Ireland Rare

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Ireland Rare
Ireland Rare
How well can you see the stars at night in Ireland?


Here in Manchester, England it's quite rare for a starry sky.

If you bother to get out of the cities ,you will be guaranteed the best light show on earth. I have been camping in Donegal, with the kids, ( can totally recommend Kinnego Bay beach), and seen the most extraordinary skys, literally ten or twenty times more stars than you will see in a city, but also satellites and shooting stars.In late autumn / winter when the conditions are right you also can get brilliant light shows of the Aurora Borealis, which will blow you away. its hard to over emphasize just how spectacular a show you will get on a clear night.

Well worth making a trip,if not over here go to N Scotland were I am sure you will experience the same things.



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Rare and Threatened Bryophytes of Ireland


Rare and Threatened Bryophytes of Ireland


$53.58


No Synopsis Available

Rare Birds in Britain and Ireland


Rare Birds in Britain and Ireland


$54.55


No Synopsis Available

Ireland


Ireland


$5.99


Ireland

Ireland (Paperback)


Ireland (Paperback)


$45.05


"Ireland has rarely been out of the news during the past thirty years. Whether as a war zone in which Catholic nationalists and Protestant Unionists struggled for supremacy, a case study in conflict resolution or an economy that for a time promised to make the Irish among the wealthiest people on the planet, the two Irelands have truly captured the world`s imagination. Yet single-volume histories of Ireland are rare. Here, Thomas Bartlett, one of the country`s leading historians, sets out a fascinating new history that ranges from prehistory to the present. Integrating politics, society and culture, he offers an authoritative historical road map that shows exactly how--and why--Ireland, north and south, arrived at where it is today. This is an indispensable guide both to the legacies of the past for Ireland`s present and to the problems confronting north and south in the contemporary world"--Provided by publisher.

JFK in Ireland -


JFK in Ireland -


$14.99


In June of 1963, President John F. Kennedy visited his ancestral homeland of Ireland. In this 42-minute documentary, follow his journey to the Emerald Isle and meet the people with whom he came into contact. Through rare footage, witness how America's 35th president, and first Roman Catholic elected to the highest public office, made his ancestors proud. Only five months following this sentimental and historical trip, Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, TX. ~ Brooke Hodess, Rovi

Directory of Rare Book and Special Collections in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland


Directory of Rare Book and Special Collections in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland


$243.75


No Synopsis Available


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Beatles - Interview in Ireland (Rare) (1963)


Johnson Counts The Cost Of The Bruising Defeat To Ireland

The England manager Martin Johnson is not yet surveying the debris of a failed Six Nations campaign, although it will break into a thousand pieces if his struggling side lose the Calcutta Cup match with Scotland in Edinburgh on Saturday week.

He did, however, spend yesterday casting a dark eye over the damage caused to his first-choice personnel during the painful defeat by Ireland at Twickenham.

Both the full-back Delon Armitage and the lock Simon Shaw are at risk of missing the rest of the tournament: the former with a nasty rib cartilage injury that may take six weeks to clear up; the latter with a mangled joint in his left shoulder. The full extent of Shaw's problem has yet to be ascertained, but two teams of medics – one from England, the other from Wasps – were due to meet today to discuss the results of a scan, together with the findings of a specialist's review.

Johnson immediately decided to hold back Armitage's like-for-like replacement, the Northampton full-back Ben Foden, and Shaw's engine room deputy, the Leicester lock Louis Deacon, for Murrayfield preparation instead of releasing them to their clubs for Premiership activity this weekend. David Wilson, the Bath prop, was also confined to barracks, as were those 13 members of Saturday's starting line-up still considered to be in one piece. The remainder of the elite squad, including one or two individuals challenging hard for promotion – the Leicester outside-half Toby Flood, the Wasps flanker Joe Worsley – were made available for the forthcoming round of league matches.

Deacon, the Leicester captain for long periods of the current campaign, is much more of a tried and tested figure, having been in the England mix since his debut against Samoa in 2005. One of the Midlanders' most effective forwards, he has rarely, if ever, scaled the heights in national colours. However, his scrummaging and mauling work against Ireland was of a sufficiently high standard to paper over the cracks left by Shaw's early departure. He has a good deal of support among the England hierarchy, most of whom have strong Leicester connections, and can expect another opportunity to answer those who suspect he is short of genuine Test class.

It is possible that Johnson will make further changes to his starting combination for what has become a must-win encounter with the Scots in Edinburgh – one of England's least favourite locations, a city where they have a damaging habit of losing by half a dozen points. Jonny Wilkinson's performance against the Irish left him exposed to renewed criticism while the back-row unit of James Haskell, Lewis Moody and Nick Easter finished a distant second to an inspired visiting threesome. There is a delicate judgement to be made, hence the heightened interest in this weekend's Premiership business.

Wales, beaten for a second time in three Six Nations outings last Friday night and effectively out of the running for the title, have lost players of their own. Two Cardiff Blues tight forwards, the lock Deiniol Jones and the hooker Gareth Williams, are off-limits for next week's meeting with Ireland in Dublin. Jones hurt his ribs early in the game against France at the Millennium Stadium while Williams, unavailable since picking up a knee problem against Scotland last month, has made insufficient progress to challenge for a place.

Warren Gatland, the Wales coach, has real problems in the second row, thanks to the injury absences of Alun Wyn Jones and Ian Evans and the need to play the multi-tasking Jonathan Thomas on the blind-side flank in place of Andrew Powell, ditched from the squad after his recent escapade with a golf buggy. Bradley Davies, Luke Charteris and Ian Gough are under consideration for the difficult trip to Croke Park. There is better news on the hooking front, though. The Lions Test forward Matthew Rees, badly missed during this championship, is fit to press for a return to action.

Ireland V Wales Hospitality
Ireland V Scotland Hospitality
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