Donegal man living and working in Donegal. Coincidentally interested in all things Tír Chonaill. Partial to the leather sphere & 🌊 also. All views are my own.
The A5 Enough is Enough are calling for a show of “public unity and support for the campaign and the families of those who have lost their lives to the most dangerous road in Europe.”
🗓️Tuesday 18th March 2025
📍Assemble at the High Court, Belfast
⏲️9am to 10am
Spain’s MEP Irene Montero:
“The fact that Netanyahu has even a minute of space at the UN headquarters speaks volumes about the hypocrisy of the West. There will be no justice until the US & Europe stop being complicit & providing economic & military support to genocidal Israel.”
A lovely wee show of the Northern Lights / Aurora Borealis for #lovedonegal day from Fort Dunree in Inishowen, County Donegal. The wonderful intro to @paulbradysongs The Homes of Donegal is the music and another wee chance tonight after dark! ☺️ @wildatlanticway@AstronomyIRL
Diverse, Natural & Authentic. #LoveDonegal
Diverse range of entrepreneurs and thinking.
The Natural beauty of our coastline, Malin Head in the background.
Authentic people & pursuits. An amazing group of sea swimmers, about to embark on a swim across the Swilly.
#IrelandsDNA
This is wonderful from @Galway_GAA
Each member of the Galway panel for Sunday's All-Ireland final, introduced by young players from their respective clubs.
Thirty years ago, beloved actor John Candy died suddenly at the age of just 43. Candy initially wanted to be a football player, but an injury in his school days forced him to pursue a different career: comedy.
Candy got his start at Toronto's sketch collective Second City TV alongside comedians like Eugene Levy and Catherine O'Hara.
He then went on to appear in classic comedies like "Uncle Buck," "Planes, Trains, and Automobiles," and "Home Alone." By the early 1990s, Candy was a comedy icon — until his tragic death that left his fans around the world in shock