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“Crazy amount” of litter discarded in National Park

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MOUNTAIN RUNNER: Joe O'Leary is growing increasingly annoyed at the amount of litter left by locals in the National Park. Photo: Valerie O'Sullivan

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By Sean Moriarty

Well-known local mountain runner Joe O’Leary has expressed his concern at the growing amount of litter in Killarney National Park. The elite mountain runner is best-known for his long distance international events, including finishing in the 2019 Ultra-Trail du Mont-Blanc, a 160km race that crosses the French, Italian and Swiss Alps after 28 hours of non-stop running.

Current travel restrictions have put a stop to his international events and once the 5km restriction was lifted on Monday he returned to areas of the National Park that he had not seen in months but said he was left “disgusted” at the “crazy amount’ of litter that has been discarded by irresponsible walkers.

He is blaming locals as tourists are unlikely to be in the Park during current restrictions.

“You don’t see this anywhere else, you don’t see it in England or France,” he told the Killarney Advertiser.

The Ardaneanig man says he picks up litter when he can and even on Monday, when the 5km restriction was lifted, he ran 3kms out of his way to return to a pile of discarded coffee cups.

“It messed up my run, it really annoyed me,” he added. “I picked it up, but it is the wrong message. The people that do this, when they return a few days later they see it's gone and that only encourages them to drop it again.”

Joe has highlighted another issue on the popular Moll’s Gap cycling route.

“There is a section along the Moll’s Gap road, if you time how long it takes to drink a cup of coffee, right at that point you will find several empty coffee cups thrown there. I can’t understand why disposable cups are even being sold near the National Park, and it is adults and not children doing this – children don’t drink coffee.”

He says the further up the mountain he goes the less chance there is of finding litter.

“Those that are into the mountains respect them and they don’t leave any trace,” he said. “But in the National Park, it is the once a week walkers, and they are locals, we don’t have visitors now, that are doing this. It cracks me up, it really annoys me.”

[caption id="attachment_37084" align="alignleft" width="492"] DUMPING: Illegal dumping and littering in Mangerton this week.[/caption]

Meanwhile Cllr Donal Grady has also condemned the recent increase in the dumping of household waste in the Killarney area.

Earlier his week, while on a daily walk near Mangerton he discovered bags of household rubbish dumped in a secluded area near the beauty spot.

“It certainly is locals doing this,” he told the Killarney Advertiser. “It is time to start naming and shaming people. We are not strict enough and the fines need to be bigger.”

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Photography competition success for Killarney Women’s Shed

Killarney Women’s Shed held the prize giving for its first photography competition and opened a two-week exhibition at Killarney House last week. The display features photographs taken by members of […]

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Killarney Women’s Shed held the prize giving for its first photography competition and opened a two-week exhibition at Killarney House last week.

The display features photographs taken by members of the shed following a series of digital photography workshops.
The exhibition is located in the upstairs gallery overlooking the gardens at Killarney House and is free to visit. The committee thanked Diana Fawcitt and the Killarney House team for their support in hosting the event.
The competition followed workshops funded by SICAP through South Kerry Development Partnership and delivered by photographer Michelle Breen Crean. Participants learned practical skills using phone cameras and focused on the theme “Timeless Landscapes”.
Seventy photographs were entered. The winners were: Fionnuala Lynch; Anne O’Keefe; Joan O’Gorman and Mary O’Leary
Judging was carried out by photographers Michelle Breen Crean and Tatyana McGough and journalist Breda Joy who also presented the prizes.
Killarney Women’s Shed meets every Tuesday at 10.30am at Spa GAA Club and offers activities, talks, social events and day trips. Information on upcoming events is available on the shed’s Facebook page.

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Rathmore students finish runners-up in national SciFest finals

Scoil Phobail Sliabh Luachra in Rathmore is celebrating a major success after students Eoin Cashman and Alex Thompson were named overall runners-up at the National SciFest finals held in Marino […]

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Scoil Phobail Sliabh Luachra in Rathmore is celebrating a major success after students Eoin Cashman and Alex Thompson were named overall runners-up at the National SciFest finals held in Marino College, Dublin last week.

The pair also won the Regeneron International Science & Engineering Award and will now represent Ireland at the world finals in Phoenix, Arizona in 2026.
Their project, titled Dust Dynamics: Analysing Planetary Bodies through the Ballistic Motion of Lofted Dust Particles, examined how the movement of dust can reveal key information about a planet’s environment, including atmospheric density and gravity. As part of their study, they analysed footage of dust thrown up by the Lunar Roving Vehicle during the Apollo 16 mission in 1972. Using online software and physics calculations learned in school, they estimated the moon’s gravitational acceleration to 1.72 m/s², within 6.7% of the accepted value.
The national finals featured projects assessed by judges from scientific and engineering fields. More than 16,000 students entered SciFest 2025, making the duo’s achievement a significant milestone. Their teacher Kevin McCarthy mentored the project, and the school says the students’ work could be applied to footage from other planetary missions in the future.

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