Monday, January 31, 2011

Toastmasters Open Night

Kildare Toastmasters Club Open Night takes place on Tuesday February 8th, 2011, writes Mary Reynolds. Guests and visitors are very welcome.

Whether you want to improve your communication skills, gain more confidence, be more effective in meetings or get your thoughts across more concisely, Toastmasters can help you develop your ability to communicate and become a more effective leader.

Kildare Toastmasters meet at the Silken Thomas, Kildare Town, on the second and fourth Tuesday of each month at 8pm from January 2011 through to June 2011.

For further information about membership visit www.kildaretoastmasters.com or contact Eilis McCormack, President, Kildare Toastmasters, on 086 332 9876 or Mary Reynolds, VP Public Relations, on 087 604 6890.

Childcare public meeting date confirmed

Kilcullen Community Action is hosting a Public Meeting on the 16th of February in the Town Hall Theatre, at 8pm, writes Iseult O'Donoghue, to look at the options available to our community regarding the Community Childcare Centre.

Due to the huge reaction to the news that the grant earmarked for the development of a state-of-the-art Community Childcare Centre has been lost, it was felt that an open and public forum was needed to discuss the issue and potential future initiatives.

The meeting will have an independent Chair and will hear from all parties involved in the previous campaign to secure the Centre; we will also hear from people with expertise in the area of community childcare and education, and we will hear about potential sources of funding for any future projects.

There will be opportunities for the audience to respond and participate in the discussions and all members of the community are invited to attend.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Council 'can't increase salting' programme

Kildare County Council says it is not in a position to add the Kilcullen-Dunlavin road to its list of roads for salting during icy periods.

Responding to a motion put down by Cllr Martin Heydon, the Council says all existing manpower, equipment and financial resources are being used to their maximum on existing salting routes.

The response was similar to a request for the Naas-Dunlavin road through Brannockstown.

The Council also said it wasn't in a position to revise its 12 salting routes to ensure that no village in the county is snowed in for a sustained period of time.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Carers & Toddlers meeting

Kilcullen Community Carer and Toddler Group will hold a meeting in Fallons on Wednesday the 2nd of February at 8.30pm to plan the year ahead for the group, writes Iseult O'Donoghue.

We are calling on all parents and carers in the community to come along to the meeting to offer feedback, suggestions and ideas and to get involved in running the group.

We're looking for weekly coordinators and new committee members, so come along and get involved in this vibrant, award-winning group!!

Friday, January 28, 2011

'Legal delays' led to grant loss

The directors of the Kilcullen Community Centre have blamed legal delays for the loss of the €600,000 grant for a proposed Community Childcare Centre.

The grant was withdrawn late last year following the failure of Kilcullen Community Childcare and Educational Centre Ltd to obtain a full lease on a site donated by Kilcullen Community Centre.

In a letter to the Diary, The Community Centre directors also suggest that the Childcare Centre Committee were not 'forceful' enough in the matter given that there was a 'looming deadline'.

The Community Centre directors say that a lease signed between the Centre and the Childcare Group in May of last year required the formal consent of the Cross & Passion Order, but despite repeated written requests from the Centre's solicitors to the legal representatives of the Order, the required formal documents did not materialise.

Previous to the May 2010 signing, a consent to the lease had been received from the Order 'through their solicitor', in August 2009 'after a long series of correspondence'.

The directors express their regret that the lease will not be proceeding, but say they had done 'everything in their power' to assist the Childcare Centre in their activities.

They also say that the position of the Community Centre 'has not been fairly represented'.

"The directors of the Community Centre have worked very hard for various community groups in Kilcullen over the years and it is most disappointing that any doubt should be cast on their good work," they say in their letter, which also details recent and planned expenditure totalling some €750,000, as well as outlining the breadth of the Centre's activities in facilitating many community groups.

The full text of the letter is published below.

Development plan 'consequences' meeting

Proposals contained in the Draft County Development Plan will 'severely limit' what may be built in many local villages in east County Kildare, according to Kildare South FF deputy Sean O Fearghaill.

In a letter distributed to local families in Kilcullen as well as other villages, he says the plan as drafted will also have 'very real consequences' for anyone wishing to see a family member accommodated in the area with a new house, in the years ahead.

An Information Meeting is being held next Monday night, January 31, in the Milltown Inn, at 8.30pm, involving Deputy O'Fearghaill and the local councillors for the Kildare area, Suzanne Doyle and Fiona O'Loughlin.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Illustrated Donnelly poem in Hideout

donnellypoem

An illustrated poem about the saga of 19th century pugilist Dan Donnelly, was presented to The Hideout pub in Kilcullen recently, rather closes a circle in the story, writes Brian Byrne.

Because the poem was written by Barney O'Keefe from Brownstown, the area where the Dublin-born Irish champion fighter trained. And The Hideout has been synonymous with the pugilist ever since his mummified right arm was brought there in the early 50s by then owner of the hostelry Jim Byrne.

These days the arm travels the world on loan from the Byrne family, as part of a major exhibition of Irish fighting heroes. But there is still a strong draw to the pub as the modern folklore home of the fighter's spirit.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Winter: It hasn't gone away, you know ...

A plan to deal quickly with snowfall on the streets of Kilcullen is to be explored by Kilcullen Community Action and local businesspeople.

This follows the experiences during the sudden snows before Christmas, which left some footpaths in very poor conditions for a long period of time.

