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Muckross Rowing Club Barbeque social event

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It was a packed house in Colgan's Bar at the Muckross Park Hotel on Saturday evening last, as members of Muckross Rowing Club were joined by supporters, family and friends who gathered for the club’s annual Barbeque Social event.

There were over 160 people in attendance on the night and while the busy club has already embarked on a new rowing season for 2025/26, the social night was a chance to relax and reflect on the success of the past rowing season 2024/25.

Those gathered were welcomed by Club Chairwoman Sharon Cooper who congratulated club members, coaches and committee on all their achievements during the year gone by.

Vice Chairman and PRO Tim O’Shea reflected on some of the highlights for the club during the year.

Since the club’s last BBQ event in 2024, the club was successfully represented in numerous events at home and abroad ranging from winter time trial events in Limerick and Cork to summer regattas including Skibbereen, Bantry, Castleconnell, Lee, Cork City and Fermoy.

The Rowing Ireland 1K Classic held in early July in Leitrim was a major success, with the club winning nine gold medals at both Junior and Masters level.

The Irish Rowing Championships for Junior 16, 18 and adult grades later in July saw the Muckross club represented by 28 crews in 11 categories.

The four crews that qualified for the A finals and top six nationally were congratulated – with Muckross in contention for silverware in the Womens Junior Double, Intermediate Double and Mens Junior Double and Quad.

A Championship highlight for Muckross was the bronze medal win for Khim Fleming and Rachel Fuller in the Womens Junior Double.

Moving further afield, there were congratulations to four Masters members of the club who were part of a successful contingent of 12 Irish clubs racing at the World Rowing Masters Regatta held in Spain in September, returning home as gold medallists.

On the night, the club honoured four junior members of the club for their selection through national trials to join Irish rowing squads for international competition in 2025.

The club made presentations to Cian Scannell and Ronan Fahy, who raced for Ireland at the Coupe de la Jeunesse Regatta in Linz, Austria in July. From Linz, Cian returned a bronze medal for Ireland with Lee Valley crewmate Colin Creedon.

The third presentation was made to Cillian Leslie, for his successful participation with the Irish team at the recent Coupe de la Jeunesse Beach Sprint competition in Spain, with Cillian making the final 16 for Ireland in the Mens Single event.

The final presentation on the night was made to Rachel Fuller, who was congratulated for her double gold medal win for Ireland at the Home International Regatta in London in July.

There were also honourable mentions for three former junior members now racing with their university clubs, who also represented Ireland in 2025.

Caoimhe O’Sullivan (UL RC) raced in the green jersey at the European U23 Championships while Daniel Daly (UL RC) and Ethan O’Neill (UCC RC) also raced for Ireland in the senior ranks at the Home International Regatta.

The buffet barbecue was heartily enjoyed by all those in attendance.

There were also words of thanks on the night from the club to local businesses who have generously sponsored and supported the club, including the Muckross Park Hotel, Cahernane House Hotel, Daly’s SuperValu and Leanes Fitted Furniture.

Following the social night, the club is back to a busy schedule as it gears up to host its annual Muckross Head Of the River time trial event on Saturday, 6 December at the National Rowing Centre in Farran, Cork.

Onshore, the club is also calling all trivia buffs ahead of its Christmas Table Quiz fundraiser scheduled for the holiday period on Monday 29 December at the Muckross Park Hotel.

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Patients to move to new Community Hospital by end of June

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The long-running saga surrounding the opening of the new Killarney Community Hospital is nearing its end, with confirmation that patients will be transferred to the facility by the end of June.

Independent TD Danny Healy-Rae confirmed the timeline following a meeting with the HSE. Patients currently residing in St Columbanus’ Home and the existing Killarney District Hospital are scheduled to be relocated to the new state-of-the-art development within weeks.

“Following a meeting with HSE, I am very glad about the update that patients from Columbanus and the District Hospital in Killarney will be moved to the new Killarney Community Hospital by the end of June,” Deputy Healy-Rae said.

“I had raised the urgent need for this in the Dáil and at every opportunity. This is very welcome news for all concerned.”

