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7 March 2008

Happy Daffodil Day

Filed under: culture,dublin,ireland,sports — Will @ 19:31

Happy Daffodil Day! In Ireland, March Seventh is Daffodil Day in Ireland. It’s a day designated by the Irish Cancer Society to donate funds to support cancer research and services to those who are affected by cancer. Several Anglophone cancer societies use the daffodil as an official symbol, including the American Cancer Society. (In Chicago, Daffodil Days begin on St Patrick’s Day.)

As in the US, the Irish Cancer Society employs Jarvisian skill in PR, bring the government, the media and practically all mainstream institutions on board.
Daffodils
The daffodil is also the national flower of Wales. In a neat coincidence, the national rugby team of Wales visits Croke Park in Dublin tomorrow. At this point in the Six Nations Tournament, Ireland is one of three national teams tied for second place behind Wales. So, on the day before one of the biggest matches of the year for Irish rugby, thousands of Irish fans are wearing a symbol of the opposing team. Nice!

Finally, on a personal note, I’ve wondered for weeks whether any daffodils are poking their heads above ground in the Midwest. I’ve seen them around Dublin for weeks. The photo above was taken on February 18th. Do you see daffodils where you are? Let me know in the comments.

1 March 2008

Hurry! Mothers’ Day is tomorrow!

Filed under: culture,ireland — Will @ 18:55

Here in Ireland (and the UK), Mothers’ Day is tomorrow. Flowers and candy are on sale everywhere, as you’d expect.

The Irish-English story of Mothers’ Day is a nice example of the entanglement of the Anglophone countries. Mothers Day is technically named Mothering Sunday, and it falls on the fourth Sunday of Lent. (So this year, it’s abnormally early. I’m sure that many Irish sons were caught unawares!)

The tradition originates in Laetare Sunday on the Catholic liturgical calendar. The story is that, centuries ago, servants and apprentices were allowed to return to their mother-church and their family on Laetare Sunday. motherssign.png So, that Sunday became associated with children returning to their extended families and thus, their mothers.

Mothering Sunday was nearly forgotten by the 1930s, but American servicemen stationed in England during the Second World War helped revive the tradition, and the focus of the day was firmly fixed on mothers alone. Mothering Sunday is prominent once again. From the appearance of the stores on Grafton Street, the tradition is now indistinguishable from Mother’s Day in the US — it’s a standard hallmark-holiday.

By the way, the story of Mother’s Day in the United States is much more exciting. It’s a historiographic grudge-match! In one corner, flourishing in 1872, is the feminist and anti-war suffragette, Julia Ward Howe. In the other corner, flourishing in 1908, is the Victorian sentimentalist, Anna Jarvis. In the grand tradition of pugilistic commentary, I offer my analysis in verse:

Howe’s left-side rhetorical hook
is second to none,
but the appeal of Jarvis to mainstream authority
will get the job done.

Good stuff, especially for doctoral candidates. This donnybrook should continue for decades to come.

19 February 2008

American Politics in Dublin

Filed under: culture,dublin,expat,ireland — Will @ 18:14

I have political interactions with Dubliners more than twice a day (when I’m out and about). Here’s two from today.

First, in the hardware store: The two workers there know me and they know that I’m American. One asks, “How about yer man McCain. Do ya think he’ll win?” Discussion ensues, bringing in another customer (Irish). All seem to hope that Obama wins the primaries and the election.

Second, not really an interaction, but a poster I saw all over town:
canamericanchange.jpg

10 February 2008

More and More Daylight

Filed under: ireland,mental state — Will @ 13:24

It feels like the days here are much longer, already. There’s a reason for that, because during this time of year, the amount of daytime hours is increasing most rapidly. So it’s not just optimism — sunset really is noticeably later each week.

In December and June (around the solstices), the sunrises and sunsets happen at about the same time every day. In March and September (around the equinoxes), the sunrises and sunsets are changing rapidly.

Here’s a graph of the hours hoursdarknesssm.pngof darkness for Dublin throughout the year. The color indicates the rate of change in this number, so the fastest change occurs in the two yellow sections. For example, from December 1 to January 31, the number of hours of daylight changes by less than 50 minutes. On the other hand, from February 1 to March 31, the number of hours of daylight increases by almost four hours!

Not only that, but the greatest acceleration in the number of hours of daylight occurs weeks before the March equinox. In the first week of February, the speed at which sunset is moving later in the day is, itself, at its fastest for the year. (The illustration above, and much much more, appears in my forthcoming book, Calculus for Ex-pats).

The upshot is that it is supposed to feel like there’s a lot more daylight. (As a math teacher might say, your subconscious is doing calculus automatically.) And thank goodness for that. Anita and I managed to be out of town for most of the darkest weeks in Dublin, but what we saw was plenty for us.

The one caveat — and the one caveat that caught me every time in Chicago — is that the air temperature doesn’t necessarily follow this pattern. In Chicago, your sun-tracking-calculus-spidey-sense says that spring is coming in February. As we all know, there are many more weeks of crappy weather to go. The disconnect between sunshine and warmth would leave me despondent in early April. We’ll let you know whether spring works the same way in Dublin.