The issue was raised at KCA's first meeting of 2011 by acting chairman Noel Clare. He said he had been approached by local businessman Paul Carey with the idea, to put in place a plan for early snow clearance.

In the discussion, the very patchy response to clearing footpaths in the first of the two bouts of snow was noted. Particular reference was made to the conditions on the bridge footpaths, which quickly became hard packed ice which took a long time to clear. This caused a number of pedestrians to risk walking on the road as the safer option.

Issues such as exactly who can call on resources in the Defence Forces to help deal with snow were raised.

The general idea of the 'snow plan' is to have a rota of businesspeople and other groups who could clear snow quickly with the appropriate tools.

The matter is to be explored further.

Felt flowers workshop

A Felt Flowers Workshop is being held in The Cottonwood Tree on Saturday February 5.

It is being conducted by Katherina Hughes, and will run from 10am-1pm.

The fee of €40 includes all materials.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Surprise party for Martha



Martha Kelly was given a surprise birthday party in the Stray Inn recently.

Ciorcal Gaeilge i gCill Cuillinn

The monthly Ciorcal Gaeilge, organised by Kilcullen Community Action, takes place next Tuesday, 1ú Feabhra ag a 8i.n. sa Hideout, writes Orla O'Neill.

Má tá suim agat sa Gaeilge, beidh fáilte romhat teacht. The Irish Circle is for anyone with an interest in speaking an teanga, and fluency is not necessary.

The objective is craic a bheith againn and to have an opportunity to use the cúpla focail and improve through speaking with others. We will be learning some songs as Gaeilge an mí seo.

Cuirimíd fáilte go háirithe roimh daltaí atá ag déanamh an Ardteistiméireacht.

Circuit Training classes

Circuit Training classes will start at Kilcullen Community Centre on Monday January 31, between 7-8pm.

The programme includes weigh-in, measurements if required, exercise and diet plans, for the all in fee of €50.

The programme will run for six Mondays and is suitable for all ages and fitness levels.

Phone Ger at 087 9850883 for further details.

Monday, January 24, 2011

'Make local government more powerful' - Heydon

martinheydonheadThe next Dail will be 'the most reforming one since 1922', FG's candidiate for Kildare South told a meeting in Calverstown at the weekend, writes Brian Byrne.

Cllr Martin Heydon said that, if elected, he would hope that when he finished his time there that he would be able to say: "I helped change it."

But he said the process of change must start at local authority level, with the 're-empowerment' of local councils. "We must make local government more powerful and more autonomous," he told the group made up mostly of small business operators.

He added that too many TDs are merely 'glorified county councillors', and that in addition to reducing Dail member numbers, a way had to be found to let them concentrate on legislation.

He also suggested that it wasn't a good thing that Dail members stayed there for too long. "It you are in the Dail for 20 years, you're more likely to be keeping your eye on your pension and you are not going to be radical," he said.

Responding to a question as to whether councillors themselves were necessary, Cllr Heydon vigorously defended the system, saying the councillors were there 'as directors to bring the Council officials, including the County Manager, to account'.

But he suggested that consideration could be given to the abolition of Town Councils, and in their place the relevant towns could provide some extra councillors to the County Council, thus saving duplication of effort and expenditure.

Childcare public meeting date set

A provisional date has been set for a public meeting on the future of Community Childcare for Wednesday 16 February.

This follows deliberations by a Working Group at a meeting last week organised by Kilcullen Community Action and involving representatives from a number of other groups with an interest in childcare and the recent loss of a €600,000 grant for a new Community Childcare Centre.

These were the Naomh Bride Community Playgroup, the Carer & Toddlers Group, and Kilcullen Community Centre Ltd.

The Diary understands that the Working Group meeting ended on a positive note and that there is scope for moving forward on the issue 'in a spirit of mutual cooperation'.

The public meeting is being organised by KCA and will have an outside and independent chairperson.

We'll have more details closer to the time.

Yoga classes

Yoga Classes are starting on January 27 in Kilcullen Parish Centre.

Places can be booked by phoning Rory at 087 1270338 or emailing rory5807@yahoo.ie.

Rory is fully qualied and is registered at yogatherapyireland.ie

Sunday, January 23, 2011

GAA Presentation Night

Kilcullen GAA Presentation and Social Night which was postponed in December due to the snow, has been re-scheduled for Friday 11 February at 8pm, writes Henry Barrett.

Presentations on the night wil include Keogh Cup winners, Junior Championship winners, and Minor Ladies.

There will be a buffet and live music on the night. Tickets cost €15 and are available from any committee member or available on the night.

Come down for what is sure to be a great night, as we prepare for another season full of football!

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Open Day at Halverstown NS

An Open Night for all prospective parents and pupils will be held at St Joseph's National School, Halverstown, on Thursday February 10th from 7-9pm.

Further details available by writing to the Principal, Marion Sherlock, St Joseph's NS, Halverstown, Kilcullen, Co Kildare; phone 045 485374; email halverstownschool@gmail.com; or visit the website halverstownschool@eircom.net.

TV cameras in Brannoxtown NS on Monday

Monday will be a big excitement day for the Fifth and Sixth classes in Brannoxtown NS, when an RTE's TV crew is coming down to talk to them about life without digital gadgets.

That's because almost all of the pupils have accepted their Principal's challenge to cut down on or do without their iPods, TVs, mobile phones and other gadgets in support of their classmates of the McGlinchey family, who are doing so as a Radio 1's John Murray Show experiment.

