. Participants can also learn about bogland habitats, hedgehogs, bees, baby animals and the importance of local conservation work. 
Other events include an art exhibition celebrating Irish wildlife (in Kilcullen Library), a photography exhibition, and the interactive Fish Doorbell citizen science initiative. Activities locations include the Bog of Allen Nature Centre, Castletown House, Athy, Clane, Naas, Celbridge, Rathangan, Kilcullen and Kildare Town. 
Kildare Biodiversity Week is supported by the Local Biodiversity Action Fund of the National Parks and Wildlife Service and by The Heritage Council through the Local Authority Biodiversity Officer Programme. Full event details are available via the official Kildare Biodiversity Week listings.

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The passing of Gale René Pullen-Foster, (funeral arrangements)

The death has occurred of Gale René Pullen-Foster, Grangebeg, Dunlavin, formerly of Cape Town, South Africa, on 13 May 2026 after a short illness at Naas hospital.
Predeceased by her parents, George and Rheana, Gale is deeply missed by her adopted families, Barney and Dorly O'Sullivan, Rachel and James Creighton and Lynn Duff and family, her niece Lynn Lightbody in South Africa and by her many friends and families of Kildare Steiner School, the Dunlavin neighbourhood and the Anthroposophical community in Ireland and South Africa.
She will be residing at her residence, rear of Newtown house, Grangebeg (Eircode W91 C8P7) from 6pm to 8pm on Sunday, 17 May. Please, no visitors to remain after 8pm.
Gale's funeral service will take place at 11am, Monday, 18 May at St Joseph's Church, Gormanstown, Kilcullen (Eircode W91 F407). Cremation after this service is family only.
But it can be viewed on this link
Family flowers only

The passing of Gale Pullen-Foster

Yesterday afternoon, Wednesday 13 May 2026, after a short illness, our friend Gale Pullen-Foster passed away in Naas Hospital, writes Dorly O'Sullivan. Coming from Cape Town in 2002 for a sabbatical, she joined the Kildare Steiner School. She ended up being the strength and pillar of the school for twenty years as a teacher and as a volunteer, even after her retirement. 
She carried the Steiner impulse strongly and beautifully for all these years. Gale had a great impact on many of our young people, and indeed on their parents. She allowed her pupils to develop and blossom and to discover themselves. She gave support and strength to their parents. Gale was an inspirational teacher who knew how to get the best out of her pupils. She was strict, but kind and gentle. Teaching was her life. The children and the parents loved and respected her. 
For the last twenty years, she lived on the O’Sullivan Farm, across the field from the Steiner School. She became an important part of family life. She was always there to lend an ear to anyone who needed it, she beautified the ground by attending lovingly to her garden, attracting birds of many kinds and filling it with flowers of many colours, to attract bees and butterflies. She also took a keen interest in the biodiversity of the farm, helping to plant hedgerows and trees. 
Gale was a very talented artist. It was a gift she freely shared with pupils and friends. Gale painted many beautiful pictures and had a great talent for Celtic patterns. She painted the wall behind the tabernacle in Gormanstown church some years ago using beautiful Celtic patterns. 
My eldest son said this about Gale: Gale had a beautiful, gentle, and high-minded spirit. She was a cultured lady who delighted in the bullfinches, tits, blackbirds, starlings, and robins that visited her garden, tending every corner of it with great care and attention. She had a deep appreciation for beauty and aesthetics, and she was simply lovely to be around — I always felt at ease in her company. She carried a lasting sense of wonder and curiosity throughout her life. 
Rest in peace, Gale.
(Funeral arrangements will be published later.)

Maurice O'Mahony: 50 years on the stage

The many stage faces of Maurice O'Mahony — Clockwise from top left: With Fergal Sloan in The Seafarer, with Ray O'Donoghue in The Padraic Pearse Motel, with Esther Reddy in The Two Loves of Gabriel Foley, as Dinny in The Walworth Farce, with Gerry O'Donoghue in The Quiet Land, and as gravedigger Mick Dowd in A Skull in Connemara.

