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Barraduff rower qualifies for World Rowing Championships

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WORLD CHAMPS: Rhiannon O'Donoghue from Barraduff and her coach Mike Fleming, both members of Killorglin Rowing Club, ahead of their departure to Japan for the World Rowing Junior Championships.

 

A Barraduff girl has been selected to represent Ireland in the World Rowing Junior Championships in Tokyo, Japan next week.

Rhiannon O’Donoghue, a member of the Killorglin Rowing Club, has secured a place in the Women’s Double Sculls for the 2019 World Rowing Junior Championships in Tokyo, Japan taking place from August 7-11.

Rhiannon will team up with Molly Curry from Coleraine, another outstanding junior rower – as the only female rowers representing Ireland.

Rhiannonis the daughter of Donal O’Donoghue, Barraduff and Vicky Dando and the granddaughter of the well-known Barraduff shopkeeper the late Tadg O’Donoghue.

A student in the Institute of Technology Tralee, Rhiannon, has been offered full scholarships to several universities in the USA, but has chosen to stay in Kerry so that she can continue to represent Killorglin Rowing Club and Ireland.

Rhiannon has been rowing with Killorglin Rowing Club for over six years and during this time she has represented her club and her country in a number of events including the Home International Regatta and the Coupe de la Jeunesse. She has also won numerous indoor and outdoor rowing events in Ireland.

“Killorglin Rowing Club and especially my coach Mike Fleming have been brilliant to me,” Rhiannon said. “He has put in long hours in all types of weather to get me to the World Championship.”

However, like many female athletes, she is receiving no financial support from Sports Ireland and must self-fund her participation in the World Championship. O’Donoghue’s Barraduff and Mizen Archaeology are her main sponsors while she has also received support from a number of other businesses throughout the county.

“It would be impossible for me to attend the World Championship without the sponsorship, so I am hoping to bring back a medal to make them all proud,” she added.

Barraduff is clearly proud of their local girl with good luck posters throughout the village and a send-off was hosted last Saturday to show their support. Her father, Donal O’Donoghue, will travel to Tokyo to support her.

 

 

 

 

 

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Bishop Murphy’s memories on Radio Kerry’s Saturday Supplement

Every day since he returned to Killarney as a priest in 1979, Bishop Bill Murphy has marvelled at the view over Lough Leane, praying the same office that the monks […]

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Every day since he returned to Killarney as a priest in 1979, Bishop Bill Murphy has marvelled at the view over Lough Leane, praying the same office that the monks of Innisfallen Island prayed more than a thousand years ago.

This is one of eight special places Bishop Bill will share with Frank Lewis on Radio Kerry’s Saturday Supplement on Saturday, October 25, from 9 to 11am.
Bishop Bill recalls his early days in Killarney — when Johnny Healy and the boys from New Street gathered scraps of lead from the ruins of the old redbrick mansion to sell and buy a football.
As a young boy, Bishop Bill remembers fishing with his father and brother on the Ownagree River in Glenflesk, catching 33 trout in one day, each about a pound in weight. Mike Joe O’Keeffe, founder of the Ownagree Angling Club, remembers a salmon that jumped into low branches — and couldn’t be retrieved.
Paddy O’Donovan delivered 38 pounds — 608 sausages — every Tuesday and Thursday to St Brendan’s College, where Bishop Bill remembers football training once stopping as a man carrying a newborn baby climbed through the fence from the District Hospital.
Winner of four All-Ireland medals and two All-Stars, Donie Sullivan, then aged 13, and Bishop Bill, aged 15, both recall the awe they felt seeing Christy Ring play for Cork against Tipperary in the 1950 Munster Hurling Final at Fitzgerald Stadium — 75 years ago this year.
Michael Gleeson reflects on the unimaginable suffering of the children who died in Killarney Cathedral during the Famine. Bishop Bill recalls that when the cathedral spire was built between 1908 and 1912, the scaffolding stretched halfway back the Monastery Field.
Richie Clancy, then aged 15, cycled back to the post office with the race results after every race during the three-day Killarney Races. Bishop Bill names the Tomies–Purple–Shehy ridge as his favourite mountain walk in Killarney.
He also recalls that working on the building of the Church of the Resurrection was easier because “a committee was in charge,” remembering those days with David Fleming, one of the committee members.
In his 64 years as sacristan in St Mary’s Cathedral, Tadgie Fleming witnessed big changes in funerals and baptisms. As part of Bishop Bill’s ordination as Bishop of Kerry, Fr Pat Ahern and members of the National Folk Theatre performed a stylised dance in which stones from all parts of the diocese were brought to the altar.
Bishop Bill Murphy will bring Frank Lewis to eight of his favourite places in Killarney on Saturday Supplement, October 25, from 9 to 11am.

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Safety Concerns raised over Loo Bridge junction – again

At Monday’s meeting of Kerry County Council, Councillor Maura Healy‑Rae tabled a Motion highlighting continuing safety issues at the junction of the N22 (Kenmare Road) and the turn-off for Loo […]

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At Monday’s meeting of Kerry County Council, Councillor Maura Healy‑Rae tabled a Motion highlighting continuing safety issues at the junction of the N22 (Kenmare Road) and the turn-off for Loo Bridge near Killarney.

In her motion Cllr Healy-Rae asked the council and the Transport Infrastructure Ireland (TII) to “examine the safety of Loo Junction on the N22 and to explore the implementation of further safety measures. Notwithstanding previous measures that have taken place, accidents and collisions continue to occur at this location on a regular basis.”

The junction has been described as an “accident black-spot off the main Kerry–Cork road,” and flagged as a high-risk location for some time.

Despite the installation of advance-warning signs and flashing lights, local residents and councillors remained deeply concerned about the junction’s visibility and vehicle speeds.

In reply to the motion, a council official confirmed that the junction’s performance is being reviewed in cooperation with the TII’s Safety Section. The reply stated that further intervention measures are being planned, which will include improved junction definition and measures to promote speed reduction on the N22.

While this confirms action is under way, no firm timeline for the implementation of these additional safety measures was included in the council’s response.

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