"Not all of them are doing a total abstinence," says the Principal, Esther Reddy. "But many of them are doing without TV, or their phones or DVD players, or a mixture."

Esther and her own family are gone 'cold turkey', doing without gadgets completely for the week. She says it is 'harder on the children', and she hasn't been able to do things like check up the 'Diary' on the internet since it began earlier this week.

"But for myself, I find I'm much more relaxed," she says. "When I go to bed now I'm tired and I go to sleep, for instance. And I'm not as hyper as I normally am, when I'm getting phone calls all the time, or texting people. It's all very positive, actually."

The McGlinchey family is one of two doing the complete 'digital fast' for the week on the John Murray Show.

Friday, January 21, 2011

CPC wall gets planning approval

Planning permission has been granted for the proposed lowering of the CPC wall and topping the remainder with a wrought-iron railing.

The project is a combined initiative by the Cross & Passion College and Kilcullen Community Action.

The stone from the dismantled part of the wall will be used to clad the new Sacred Space reflection centre being built in the college.

The work will 'contribute to a safe school environment', an architectural appraisal of the project says.

The work will lower the existing wall by a metre and replace the removed sections with a railing, thus opening up the parkland behind to view from the road.

Kilcullen Community Action, the umbrella group for the tidy towns effort as well as other initiatives in the town, is promoting the work, and has raised funds towards it.

The appraisal was commissioned following concerns raised by Kildare County Council about the planning application for the work. Conservation architect Gabriel McGinley examined the project in detail and researched the history of the Cross & Passion Convent extensively.

His report notes that the wall was built in the late 1880s as part of the first phase of the development of a Convent by the Cross & Passion sisters, who had been invited to the village to set up a school.

Changes were made in 1985 when the main entrance was moved in order to facilitate Kildare Council Council improvements to the crossroads and the construction of a footpath.

At that time the original stone work was covered in a render. Mr McGinley says that the proposed alterations will restore the stone facing of the lowered wall, as well as on sections close to the gated entrances.

The report says the school authorities want the wall lowered to protect the pupils and 'replace the current sense of isolation' provided by the existing wall with a more 'transparent, safer environment' for the pupils.

Lowering the wall would also help reduce vandalism and anti-social behaviour in the grounds and thus help in the protection of the main buildings, which are a Protected Structure.

Mr McGinley notes that lowering the wall would also help the school engage with the town more successfully, something which its management and board consider to be an 'evolving requirement'.

It is proposed by KCA that the stone removal work could be done on a voluntary basis as a community involvement process, thus bringing the school and the community closer.

Noel Clare said tonight that KCA were delighted that the planning permission had been got, and now they would sit down and 'look at the numbers' to see how quickly the project could start.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

GAA officers for 2011

Following the recent AGM of Kilcullen GAA, here are the officers that were elected at the AGM:

Patron: Dr. Tony O'Reilly
Trustees: Martin Whyte, Christy Howard, Billy Aspell
Presidents: Billy Aspell, Pat Lynch, Andy Nolan, Tom O'Connell
Vice Presidents: Jim Barker, Paddy Aspell, J.J. Whelan, John Coughlan, Steve Schwer, Brian Fox, John Martin, Christy Howard, Tommy Howard, John Goulding, Sue Goulding, John O'Brien.

Chairman: Dan Bell
Vice-Chairman: Frank Kenny
Secretary: Jennifer Short
Assistant-Secretary: Claire McDonnell
Treasurer: Albert Keenan
Assistant-Treasurer: Jim Kiely
PRO & Website Administrator: Henry Barrett
Cumann na mBunscoil: Maurice O'Mahony
Kit Managers: Frankie Morrow, Dan Bell, John O'Brien
Committee Members: Hazel Spencer, Bobby Walker, Ann Keenan, Pat Kelly, Des O'Brien, Sue Goulding, Karen Bell, Warren Kelly, Claire McDonnell, John Mulhall, John O'Brien, Peter O'Toole.

Call for water shortage investigation

Cllr Martin Heydon has asked Kildare County Council to examine the cause of recent water shortages in The Demense estate in Calverstown.

In a motion to be discussed at the next Athy Area Committee meeting he says that if the developer is found to be responsible for the difficulties that the Council should pursue the matter to resolution or take the estate in charge.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Gilltown family undertakes 'digital fast'

The McGlinchey household in Gilltown is feeling a little cut off from this morning, writes Brian Byrne, because they are one of the two families taking part in the Radio 1 John Murray Show Digital Challenge.

All the family's screens and gadgets have been 'put beyond use' for a week in the experiment, which was triggered after John Murray interviewed an American author who had done the same with her family for six months.

The only electronic equipment left to the family, apart from their telephone landline, is a transistor radio.

Caroline and Mike McGlinchey live on a farm near Brannockstown with their children Emily and Ethan.

Ethan says he'll miss the TV most, and Emily will 'miss my phone'.

Among the equipment which has been taken from the house for the week are game consoles, Caroline's laptop, the TV, mobile phones, DVD player, and iPod.

Mike says he'll miss the TV, but he hopes that the experiment will help the children get a taste of how he grew up as a child.

"My imagination was a great pal of mine when I was growing up, playing cowboys and indians and all that," he told John Murray last night. "I don't think these will be playing cowboys and indians, but it will bring them back to something anyway."

The gadgets are being kept under lock and key by the children's grandmother Eithne Kenny.

