Getting from Paris to Dublin is an all-day adventure through the chunnel, across
England, and then on a ferry (1) to the emerald
isle. One little man decided to take me under his wing, getting from the train
station to the ferry depot in Holyhead, England. He wore a green polyester jacket
with some medals and a white sash, and declared that he'd been taking this ferry
ride every month for twenty years to collect his pension from the mainland.
Worried that he might turn into a leprechaun at any minute, I pretended not
to see the signs and let him guide me to the big boat.
In general, Dublin is a small, industrial city, half covered by the Guinness
factory and, just in case the locals forget its presence, the other half is
covered with Guinness billboards. The trendy Temple Bar / Trinity College neighborhood
is the only green respite from the stout blonde goddess. There, I drooled over
the Book of Kells, an ancient, highly ornamental rendition of the gospels. Loved
the hornmen sculpture (2) out on the street and
the stained glass pub awning (3). Oh, and Knobs
and Knockers (4), a hardware store, of course.
With grad school ambitions firmly in mind, I trekked across the city one of
the old Guinness vathouses, where MIT Media Lab (5)
had set up shop the previous year. Got a tour of the vast facilities, and did
a little schmoozing. Later, I caught a couple of hardy Irish boys performing
Beatles standards in an outdoor mall, and went to an Alan Ayckbourn play.
Ah, but the next day is when things really got jumping. That's when I met the
middle-aged Danes and the hottie bike tour guide (6).
I had wandered across a bike-tour (7) advertisement
the previous day and talked the company into letting me into an already-full
tour for the following day. A group of Danish, Scottish, and Irish ski buddies
and their spouses who were evicted from their ski club upon turning forty were
now traveling together, and had reserved a three-hour bike tour of the city,
which I crashed. Together, we took in some fake castles
(8) (this one was just a façade built to impress foreigners), gardens
(9), and the courtyard of the Dublin Museum of Modern Art, with its dumpy
bagpeople (10). Drank lunch at a pub (11)
that practically required a secret password to get in the door.
On the way back to the bike shop, we caught the Liffey
Swim (12). Hundreds of fat, pink men (13)
in little black speedos swimming the freezing river that bisects Dublin. You
know I envied them.
Both U2 and a hee-uge football match were taking over Dublin the following
day, so I left the city that evening as dozens of half naked and painted neon
orange (Holland fans) or half naked and all green (Ireland fans) took to the
streets.
Next: Galway a'pubbin . . .