The purpose-built 130-bed Community Nursing Unit (CNU) has been at an advanced stage of readiness, with room allocations already agreed with existing residents. The final phase of the project involves securing official registration from the health watchdog, HIQA, before the doors can officially open.

The transfer will mark the closure of the older St Columbanus’ Home and Killarney District Hospital facilities.

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From Fossa to the Roof of the World: Frank McCarthy’s Everest Triumph

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From Fossa to the Roof of the World: Frank McCarthy’s Everest Triumph


There is an old saying that no matter where you travel in the world, you are bound to find an Irish man there before you. For Fossa native Frank McCarthy, that bit of folklore became a startling reality just a couple of hundred meters from the roof of the world.


While making his final push toward the summit of Mount Everest in Nepal on May 25, McCarthy encountered a climber on his way down.
It turned out to be a Galway native now living in Seattle. The pair, who were previously acquainted, paused amidst the unforgiving altitude to briefly exchange pleasantries, much like old friends crossing paths on New Street, sharing a quick word about the mammoth task at hand before one continued upward and the other focused on a safe descent.
It was just one of several Irish connections that illuminated a gruelling, high-altitude journey. A few days prior, while resting at Camp 3, McCarthy learned that Tyrone mountaineer Robert Kelso Smith, one of the most experienced Irish climbers to ever tackle Everest, was in the camp zone.


Sticking his head out of his tent, the Kerry man yelled into the thin, frozen air: “Up the Kingdom!” From across the quiet mountain edge, a booming reply echoed back: “For f**k sake, you can’t escape a Kerry man!”

The Simulated Mountain in Dubai


Now back in his Dubai apartment where he has lived for many years, normality is slowly returning for the Killarney native, though the scale of his historic achievement is still sinking in. Standing atop the 8,848-meter peak, McCarthy officially became the youngest-ever Kerry native to conquer Mount Everest.
The monumental expedition, however, came together almost by chance. Back in 2013, McCarthy scaled Mount Kilimanjaro, sparking a long-term fascination with the ‘Seven Summits” the highest peaks on each of the seven continents. Earlier this year, he climbed Carstensz Pyramid, the highest point in Oceania.
While on a leave of absence from work during that Oceania trip, his expedition leader was Garrett Madison, one of the world’s most accomplished Everest guides with over ten successful summits to his name.
Madison convinced McCarthy that he possessed the physical and mental resilience required for Everest. With a narrow two-month window to prepare for a rapid-ascent expedition, the Fossa man went into hyper-focus.
Part of that rigorous preparation included living out of a specialised hypoxic tent pitched directly inside his Dubai apartment bedroom for over a month. The tent gradually reduced oxygen levels over the weeks to simulate extreme altitude, forcing his body to acclimatise before he even set foot in Nepal.
“I had to ask myself each day: Have I eaten? How many calories did I take in?” McCarthy recalled, reflecting on his meticulous routine. “It required single-minded, almost selfish focus. But I knew that without that preparation work, I wouldn’t be ready.”

The Numbing Reality of the Summit


Passing the frozen bodies of failed attempts along the route served as a sobering reminder of the mountain’s stakes. Rather than deterring him, it forced a state of hyper-vigilance.
When he finally stepped onto the highest point on earth in the early hours of May 25, the moment brought more relief than celebration.
“The job is only half done, focus switches almost immediately to a safe descent he said. “It is worse on the way down, you can see the drops.”
The descent proved even more demanding, requiring a constant check of harnesses and belts every few paces while staring down steep precipices.
Yet, as the air grew thicker with every downward step, McCarthy felt his cognitive abilities and physical strength rapidly reinvigorate.
The Long Road to Normality
By the time he returned to Base Camp, the physical toll was stark. The gruelling 32-day rapid expedition had cost the former Fossa GAA senior player 13kg in body weight.
“It’s almost like an exaggerated feeling of jet lag , my sleep is still disrupted,” he said
Now, having traded minus-degree mountain gales for the 40-degree heat of Dubai, McCarthy is slowly readjusting to regular life, though he jokes that a few pints of Guinness will be required on his next trip back to Kerry to help restore the lost weight.
“Without looking at the footage and photos, I’d nearly struggle to believe it actually happened myself,” he laughed.

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