Meanwhile, the Principal of Brannoxtown NS where the McGlinchey children go to school has called for their fellow pupils to support them by undertaking at least in part a similar 'digital fast'. And Esther Reddy is leading by example, having 'decomissioned' all the similar gadgetry in her own household.

"I'm not very popular this morning," she told John Murray ruefully today.

The second family is in Sutton, Dublin. Both families are allowed to use the landline to phone their experiences to the show each evening.

Locally-published car mag on sale

A bit of a plug from your editor. You may or may not know that my colleague Trish Whelan and I are publishers of Irish Car+Travel magazine, which is now heading for its 21st year since it was founded as Irish Car.

Our current issue, for January-February, includes our annual Car Guide 2011, and is on sale at local newsagents as well as nationally. At €2, you just can't beat the value.

You know what they say ... support local.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Stars in Our Bars in Hideout

The first local heat of the Stars of Our Bars talent competition takes place in The Hideout on Friday night at 9pm.

Whether you’re looking to be 'discovered', hoping to win cool prizes, or just seeking some recognition of your vocal talents, karaoke contests are a great way to test yourself.

These competitions offer a chance to see some great performers (and some not-so-great ones, too), and have an outrageously good time. They’re even more fun if you win.

Councillor inaugurates Kildare Indian Association

kildareindian3

Cllr Martin Heydon cuts a cake to symbolise the inauguration of the Kildare Indian Association, at an event in the Community Centre. The full story is in the current issue of the Kildare Nationalist.

Monday, January 17, 2011

While the birds are away ...

catclimb
This is what happens when you put some roast beef tidbits up in the birdhouse feeder ... for the birds, of course!

It Says in The Bridge: January '11

This month's Bridge notes a forthcoming major event in its own life, writes Brian Byrne. Next month it will complete its 40th year since it was founded. That's certainly going to be worth a little looking back, not least over some of the times when it nearly ceased to exist. But in an editorial piece, the people who run it today note the challenges ahead, in an increasingly digital era where printed media in general is in decline.

In that context, the editors are calling for fresh ideas, and suggest that the recession has given many people more time and they might be in a position to gather material or write for the publication. The monthly meeting of helpers takes place on Wednesday night next, in Fallons.

Meantime, Kilcullen's world goes on and the latest episodes are faithfully recorded in this first issue of 2011. A letter to the editor from the Kilcullen Community Carer & Toddler Group expresses 'extreme disappointment' at the news of the loss of the €600,000 grant for the Community Childcare Centre project. Lyn B Worrall writes that the matter raises many questions and says they must be answered on a community-wide basis.

Meanwhile, one of the recent successful projects for children gets on the front page, though on an unexpected negative. It seems that the Community Playground people who worked for five years to get their project going have now received a 'sting in the tail', on receipt of a bill of €5,500 in legal fees incurred in transferring ownership of the land involved from the Dublin Diocese.

A more uplifting report on the front page highlights the several Christmas parties which were organised for Kilcullen's older residents over the festive season, by the Scouts, the Senior Citizens Association, and by the students of CPC. Granny Aspell is pictured, approaching the age of 101 and a great advertisement for the bottle of Jameson she's holding! Pictures from the various parties are scattered liberally through this issue.

In the KCA Environment News page there are a number of updates on current projects, including the Ciorcal Gaeilge, the Convent Wall project and a note about repairs to the Valley wall which was further damaged when hit by slideaway vehicles during the cold snap. They also note how the weather impacted on the Christmas lights, most of which nevertheless did get lit.

The Drama Group takes some space to invite past members to rejoin and get involved again in an organisation which has its roots in the 1930s and over the decades has helped to develop the skills and promote the gifts of members, families and neighbours in the village.

A report and pictures of the Reunion organised by the CPC Class of 1990 takes up a couple of pages. It's interesting to note that much of the organisation of the event was done through Facebook, a facility that hadn't been invented when the girls involved left school.

In the congratulations department, let us echo the felicitations sent to Margaret and Jim Talbot, who celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary recently. Congratulations also to the Scoil Bhride participants in the 'Intel Mini Scientist' competition, who investigated such matters as 'Engines', 'Does 10 minutes of exercise per day help you concentrate?', 'How do calculators work?', 'Gears', and 'Cornflour Suspension'.

(Wow, heavy stuff, and far more interesting than the kind of things we had to do when this writer was in that school age.)

Still on schools, we read that Brannoxtown NS has applied for planning permission for four new permanent classrooms. And back in Scoil Bhride, the Bridge records the retirement of Ann O'Mahony, who, it reports, made an 'enormous contribution' to the school and pupils over many years.

In features this month, Sean Landers almost has a monopoly from his contributions, beginning with a new series on 'Kilcullen Buildings and their Architects'. He also writes of his Christmas visit home from Taiwan, in which he managed to pack events in Kilcullen, Dublin, Dungarvan and Clare. A fictional piece involving 'Sherlock Holmes and the Unfortunate Business of the British Throne' is rather convoluted, but then that's Holmes for you.

In other articles, Dr Liz Cullen recalls some recent time spent in Calcutta, where she was reminded of the triumph of the human spirit in the face of seemingly insurmountable difficulties. Billy Redmond has penned a poem about 'Kilcullen 2010', and also muses in 'Off the Cuff' about the delights of watching the local world go by from the vantage point of the Hideout corner.

