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It is Assess Ireland Rally of Lakes week– interview with Paul Nagle.

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The interview was conducted by Transition Year student, from  St Brendan’s College, Killarney, Paul’s Alma Matter, and we orgianlly published in the May 1 edition of the Killarney Advertiser

Interview conducted and edited by Cormac Flanagan, Aodhagán Ó Súilleabháin, Ryan Twomey and Éanna O’Donoghue.

Name: Paul Nagle

Occupation: Retired Rally Co-Driver

Boarder: No

Year of Graduation: 1997

Current occupation

I'm a store manager at the ESB, or a supervisor. I'm there 20-something years now. Well, I had a career break when I was rallying, so I left it, but I always had the job to go back to full-time. I am still involved in the rallying. I work with the governing body now, the FIA, so I am a safety delegate and a sporting delegate for half the World Championship rallies. I drive through the stage 30 minutes before first car, and I decide if the stage is safe to run. I'm a sporting delegate for smaller national events as well, so I do 10 events a year around the world.

What is your role in the historic Rally this year?

I am Clerk of the Course for the Killarney Historic Rally this Year. It's 30 years since my dad [Maurice] first ran it. I suppose if I was ever going to do it, I'd have to do it this year on the 30th anniversary. 

Could you describe a typical rallying day for you?

When we go to a WRC rally, we fly out on Sunday. Monday would be a day of checking out the route, checking out some of the ceremonial starts. Tuesday and Wednesday is practice. Then you rewrite all the notes, check all the videos. You are doing 17-18 hour days. Thursday morning is shakedown followed by the Ceremonial Start and Super Specials.  Friday, Saturday and Sunday are three full-on, 16-18 hours a  day.  There is a test day for every event, before those rallies. You have another day travelling, a day of testing and a day getting home. You're away 250 days a year, 100-plus flights a year.

Would there be a full team supporting you?

We would have a doctor and a nutritionist at all the events. There'd be 70, 80 mechanics in each event. There would be three car teams. The snow can be minus 20, minus 30. I was in Sweden in February, it was minus 21, and you prepare for those conditions you must get hydrated. Fitness is huge. We had to stay underweight as well, so the two of us combined would be 160 kilos. It would be suited and booted. The warm rallies can be 30 degrees inside and outside, it's 50, 60 degrees in the car, you have no air con. You can lose two to three kilos a weekend. You are drinking 10 to 12 litres of water a day, just to keep hydrated.

Do you think the current fuel crisis will affect rallying?

Rally cars probably have all the funny juice, the same as aeroplane fuel. Rallying is very strong in Ireland at the moment. It is competitive. There are165 cars, I think, doing the Rally of the Lakes. I know there's problems around the world, but rallying has not been affected. I'd expect the next two Formula One races are cancelled because of the Middle East. We are in Saudi in November; we'd expect the whole world to be back to normal by then. It shouldn't be an impact issue in Saudi.  That won't be decided until September because it's the last round of the championship. The decision is going to have to be made well before November, because if they cut a round, it tightens up the whole championship.

Can you describe your greatest professional achievement to date?

Finland, it would be the Champions League of Soccer. It is the biggest rally in the world. It's like the Monaco of Formula One. It's the fastest rally in the world. I won it in 2017. It is the biggest rally you can win on the calendar.It was my third win, but it meant a lot to win there because only five people, non-Scandinavian people, have ever won it.The average speed in Finland, which was only beaten last year was 136 Kilometres an hour.

What advice would you give to young students looking to pursue a career in rallying?

 You need to start helping at the rallies. There are co-driver courses happening now, there was one in Monaghan last week. There's two or three of them a year.They should go to the local meetings.

What is your most memorable moment from St Brendan’s College Killarney?

The borders. We used to have great craic because you'd meet borders from all over the country. There were a good mix of people and we learned a lot there. Football was also big back then. It is renowned everywhere. Hopefully my kids will come here.

What are your rally predictions for 2026 ?

One of my best mates is leading the World Championship, Aaron Johnson, has won two rallies in a row. I still think Sebastien Ogier will be World Champion this year, even though he's in partial season. I think he's going to be the one to win the world championship. In Ireland here, it's hard to know.We have two drivers in the World Championship, Jon Armstrong and Josh McAleeran. Armstrong is showing a very strong pace at the moment. And in Ireland, I'd expect Callum Devine to win his fifth Rally of the lakes.

Have you kept memorabilia from your rallying career ?

I have 19 model cars of our 19 WRC podium cars. I also have all my winning helmets. I have the winning bottle of champagne from Finland as my wife brought it home. If you win in Mexico, you get cowboy boots specially made from crocodile leather. I have a lot of things from Craig. I have one of his helmets. One of his was important to me. I also kept one of every race suit I have ever had in a rally year. We would have eight race suits a year.

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Meentogues National School pupil wins regional Green-Schools award

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Meentogues National School pupil wins regional Green-Schools award


A pupil from Meentogues National School was among the winners at the annual Uisce Éireann Green-Schools poster competition.