18 January 2008

Locutionary Confectionary

Filed under: consumer,ireland — Will @ 19:00

At the 2007 retreat, the Bugle staff decided to become your best-in-class source for information about the Irish and British sugar- and syrup-oriented products. The BB Procurement Department obtained the first sample for 2008: Fry’s Turkish Delight.

The wrapper for Fry’s Turkish Delight presents itself as a typical, old-fashioned British candy bar. The wrapping promises the intensely sugary quality that seems to hold an extraordinary appeal for Angles and Saxons (and the Irish too). The motto, “Full of Eastern Promise,” is odd. Does Fry make good on the promise? Is it appropriate to talk about “Eastern” (presumably as opposed to “Western”) flavours in the 21st century? Fry may be a bit of an orientalist.

Inside the wrapper lies a medium-brown chocolate rectangle that tastes like ordinary chocolate. It’s a little too big to eat in one bite. Biting off half the bar leaves its gooey innards exposed, frysturkishdelight.jpgwith teeth marks slowly melting back into the mass. The chocolate skin is barely a millimeter thick.

The innards are the Turkish Delight from which the delicacy derives its name. It is a block of goo that resembles plastic explosive more than food. It appears that the Ottoman Turks generated a gelatenous substance of supersaturated sucrose, perhaps by following ancient Greek methods re-discovered during the Islamic Renaissance. The strangely solid, yet sticky result could be delicious, or it could be a derivative of napalm. [The author’s implicature, which advances a harmful stereotype, should not be taken as an endorsement of the historically suspect idea of a clash of civilizations, nor does the Bakker Bugle endorse the suggestions herein. — Editor]

So I had taken my first bite of Turkish Delight. After my fight-or-flight instinct subsided, I paused to consider the remaining part of the treat. The delicate supporting structure of chocolate was ruined, and the lightest pressure of my fingers — just enough to keep the candy from slipping to the floor — was smashing the Delight into an amorphous wad. My brain protests, but I have no choice. I must eat the remainder or be condemned to hours alternating between washing with caustic soaps, and walking around, fingers akimbo, as if I received a fresh manicure of some misbegotten nail-polish glacĂ©.

With the second and final bite, I discovered that this goodie has a flavor as well as a texture. It resembles, slightly, the generic fruit flavor one finds in American hard candies. The wrapper told me that Turkish Delight consists of sugar, gelatin and rose water. There was something natural about the taste, unlike the supposedly “fruit-flavored” Now-and-Later. But I don’t know how a rose tastes. The purply gel in my mouth didn’t taste like fruit, and it didn’t smell like a grandmother’s perfume, so “rose water” didn’t help me much. I’ll assume that this confection’s origins are botanical, even if a process rendered it into something that cannot be one of God’s own creations.

After two bites, I found the solid-gel texture intriguing, and the taste was compelling. Now I want more. I can’t recommend it to you, and I can’t say that it tastes good. But I find myself thinking about the Eastern Promise several times an hour. Fry, you are a cruel candy-pusher, but you are also the exotic Mata Hari of the bonbon-industrial complex!

17 January 2008

Coldest Week in Dublin

Filed under: dublin,ireland — Will @ 15:14

Last week was the coldest week for us since our move to Dublin. Some weeks this summer felt cooler, relative to normal temperatures and particularly relative to our US summers. Nevertheless, I am ready to declare the week of 6-12 January 2008 as the crappiest week of weather for the Bakkers in Ireland. I created a chart to prove my point: the blue columns indicate daily rainfall totals, the grey zone is the temperature, Weather Chart Jan 2008and the red line is average wind speed.

There was no snow last week. A little bit of snow-like substance fell from the sky, but it was more like hail or sleet. Snow doesn’t make “tick” noises when it hits the ground! And Anita did need to scrape her windshield two or three mornings, before driving into the pre-dawn darkness.

The story was much different for us on Saturday the 5th. We drove to Belfast. In Northern Ireland, and even the higher elevations of County Louth, the ground was lightly covered in snow. In the city of Belfast, the snow and slush stood in low piles along the streets, like a minor snowfall in Chicago. The roads were perpetually wet, as the snow on the tarmac was moved aside mostly by the tires of ordinary vehicles.

Back to Dublin: Last week, almost everyone still wore light coats, scarves, and sometimes a hat. I now believe that most Dubliners don’t own heavy winter coats. Lots of Southsiders have skiing gear, and a few wore their ludicrously coloured ski jackets on the coldest days. And the cold didn’t inhibit people from walking to get coffee and lunch. The early mornings were dead, as usual, but I didn’t notice any change in the number of pedestrians out at midday and in the evening.

Belfast was another story. Nearly everyone, including motorists, had heavy winter coats in the LLBean style, and stocking caps.

Anita reports that her co-workers believe the worst weather is yet to come, in February. I’m skeptical, especially given the gusty, rainy nature of last week. This week is gray and rainy, but noticeably warmer. And my maxim from the summer still works: There is sunshine every day, for at least a little while. The oppressive mat of dark clouds that sits over the American Midwest in wintertime just can’t resist the constant wind. As I walked around last week, I thought, “Coming here as a tourist during this week wouldn’t be terrible, especially if you adapted each day’s sights to the sunshine.”