And there's much more, of course. But if we detailed it all here, you wouldn't have to buy it. That would be a shame, because, as always in the past four decades, all Kilcullen life is found between the pages of The Bridge.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Barney presents Dan Donnelly poem

donnellypoem

Dan Donnelly fan Barney O'Keefe has presented his illustrated poem about the pugilist to Clare Boyce of The Hideout. The full story is in next Tuesday's Kildare Nationalist.

Kilcullen echoes to Clifden drowning tragedy

The tragic drowning of a woman in Connemara on Friday has strong resonances for Kilcullen's Bridge Camphill Community.

Siobhan Monaghan (Benden) worked with the community in its early days and was involved in the establishment of the An Tearman coffee shop.

She died while walking on a rocky path near Ballyconneely, on a mission to scatter her late sister's ashes into the sea. Conditions were stormy and she was swept into the sea.

Despite the quick efforts of the Clifden RNLI lifeboat, and of her brother in law who was accompanying her, she drowned.

Siobhan maintained her friendships with a number of Kilcullen people when she moved to Connemara with her daughter. She has lived in Clifden for many years, where she was involved with the Clifden Arts Festival.

Ar dheis Dé go raibh a hanam.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Indian community event

An inaugural meeting of the Kildare Indian Association takes place this afternoon in Kilcullen Community Centre.

The event will be attended by Cllr Martin Heydon, Fine Gael's candidate in Kildare South, who will cut a cake to symbolise the formation of the Association.

The ceremony takes place at 2pm.

Friday, January 14, 2011

2010: A year to remember

It was a year which began and ended with snow, but 2010 had many other highlights for Kilcullen, recalls Brian Byrne.

In January, the local Community Games effort was rescued as the necessary number of volunteers were recruited at the last minute. That was to the delight of the children, as well as organiser Anne Quigley.

On an equally positive note, local fundraising to help those left homeless and jobless after the Haiti earthquake raised many thousands of euro, showing that even as our own recession bit harder, there remained the traditional Irish consideration for others in distress.

It was a good start to the year for the children of Brannoxtown NS when their project on Rocks, Soils & Erosion in the BT Young Scientists Exhibition won its Primary Schools category.

In February, there was a very special Happy Birthday to Granny 'Bridgie' Aspell, who achieved the milestone of a hundred years.

At a younger end of the age scale, CPC students Ellie McMahon and Kevin McMahon (no relation) blew the audience away when playing the support act to veteran singer Luka Bloom at a 'Live by The Liffey' concert.

In March, the number of accidents at a new junction built as part of the M8 extension resulted in a campaign by local residents and councillors which took the best part of the rest of 2010 to finally get a commitment from the NRA and Kildare County Council to rectify the situation.

The 2010 production by Cross & Passion Transition Year students, of 'Grease', was a sellout success. And Kilcullen Drama Group's production of The Beauty Queen of Leenane was equally so, with chilling performances by Siobhan Murphy and Eilis Phillips, and a serious and gentle presentation of the Pato character by Roy Thompson. The group celebrated its 80th year in 2010.

In April, three training dialysis machines were handed over to Beaumont Hospital by the Punchestown Kidney Research Fund. Set up by local businessman James Nolan, a kidney transplant recipient, the fund is helped locally each year by a charity race at Punchestown Racing Festival as well as a group of Kilcullen area women who participate in the Flora Womens Mini Marathon. Funds raised since it was inaugurated two decades ago amount to more than €1.1 million.

In April he Kildare Steiner School community planted 1,500 native Irish saplings at the school in Gormanstown, outside Kilcullen. The trees came courtesy of an anonymous Canadian donor and included oak, willow, beech, holly, cherry and other fruit trees.

In May, a wreath-laying party in the Garden of Remembrance, Plunkett Barracks, included local man Billy Redmond. It was the 50th anniversary commemoration ceremony of the first battalion to serve in the Congo in 1960.

The annual Chruinniu Chriost parish gathering was told by Bishop Eamonn Walsh that if there is going to be a strong faith in the 'new beginning' in the church, it will be in the home and in the culture of the community.

The well-known local artifact, Dan Donnelly's Arm, went on show at Croke Park as part of an exhibition of Fighting Irishmen which previously was shown in New York, Boston, and the Irish-American Folk Museum in Omagh. Donnelly's arm has been in the ownership of the Byrne family for nearly six decades.

In June, Kilcullen again hosted a key part of the FBD Insurance Ras cycle race, the start of the last day of the competition. There was a disappointing turnout to the event, which saddened Kilcullen Cycling Club chairman Liam Walker.

On the other hand, there was a good attendance to the official launch of 'It Takes a Village', a parents/children resource publication by the Carer & Toddler Group. Produced in conjunction with The Bridge community magazine, it is to be the basis of a developing project.

In July Brannockstown's inaugural Village Festival provided a weekend of music, art and discussion. It is a template for an annual affair.

A gold medal that Katie Berney of Kilcullen took in the u/15 Girls 200m at the 2010 All Ireland Track and Field showed that the Community Games effort is so well worth while.

A farewell event for Fr Paddy Ryan brought many tributes to a man who interacted strongly with Kilcullen in a short time. He was presented with a framed photograph of the tower at Old Kilcullen.


In August the biggest event was the first Kilcullen River Festival, organised by a group of local business people and which brought thousands to the town. The organisers said they now have something very successful to build on for coming years.