When Maurice O’Mahony was interviewed for his first job as a teacher by the then Kilcullen Parish Priest, Fr Keogh, he was asked if he had any interest in drama, writes Brian Byrne. As it happened, he had acted in a play while in college, and said ‘yes’. This year, Maurice marks five decades of involvement with Kilcullen Drama Group. “I think Fr Keogh was trying to work out if I would be more than a year in the parish before I moved on, and was signalling some areas of interest that might keep me here,” he says. 
After taking up the job, he spent a few years ‘kind of bedding in’ to the village. Around 1976, he joined the drama group, founded in the 1930s. “My first part was in Spreading the News, a one-act directed by the late John Martin. The group at the time was going through some expansion, and presenting a series of one-acts was the way to give new members some experience before putting them in full-length productions.”
Over succeeding decades, he took part in several productions. “Many farces, but also serious Irish plays like those from John B Keane. We began going to festivals, among them Naas, Leixlip, Littleton in Tipperary, and Kilmuckridge. It was all about finishing work, loading props and actors into cars, then driving around the country. I enjoyed that, and there were adjudicators, who we’d meet afterwards, and they’d give us more detailed information than had been said on the stage. I learned a lot from those sessions.”
Maurice doesn’t recall the total number of productions he’s been in, but some are highlights. “Conor McPherson’s The Seafarer was a good, strong play, for instance. I had a challenging but enjoyable role. Further back, Hugh Leonard’s play Da — I was in that twice. First playing the father, Mr Drumm, and later, in a Paddy Melia-directed version, his son, Charlie, with Bernard Berney playing the father. I really enjoyed that.”
At the end of the 1980s, the drama group became temporarily inactive when the Town Hall was closed. “Bernard Berney and I then got involved with a Dunlavin group, who put on plays in a local pub. We did The Field, Moll, The Year of the Hiker, and Translations, and we toured The Field to Kilkenny’s Watergate Theatre and Waterford’s Theatre Royal.”
The Kilcullen group reformed after renovations to Kilcullen Town Hall, and Maurice was elected chairman. “It became quite a vibrant group, and we put on some very good plays — sometimes with hitches. We were doing The Patrick Pearse Motel, which had two different sets. We could lift each set into the ceiling area, but during one performance, the set above, which had real windows in it, came crashing down. There was glass everywhere, and we had to stop the performance and clean it up. But the audience just accepted that and sat back until we opened the curtains again.”
What an audience gets to see is the final product of several months of preparation: script selection and learning, set design and building. Rehearsals a couple of times a week, and for each actor, learning lines can involve hours borrowed from home and, sometimes, work. When a new play is chosen, it’s often not easy to grasp at first. “Complex plays can take a number of rehearsals before you begin to appreciate relationships and situations. But you build an understanding of character dynamics over time.” He says some authors’ work is easier than others. “For instance, in John B Keane’s plays, the story is straightforward, with easy-flowing language. Others, like Brian Friel or Enda Walsh, can be much more difficult and less immediately accessible to audiences.”
Such was the case with the most recent production, Enda Walsh’s The Walworth Farce. It earned several standing ovations, but it was probably the most challenging production the group had ever attempted. For Maurice, that was apparent when he first read the script. “I couldn’t make head nor tail of it — I really had to read it a couple of times. My main concern was that the audience wouldn’t get it.” After feedback from the preview show, a brief explanation of the production and how the actors shifted into other characters was given before curtain up. “I think that helped … the nights that we did that, people did get it.”
Maurice has fond memories of many fellow members with whom he has shared the stage. They include John Martin, who recently passed away, the late Bernard Berney, and the ebullient director, the late Paddy Melia. Actors Padraic Brophy, Patsy Aspell, and Bridie Maloney come to mind. “People in a drama group become a tight, supportive community,” Maurice muses, noting that working on stage brings trust between players, with sometimes complex scripts and demanding roles. The group is currently in a period of turnover, with lots of new people. “Sinead McKenna is the new chairperson, and we have a new treasurer and a new secretary. It’s good to refresh, and there’s a new enthusiasm.”
The group’s productions bookend key times of the year. Rehearsals in September and October give structure to the dark evenings, getting the players out when they might otherwise just stay home. “For the audience, the autumn play marks the move into winter, the spring event marks the move out. In that sense, the drama group also functions like a family ritual.”
For as far back as collective memory goes, drama in Kilcullen has been a place particularly for ‘incomers’ to get involved with their adopted community. Thus it was when Maurice O’Mahony came to Kilcullen. And so it is today for many of those recently new to the town. 
This article was first published in The Kildare Nationalist.

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Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Kilcullen Community Childcare AGM


Kilcullen Community Childcare and Education Centre will hold its Annual General Meeting at the centre on 15 June at 6.30pm. There’s a general invitation to the event with organisers saying all are welcome.
The community-based service has been providing early years education in Kilcullen since 1974, in a purpose-built centre since 2014.
The facility includes ECCE classrooms, full-day care and afterschool services for local children.

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National Famine Way Remembrance Walk

Bronze shoes sculptures mark different stages along the National Famine Way.

People in County Kildare will have two opportunities to take part in this year’s National Famine Way Remembrance Walk, which begins this weekend, writes Brian Byrne. The annual walk follows the route taken by 1,490 famine emigrants who left Strokestown Park, Co Roscommon, in 1847 and travelled to Dublin on their way to Liverpool and Canada.
The Kildare stages take place on Saturday, May 23, from Enfield to Maynooth Harbour (20km), and on Sunday, May 24, from Maynooth Harbour to EPIC Museum, Dublin (27km).
Walkers will join participants from across the country in commemorating those forced to leave Ireland during the Great Famine, with each stage beginning at 9.30am.
The remembrance walk runs from May 17 to May 24, tracing the National Famine Way through Roscommon, Longford, Westmeath, Meath, Kildare, Fingal and Dublin City.



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Motorbike training at Kilcullen GAA

File image from cnrdmroglu via Pexels.

Kilcullen GAA has announced that a motorbike training facility will use its main car park every Wednesday and Friday from 8am to 4:30pm, beginning on Wednesday, 13 May 2026.
During these hours, the main car park will be cordoned off, and club members and visitors are asked to park in the area behind the main goals beside the Pitch & Putt Club.
The club said the arrangement is part of its efforts to maximise revenue from its facilities during off-peak times and thanked members and visitors for their patience and cooperation.

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Kilcullen Library to host Irish Wildlife Exhibition


Kilcullen Community Library will host Celebrating Irish Wildlife, an exhibition of ink and watercolour sketches by amateur Kildare artist Rory Callanan, from 15 May 2026.
The exhibition, presented as part of Biodiversity Week, will offer visitors an opportunity to enjoy locally created art while reflecting on the importance of biodiversity and conservation. All welcome.
The Library recently welcomed a new Librarian, Ita Casey, and opening hours were also extended, as follows — Monday: Closed; Tuesday: 10am-1pm and 2pm-5pm; Wednesday: 10am-1pm; Thursday: 1.30pm-5pm and 5.45pm-8pm; Friday: 10am-1pm and 2pm-5pm; Saturday: 10am-1pm and 2pm-5pm.

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