![]() |
Site plan courtesy and by permission of Darmody Architecture. |
Drawings are available here:
![]() |
Construction works on the riverside park, Kilcullen. © Eugene Brennan |
![]() |
© Eugene Brennan |
![]() |
© Eugene Brennan |
![]() |
© Eugene Brennan |
![]() |
Site plan courtesy and by permission of Darmody Architecture. |
![]() |
Construction works on the riverside park, Kilcullen. © Eugene Brennan |
![]() |
© Eugene Brennan |
![]() |
© Eugene Brennan |
![]() |
© Eugene Brennan |
![]() |
Image generated by Bing Image Creator. |
Apparently your blood coagulates when you watch a horror movie, preparing you for bleeding. In this podcast episode, we hear why.
![]() |
Image generated by Bing Image Creator. |
![]() |
Image courtesy illusionist Victoria Skye. |
![]() |
Image generated by Bing Image Creator. |
![]() |
Screenshot from the EirGrid website. |
![]() |
Golden Falls dam. © Eugene Brennan |
High flows at Golden Falls today, which were forecast to be 10 m³/s all day. The releases are due to recent heavy rainfall. I always end up here late in the afternoon on dull days, so the high contrast in the scene means photos aren't the best. So the sky gets washed out if I increase the exposure.
![]() | |
© Eugene Brennan |
![]() |
© Eugene Brennan |
Seduisant, CC BY 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons |
![]() |
© Eugene Brennan |
Reading about the demise of Odlums Mill in Sallins and commencement of demolition work last month led me down a rabbit hole to this 2019 article from The Irish Times. Apparently, according to the article, there were 900 mills still in operation in Ireland in the 1940s. In the Kilcullen region alone, there were around seven mills operating at various periods over the centuries: a corn mill just north of the bridge in the town itself, which was demolished in the 80s, two more at Carnalway/Harristown, one on the Mill Stream at New Abbey and another in Mile Mill in the field behind The Mill pub. At Ardenode between Kilcullen and Ballymore, there was a mill on the Toor Brook, a tributary of the Liffey. There was also of course the large woollen mill in Ballymore Eustace and water powered cotton factory at Inchaquire (located on the left side of the road, between the two turns for Colbinstown), both of which employed hundreds of people.
![]() |
Public domain image by Skitterphoto on Pixabay |
![]() |
Public domain image courtesy Pexels. |
![]() |
Rock showing the influence of volcanic activity, on the coastline at Skerries. © Eugene Brennan |
Some interesting rocks from the Loughshinny, Skerries, Balbriggan area I came across on a walk along the coastline. Also a smuggler's cave I want to explore the next time I'm up there. I presume the holes in the rock are from volcanic gases that made the rock froth when it was molten. The white vein is a sedimentary layer that ended up on its side when the strata became folded over horizontally (I think that's what the GSI said when I asked them). Skerries is an area of interest geologically because of the complex number of geological formations from different periods. Further north at Clogherhead is one end of the boundary between the northern and southern landmasses that came together 470 million years ago to "make" the island of Ireland. That boundary line between the two sections extends south westwards towards the Dingle Peninsula.
![]() |
Vein in rock strata. © Eugene brennan |
![]() |
Smuggler's cave near Loughshinny. © Eugene Brennan |
![]() |
Image courtesy ComReg SiteViewer. |