I’ll finish with the immortal words of AndrĂ© 3000, “You can plan a pretty picnic, but you can’t predict the weather.”

6 January 2008

First Visit to the Mothership

Filed under: ireland — Anita @ 12:59

As many of you know, Will and I have a fondness for IKEA. [Editor’s Note: Dave’s objections notwithstanding, we cannot resist the Scandinavian huldra of affordable design.] Once or twice a year, we would organize a trip to the Schaumburg (Illinois) store to get nifty storage containers, unique household items and functional furniture. Imagine our shock and dismay when we discovered that Ireland did not have an IKEA. Not one store on the whole island – a tragedy! We discovered this deficiency before we moved, so we made a final run to the Schaumburg store. We managed to get almost every IKEA thing we could need, but we did have a few holes that needed filling with cheap, function Swedish designs.

Not long after we moved here, the news of a new IKEA opening in Belfast reached our eager ears. The store opened in December. ikeajan08.pngWhile the island is small, Belfast is still about two hours away. So, it wasn’t reasonable or practical to go to Belfast just to shop at IKEA, as we really didn’t need that much. But, due to circumstances outside our control, we had to go to Belfast Saturday morning. Never ones to miss an opportunity, we decided to go to IKEA after we completed our commitment.

We arrived not long after the store opened, before the crowds began. Our friend Kathryn went with us and all three of us had an excellent shopping experience. We found rugs, storage units, a small table – everything we think we need to make our apartment just a little more perfect. Since Northern Ireland is part of Great Britain, the currency is Pounds, not Euros. Right now, it takes about two US dollars to get to one Pound. So, to get a feel for what things cost, you just doubled each posted price. Even I can handle that!

IKEA has plans to build a Dublin store, but they have to wait for some roadwork to be finished before they are allowed to build the store. The best estimate right now is 2010. Sometimes, things take a long time in Ireland…..

17 December 2007

A stocking full of links

Filed under: culture,dublin,ireland,links — Will @ 17:51

What’s News in Ireland? These links represent the stories that seem to dominate the newsmedia of Ireland.

Independent: Drivers on learner’s permits may be safer
The fiasco about learner’s permits turned the newsmedia’s attention to driving safety. Some counter-intuitive conclusions are being publicized in the wake of the policy shift. When it comes to roads safety, Irish expectations differ from American “common sense” — but not when it comes to children. But in Ireland, the combination of large families and small vehicles makes for an awkward situation for many parents.

Independent: Traditional light bulbs banned
The Greens joined Fianna Fail to form the current Irish government. That didn’t cause a big shake-up, but the number of green initiatives is increasing. This week, the Government announced the official obsolescence of the incandescent bulb.
Guardian (UK): “Dead” kayaker returns to face fraud charges
A man declared dead in 2002 by UK authorities walked into a London police station and declared himself a missing person. For the past two weeks, suspicions coalesced into a criminal case. Now, his wife and himself are charged with fraud.

Independent: Cocaine is a new scourge for Ireland
Cocaine use has been relatively uncommon in Ireland, but the newspapers seized on the story of increased cocaine use recently. The story is all the more dominant, given the apparent role of cocaine in the death of one of Ireland’s beloved models, Katy French.

Independent: Michael Lynn scandal continues
Michael Lynn is a lawyer and property developer who fled Ireland for a second time after defrauding banks and individuals in complex schemes involving multiple mortgages on the same properties.

Independent: EU “constitution” referendum is contentious
Ireland is one of the few EU countries holding a popular vote on major changes to the European Union. Some people say that the changes are a back-door version of the constitutional revisions that were rejected by French and Dutch voters. Others say that the changes are vital and necessary, and that the process of approving them is reasonably democratic. I don’t fully understand the issue yet.

Interesting Links

Ireland’s 1911 census available online
If you’re into genealogy, this may be big news! The National Archives released a big set of data about the residents of Dublin in 1911, and an exhibit about the face of Dublin that year.

The remarkable Guinness family

IKEA in Belfast!
Anita has been waiting for this development with great anticipation. The North is working hard to change its image, sometimes using bizarre means.

Independent: Oprah hearts Obama
This was big news in Ireland, too.

13 December 2007

Christmas holidays

Filed under: administrative,entertainment,ireland,sports — Will @ 23:51

The Bugle staff might not be productive for the next few weeks. In Ireland, office Christmas parties are taken very seriously. From what we understand, it can take up to two weeks to recover. So the staff apologize, in advance, if they are not able to maintain the levels of Bugle excellence that you expect.

Relax, enjoy your own festivities, and look forward to lots of new stuff in the new year!

5 December 2007

Flickr Photos Update: The Visit of Jaime and Sharon

Filed under: B&B,entertainment,ireland,travel — Will @ 16:20

At last, the photos from the epic visit of Jaime and Sharon are available to the loyal readers of the Bakker Bugle Blog. Each photo has a title and most have comments, so click through and enjoy the stories! (For the real details, ask the ladies yerself.)

The best way to view the photos is to start at the Collection Page and click through each day:

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