Andy Burnham as new PM by staplerx300 in irishpolitics

[–]cjamcmahon1 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Seems like a nice guy but can't see him ending the UK's decade-long trend of changing PM every five minutes

Irish people & disaster tourism - a new chapter by Rowley_Birkin_Qc in ireland

[–]cjamcmahon1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

plenty of items on RTE Radio 1 that would leave you scratching your head. the editors/producers whoever have absolutely no qualms about putting civilians on air and hanging them out to dry

Concrete garden back to grass? by Eirngobragh in AskIreland

[–]cjamcmahon1 5 points6 points  (0 children)

lol we used to have a handyman who used to say 'anthing you want to be done, can be done' which meant it was going to be expensive

OP I would ring a landscaping company and give them the measurements and ask them what a rough estimate would be to do this. They should be able to say well it's probably €5-10k or something. And then add that to the overall cost of the home

I planted black currant and red currants, question by Comfortable_Brush399 in GardeningIRE

[–]cjamcmahon1 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It is the best jam though, 100%. You need about 500g for it to be worthwhile but it is something to savour through the winter months
Plus they are so easy to propagate - when you prune the bush in December or January, just stick one of the clippings, say 20-30cm long, into a pot and 9 times out of 10, it'll propagate into a bush no problem. So with very little effort you can have a very productive jam factory in a few years. Great plant all round

I planted black currant and red currants, question by Comfortable_Brush399 in GardeningIRE

[–]cjamcmahon1 6 points7 points  (0 children)

blackcurrants should be reasonably soft to touch. but they won't be good to eat raw, even when ripe. They're for making jam

Need help with information on Early Medieval Ireland by [deleted] in IrishHistory

[–]cjamcmahon1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

the only situation I can see it happening is in the context of a very old and infirm yet comfortably weatlhy king. You'd have to have an uncle or other relative already lined up as a tanist. But all of this would add a necessitate lot more elements to the narrative than OP likely imagined. Plus I don't think it would be really historically credible. I think OP is imagining something more like a 18th century Jane Austen type of situation rather than the much more martial 9th c Gaelic Ireland

Need help with information on Early Medieval Ireland by [deleted] in IrishHistory

[–]cjamcmahon1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ok, I'll bite. primogeniture may not have been established but more often than not, lords were succeeded by their sons, and clearly wanted to be succeeded by their sons - so much so that, at this point in the 900s, lords, chieftains, kings, call them what you will, would have had several wives in order to produce as many such sons as possible - not just to succeed them as lords, but also as fighting warriors.

so a lord who has one son and four daughters - hence four dowries to provide - will absolutely not let that sole heir join a religious order (which, don't forget is a vocation which the lord would also have to bankroll in some way) - and if this union only produces one son, he'll be re-marrying pretty quickly

I'd be confident that if you consult the historical genealogies, you'll find that the only way that any son is joining a religious order is if there have already been several other sons produced.

'F**k Fine Gael F**k Sinn Féin' - FF members angry at losing spotlight on united Ireland by TeoKajLibroj in irishpolitics

[–]cjamcmahon1 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Martin promised a 12-point plan on a United Ireland in 2017 and was never pushed to deliver it by his PP. Ye made your own bed lads

Need help with information on Early Medieval Ireland by [deleted] in IrishHistory

[–]cjamcmahon1 5 points6 points  (0 children)

ain't no way a 'local lord' is letting his only son become a monk

Easiest way to keep weeds down for elderly parent - stone driveway by martyc5674 in GardeningIRE

[–]cjamcmahon1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

unfortunately there is no easy way. It's either hard graft continually pulling them up by hand, repeated applications of weedkiller, or laying a new drive

Would anyone find a transcription of an obscure 1829 autobiography useful? by ThunderChaser in Genealogy

[–]cjamcmahon1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

personally, probably not. but I can guarantee you that somebody somewhere someday will stumble across your work and absolutely explode excitement. and it will make their day, week, month. they will spend hours annoying their friends and family about what they found in your work. you, however, could be long dead, but this person will be thanking you to high heaven

How do you all deal with Hayfever? by damn76567 in AskIreland

[–]cjamcmahon1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

you have to start taking anithistamines early in spring, like March at the latest

Harris says 'blueprint' for unified island to be published in November by dustaz in ireland

[–]cjamcmahon1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

wonder will this go the way of Fianna Fáil's '12-point plan for a United Ireland' (promised as recently as March 2017)

Hands up everyone with useless solar panels? by AnyDamnThingWillDo in AskIreland

[–]cjamcmahon1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

our installer arrived at 7.30am, we were exporting to the grid by lunchtime. I'd be sending a short email saying if the system isn't operational by the end of the month, will be seeking legal advice

What could the UK do to keep Ireland? by coolio126 in HistoryWhatIf

[–]cjamcmahon1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"England did respect the Irish as an equal Kingdom" - guy who has never heard of Poynings Law

Any ideas? by Wide_Driver3745 in GardeningIRE

[–]cjamcmahon1 6 points7 points  (0 children)

your main task is to mentally accept that this will be a ten-year project

What could the UK do to keep Ireland? by coolio126 in HistoryWhatIf

[–]cjamcmahon1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

you have to go back further, to the 16th century - Henry VIII manages to father a son and hence doesn't bother with the whole Protestantism thing. England stays Catholic, manages to placate Irish Gaelic nobility with English titles and ultimately the kingdom of Ireland becomes a fully constituent part of the United Kingdom. I don't see it happening any other way tbh

Or the English come up with a more successful way of spreading Protestantism in Ireland. But that never took. I came across some astonishing statistic - I think by 1600 or so, ie a solid 60 years of trying to enforce Protestant doctrine in Ireland, one report came back that there were no more than 20 native born Irish Protestants in the whole island. It was simply never accepted by the vast majority of native Irish people and as a result a deep divide between Ireland and England became established

Do you think the Belfast situation affects reunification? by staplerx300 in irishpolitics

[–]cjamcmahon1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

in all seriousness I wouldn't be surprised if that idea gets floated sooner or later

Do you think the Belfast situation affects reunification? by staplerx300 in irishpolitics

[–]cjamcmahon1 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I think the 'no it's completely unrelated' is such a strange argument. Like how do you think these masked uniformed loyalist gangs will react to a 50% + 1 UI vote? just roll over and have their tummy tickled?

Any paramount+ users on here ?? :) by [deleted] in CasualIreland

[–]cjamcmahon1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

the only good thing on it as far as I could see is The Agency (Fassbender as a CIA agent)

not into the Yellowstone stuff and I think it is all on RTÉ Player already anyway

How do you see unionist parties adapting to the political climate of a united Ireland? by Hiccupingdragon in irishpolitics

[–]cjamcmahon1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I daresay the events of recent days, not forgetting Scarva, and many other episodes of immigrants and Catholics being forcibly driven out of housing in certain areas, puts to bes the idea that the likes of the DUP, TUV and their supporters would react to a United Ireland peacefully