September was a big month for Colm, an autistic resident at the Bridge Camphill Community. Thanks to fundraising by his friends, and a number of individual donations, he realised a life's ambition to visit New York, The Big Apple. It was facilitated by the Triform Camphill Community in upstate New York, who looked after Colm for six weeks.

In October, Kilcullen Badminton Club international star Claire Flood realised her own dream when she established her own Badminton Academy in Kilcullen. The facility will help bring young badminton players to international match standard.

A knitted tapestry presented to Kilcullen Parish Centre marked the first anniversary of the Suas Knitting Group. The tapestry is a representation of a church stained glass window.

At the annual Community Awards Night organised by Kilcullen Community Action, the tables were turned on KCA itself when the organisation was presented with a surprise award. Sabina Reddy expressed the appreciation of the community for all the work KCA does.

After many years of campaigning, the Kilcullen Community Playground project finally broke ground, and several members of the organising group celebrated with a glass of bubbly on the still-muddy site.

November saw a number of productions organised by Kilcullen Drama Group and friends, the most memorable of which was a presentation by travelling community actor Michael Collins of his one-act play 'Mobile'. The group itself performed 'Two for a Girl', a play that tells the story of one traveller woman's experience in her journey through life.

With nobody expecting it, the first snow of the winter fell on December 1, and from there on it was a month of postponements and cancellations of many community and commercial events. These included Kilcullen Drama Group's Christmas productions, which, however, were well worth going to when they did get on the stage. 'Operation Christ Child', from the younger members of the group, was particularly an absolute gem and beautifully played.

All in all, a year to remember fondly when all the nation around us was crumbling.

(This roundup of 2010 was originally published in the Kildare Nationalist.)

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Dangerous bend signs in train

Kildare County Council is to have the matter of new road signs at the dangerous bend at 'The Chimneys' in Calverstown included in the Road Design Department's 'low cost' schemes for 2011.

The matter was raised last November by Deputy Sean Power. He was told that there are no current plans to erect signage, but it would be included in the low cost schemes.

Deputy Power says he will stay in touch with the matter.

Road conditions kill: NRA

Up to 20 of the road deaths in 2008/2009 are now admitted to be due to poor design and the condition of our nation's roads, according to Fred Barry, chief executive of the National Roads Authority.

Speaking at the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Transport he said many national and secondary roads are simply 'not up to standard'.

Inadequate or no signage at junctions, inferior road construction material, poor visiblity, bad alignment and poor drainage are just some of the shortcomings he described to the Committee, adding that much of the national road network doesn't even 'come close' to modern design and construction standards.

Thompson's Cross, anyone?

Drama history has Kilcullen interest

A recently published book about the history of drama in Kildare town and the Kildare Drama festivals from 1958-2008 has much to interest Kilcullen people.

Kilcullen Drama Group competed in the Festival a number of times over the years, and won it in 1970 and 1982.

Researched, edited and published by Joe Connolly of Newbridge, 'Pure Drama from behind the Spotlight' includes photographs, adjudicator reports, newspaper clippings and stories about many of the groups and productions, as well as the 'apres-show' events.

A significant number of the items relate to Kilcullen Drama Group, and leading figures from the Group's participation over the half-century of the Festival are pictured.

The book has 288 pages and over 1,300 photographs and cuttings.

Six participants, one from each decade, give a short memory of their involvement in drama at that time. They are Ray Darling, actor 1950s; Barry Cassin, adjudicator 1960s; Stan Hickey, backstage 1970s; Kevin McCaffery, producer 1980s; Fr Adrian Carbery, festival president 1990s; and Conor O’Connell, actor 2000s.

Many well known actors and producers from stage and screen have 'trod the boards' at the Kildare Festival. They include Tom Hickey, Gabriel Byrne, Joan Brosnan Walsh, Myles Dungan, Pat Moylan, Pat Kinnevane, Simon Delaney, and Moya Doherty who wrote the foreword for the book.

'Pure Drama' can be bought from the online shop at kennybooks.ie. It is also on sale in local bookshops Barker & Jones, Naas; Farrells and Easons, Newbridge; Louis Hennessy Bookshop and the Parish Centre, Kildare; and Prosperous Parish Centre.

(Clicking on the advert on the right will bring you to the Kildare Heritage Centre online bookshop.)

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Wall work required for 'safe environment'

An architectural appraisal in support of a plan to lower the Cross & Passion College wall and top it with railings says the work is necessary to allow the ongoing use of the school as a 'safe environment' for its pupils, writes Brian Byrne.

The appraisal was commissioned by Kilcullen Community Action in response to queries on its planning application to lower the wall from the County Conservation Officer.

Conservation architect Gabriel McGinley said in his report that the proposed works will also 'prolong the life' of the protected structure of the Cross & Passion campus.

The work will also result in the original stone exterior of the wall being restored, while the stone removed will be used on the exterior of the new 'Sacred Space' currently in construction on the school grounds.

While conservation concerns have been expressed over the planning application, the applicants are now 'very hopeful' that the project can get under way by summer.

The original wall was constructed in the late 1880s when the first phase of the Cross & Passion school was built. The current rendered facing was done in 1985.


Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Meeting proposed to revive Childcare project

A meeting of all groups and individuals interested in the progressing of the Community Childcare Centre project is being initiated by Kilcullen Community Action, writes Brian Byrne.

This follows the loss of funding for the project at the end of 2010 because of failure to secure a lease on the property which had been earmarked at the Kilcullen Community Centre campus for the new premises.