Julia Keane won the regional award in the primary school junior category. She received her prize at an awards ceremony held at Wood Quay in Dublin.
The competition received 1,600 entries from primary and secondary schools across the country. Students designed posters based on the theme ‘Water and Me / Mise agus Uisce’, focusing on moments when water has mattered to them.
As a regional winner, Julia received a €100 voucher, and her poster was professionally framed.
The event marked the 13th year of Uisce Éireann’s sponsorship of An Taisce’s Green-Schools programme. The initiative works with over 300 schools and 90,000 students on water conservation and environmental awareness.
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Felicity’s Summer in Killarney — Week One

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Felicity’s Summer in Killarney — Week One



A new weekly series from Killarney Advertiser’s Jess Jukes
Jess Jukes, a member of the advertising department at the Killarney Advertiser, is also a budding writer. Each week, we will bring you her serialised novella following the adventures of Felicity’s summer in Killarney.


Felicity’s Summer in Killarney — Week One


This was it. The county border. The edge of her world for the next few months. The 40 Expressway paid no mind to her inner turmoil as it trundled down the road.

Felicity slouched in the uncomfortable seat and watched the Kerry countryside pass her by, trees on both sides of the road before they opened out to the rolling hills and fields beyond. An older lady was humming a lilting traditional tune behind her, tapping her foot to the melody she made as the bus carried them both closer to Killarney.

Killarney. It was her mother’s hometown, where she had left at twenty and hadn’t gone back. And now when Felicity’s parents wanted to go abroad for the summer of their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary they were shipping her off there. She was to stay with her Auntie Sheila who used to be a detective in Dublin. She had taken early retirement back to Killarney a few years ago, “returning to her roots” as she had put it.

This was the first time that Felicity’s parents had shipped her down to Killarney, but she would bet that it wouldn’t be the last. She was going to miss her friends, her room, her life back home. Felicity had fought tooth and nail to stay in Dublin but none of her friends would be able to take her for the whole summer. She couldn’t stay in her own house because her parents were partaking in a house swap “to get the authentic experience” her mother had said. Even though Felicity had known it was coming for months, and she had spent the past few hours travelling, arriving in Kerry still felt surreal.

Pondering how her summer was going to unfold, it wasn’t long before she turned up her music and closed her eyes, letting the dull drone of the bus engine lull her to sleep.

Felicity opened her eyes with a jolt. The bus pulled into its berth. Felicity disembarked, hardly noticing the loud ding of an advertisement for the Bus Station Café over the intercom. She waited along with everyone else for the bus’s undercarriage to open, and pulled her bags out from the hold.

Her whole life for the summer, packed into two small suitcases and a backpack. Her parents had assured her that anything else she needed she could buy in Killarney. Felicity somehow doubted it.

She turned around, searching for her aunt. They had agreed to meet just next to the Outlet Centre doors. She easily found the woman’s head of crazy blond hair. Sheila’s outward appearance was an outward representation of her enthusiastic view of life. Her aunt saw her and approached, holding her arms out for a hug. “Felicity! Come here to me, you’ve arrived just in time. We have a festival on this weekend. You won’t have a dull moment to miss home.”

Felicity shook her head fondly as her aunt jabbered on. She had missed her aunt since she had moved back to Killarney. No matter what the summer brought, it would certainly be interesting.

Felicity was scrolling in her bedroom when Aunt Sheila came bustling in. Sheila was like a hurricane, sunny smile, curly hair, glasses perched atop her head at a slant. It was a wonder she had made it as far as she had as a detective.

“Felicity,” the way her aunt drew out her name sounded like a song. “I’m going to take you around town this afternoon.”

The girl rolled her eyes. “It’s just a town. I’m eighteen, surely I can make my own way around without an escort.”

Sheila tutted. “I want to spend time with you out and about while the weather is good. You know, this is the warmest day we’ve had all year? The post man told me it’s only meant to get hotter before the bank holiday.”

Felicity almost shuddered. It was already reaching 25 degrees. She wasn’t made for this weather, but she accompanied her aunt into town nonetheless.

Auntie Sheila was on a mission to cram everything Killarney had to offer into one day. They hopped between retailers on Main Street and New Street before heading out to Muckross Garden for lunch and a stroll.

The park was an experience like no other for Felicity. The serene beauty that Muckross held was like nothing she had ever seen. Everything was so lush; there was nothing like the rugged beauty of Kerry compared to Dublin.

They spent three hours meandering along the paths. Felicity wondered at Torc Waterfall and Muckross Abbey, enthralled by the fact that she could venture inside. Auntie Sheila indulged her with stories about the old friary, transporting Felicity to a different world.

For dinner they went to the International Hotel, a treat to celebrate her arrival. Afterwards, they drove back to Auntie Sheila’s house on Hedgerow Place. Felicity watched an ice cream truck trundling down the road, trumpeting its sweet ditty. She thought she could come to enjoy the summer after all.

As they pulled into the drive, they heard a loud crash. Felicity turned just in time to see the ice cream truck’s door swing wide open. A figure was pulled out and thrown to the floor as the attacker hopped in. She clambered out of the car, Auntie Sheila not two steps behind her, and started running toward the vendor on the ground as the truck’s tune cut out and it sped away.

Tune in next week…

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