The Naomh Bride Community Playgroup is currently operating on the site in a pre-fab building.

At KCA's first meeting of 2011 last night, Orla O'Neill said the matter was an issue for the whole community, and she proposed that KCA support a public meeting which would explore what can be done to revive the project.

She said that even though the original funds were now lost, community childcare is an area which will continue to get investment from Government, because it was clear from the experience of the 1980s that the provision of affordable childcare was a key element in the country 'getting back on its feet'.

The meeting heard that with people now having to take lower paid jobs, the matter of affordable childcare was even more critical.

JJ Warren said it is important that the issues which led to the recent loss of funding be dealt with so that a similar situation won't happen again.

Noel Clare suggested the formation of a working group of representatives from all interested parties. These could include the Naomh Bride Community Playgroup; Kilcullen Community Childcare & Education Ltd, which had won the project the original grant aid; Kilcullen Community Centre Ltd; and Kilcullen Carers &  Toddlers Group.

Orla O'Neill said KCA is well-placed to facilitate this, as it had when the Community Playground project had stalled.

"We held a public meeting then at which all involved, including the county councillors, had to make their case," she said. "That effectively gave the Playground project a mandate to move on with full public support."

Last night's meeting agreed that interested parties should be invited to form a working group, with a view to organising a public meeting at which all issues and possibilities might be clarified.

Sunday, January 09, 2011

A less dependent way of life

The cold snap served as a timely warning to continue with 'Transition work'. That of raising awareness around the importance of building connections between neighbours, supporting communities to create interdependence, emphasising the urgent need for local people to be adaptive, resourceful and helpful one to another, hence fortifying communities and creating much less dependence on government and globalisation, so that when problems like this come back again as they most certainly will, we will be able to adapt and change to make the best of the situation.

The above is an extract from a piece written by your editor's cousin Marella Fyffe (nee Byrne) who lives on Glenhordial Farm near Omagh in County Tyrone.

Her 'Banana Rambles' blog is an ongoing account of how she and her husband Billy are on a journey to a more sustainable way of life for themselves and their community.

For anybody interested in being less dependent on 'the system', it is well worth keeping an eye on.

A time come around again

This particular piece is getting to be a habit as the years go around, writes Brian Byrne. Six of them now since I first began this bit of cyberjournalism rooted in the town where I grew up and stayed to make my life.

At the time I didn't have any idea how long it might last. That wasn't an issue, because the whole thing was an experiment. Even that's too big a word. A tryout, maybe. A curiosity. To see if anyone might be interested. Also to do what I used to when I began contributing to The Bridge almost four decades ago, a staggered and unplanned start into an eventual career in journalism. Writing about my town and its doings, and its people.

Was anyone interested? Well that they were is now part of the Diary's history. From less than a couple of dozen readers a week, by the end of the first year, the pages of the Diary had been accessed no less than 35,000 times.

And it just keeps going on ... and growing on. In that first year we used about a thousand photographs. Today there are close to 10,000 pictures connected to the Diary, and they have been viewed around a quarter of a million times between them. With almost 200 sets of slideshows each now typically gets played between 800-2,000 times within a week of uploading.

There are more than 3,700 stories posted since the beginning, and our readership is now some 14,000 pages a month. Sometimes I jokingly tell people that I created a monster which has to be fed every day. Truth is, though, I only do it because I enjoy it. And, more importantly, because all of you out there are reading it. If you weren't there, it wouldn't be.

As I read back on my roundup of the Diary's first year, I see that we reported then on pretty much the same things that exercise our community today, but moved on. Life is like that, a large number of small journeys on a train that stops at many stations.

Looking back on that first year, we can see many highlights, and hopes and endeavours of many individuals and groups, some of which came to fruition, others which didn't. And there were lows too. The most difficult story I ever wrote was that year, recording the death of my younger brother Des. It was also the year I had to write about the passing of Pat Dunlea, and Paddy Mitchell, among others who had been part of the fabric of the town from as long as I could remember.

Recording the passing of Kilcullen people is just a small part of what the Diary does. We don't catch them all, of course, but over the last six years we've marked about 130 such departures of people from or related to the community.

And so, to finish this little annual musing about what is at one level a hobby for me, and at another an important part of my identity and my life, let me write again the names of the people who passed on from our community in 2010. They include John McGrath, Carmel St Leger, Brigid Clifford, Don Charlton, Maisie Bolger, Josie English, Joe Fagan, Ann Brennan, Mary Kelly, Isobella Urquhart, Iain Scott, Lilian Healy, Andrew Durney, Margaret Keogh, Mary Pender, Tom Bermingham, and Sheila Dowling.

May they rest in peace, and may we not forget that they were each in their own time an integral part of what each of us in Kilcullen collectively are today. Our community.

Saturday, January 08, 2011

Library extra opening times

With more and more people rediscovering the advantages of using their public library service, Julie in Kilcullen has been given a couple of extra opening hours a week by the Council.

On Tuesdays, the Library will now stay open until 5pm, instead of the 4pm heretofore. And on Fridays, the evening session opening will start at 6pm instead of 7pm.

Any time your editor goes there these days, there are always children in with parents. It's great to see, and there are some new toys in stock to keep them happy while the elders peruse their own books.

There are also a couple of new armchairs too. If you don't use the facility, you should check it out. Then check out a few books while you're there. In my experience, there's a great selection, and you can ask Julie to get you any particular title ... or even book it online for delivery to Kilcullen. The whole County Library catalogue is online and you can browse it at your leisure from your fireside.

No excuses not to use it, really.

KILCULLEN LIBRARY OPENING TIMES

Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 10.30am - 2.30pm/3.00pm - 5.00pm
Wednesday: Closed
Thursday: Closed
Friday: 3.00pm - 5.00pm/6.00pm - 8.30pm
Saturday: 10.00am - 1.00pm
The Library is closed the Saturday of Bank Holiday Weekends

Friday, January 07, 2011

'Questions need to be answered' on €600K funding loss

The Kilcullen Carer & Toddler Group - Kilcullen Carers - has called for 'questions to be answered' over the loss of the €600,000 funding for the Naomh Bride Community Playgroup's proposed new premises, writes Brian Byrne.

This follows a pre-Christmas statement from the directors of the playgroup's company, Kilcullen Community Childcare & Education Ltd, that it had been refused further extension on time to draw down its grant for a purpose-built premises which had been pursued since 2001 and for which the grant had been approved in 2006.

The reason for the withdrawal of the grant was given as the failure of the project to secure a lease on the property which had been earmarked at the Kilcullen Community Centre campus for the new premises.

The playgroup has been operating on the site for much of the last decade in a pre-fab premises provided by the late Pat Dunlea as a temporary measure.

Expressing their regret that the project would not be going ahead, the playgroup's directors said that despite obtaining several extensions to the deadline from the funders, the lease for the site on which the childcare centre was to be built 'and the written consent to sublease', were not provided to the group within the deadline, 'which had been clearly communicated to all relevant parties'.

In a letter to be published in the next 'Bridge' magazine, Lyn B Worrall of Kilcullen Carers & Toddlers Group says they are 'extremely disappointed' at the situation.

"This Centre would have provided parents and children with an expanded high quality, affordable Childcare and Early Education facility within our community," she writes. "As a group of parents, we are left with many questions regarding the loss of the grant funding. The overriding question is why? Why was the lease not provided on time? Why was this huge investment that would have provided a great community-based service for the children of Kilcullen and increased employment in our community during the construction and on an ongoing basis, allowed to evaporate?"

A spokesman for Kilcullen Community Centre told the Diary today that a 'sublease' had been signed with the directors of the project, as the property of the campus was itself only held on lease from the trustees of the Cross & Passion Sisters.

He said that while solicitors for the playgroup and for the Community Centre had been in contact with each other on the matter, there had been 'side issues' in relation to the lease.

Lynn Worrall says Kilcullen Carers believe the questions need to be 'considered on a community-wide level' so that any future issues may be addressed for the benefit of all members of the community.



Thursday, January 06, 2011

Rescheduled GAA AGM

Kilcullen GAA is hoping for third time lucky with its AGM, which has already been cancelled twice by the appalling pre-Christmas weather.

It will now take place next Monday night, 10 January at 8pm.

And the postponed Juvenile Christmas Disco is being held tomorrow night, Friday 7th, 6-8pm.

But the Wags & Wellies fun match rescheduled for the third time to next Sunday has again been called off. It will now be held on St Patrick's Day.

Another Kilcullen Year

If you might have forgotten the many highlights of 2010 in Kilcullen, I'd recommend you buy the current Kildare Nationalist.

I have a lookback page on the best, and some of the less good, things that happened.

(Blatant plug!)

Wednesday, January 05, 2011

Funeral arrangements for Marian Callan

Marian Callan, who died unexpectedly at the weekend, is reposing at her residence from 4pm today until removal this evening at 6.30 for arrival at Kilcullen parish church at 7 o'clock.

Requiem Mass will be held on Thursday morning at 11 o'clock followed by funeral afterwards to New Abbey Cemetery.

Monday, January 03, 2011

The passing of Marian Callan

There will be widespread sadness in the community with the news of the unexpected death of Marian Callan, Nicholastown.

We will post details of funeral arrangements later.

Ar dheis Dé go raibh a hanam.

Sunday, January 02, 2011

Wags & Wellies

The twice-postponed Wags & Wellies match organised by Kilcullen GAA will now be held next Sunday, the 9th. Kickoff at 11.30am.

Saturday, January 01, 2011

First Thompsons Cross crash of 2011

Just an hour into the new year, Thompson's Cross claimed its first crash of 2011.

The single car accident involved the driver overshooting the junction coming from the Kilgowan direction.

"The car ended up buried in the opposite trees and went on fire," says local resident Sabina Reddy, who has led a campaign to have the junction redesigned. "Luckily the man escaped alive, and the services of the fire brigade, guards and ambulance attended the scene."

Acknowledging the fact that a commitment was recently extracted from the NRA to erect public lighting and new warning signage at the junction, Sabina nevertheless is adamant that something more needs to be done if a fatality is to be avoided.

"The road was constructed far too wide and leads to motorists increasing speed when on it, and when they come on the junction at Thompsons Cross it is too late to stop."

She has called on Kildare County Council's road safety officer to ensure that the approach to the junction be narrowed and an Accident Black Spot sign be erected.

Wild geese on the wing

Paul Brady called to visit Noel and family in Boston on his way to meet up with Brendan O'Connell in San Francisco.

New Ice Age fears

A thought for the first day of 2011: in 1974, scientists were seriously worried about global cooling and the prospect of a new Ice Age.

Happy New 2011