Tuesday, June 28, 2005

Ireland Photos







The western Ireland coast and contryside.














The amazing Cliffs of Moher.














Poulnabrone Tomb - This is really really old. I forget how much, but we're talking several thousand years old.











Our first round of Irish golf.














Check out that beautiful form. (Yeah, right!)














This is the main city of Galway. It had a nice town center area.















This is of the Irish countryside on the west coast in Burren.











This is part of the Aiilwee cave.















Monday, June 27, 2005

Ireland This Week

This is a long one, so read at your own risk. Also note that Amy was in Poland during part of this, and her post is included on the blog below as well. You’ll want to be sure and check out the pictures from her trip there, too.

The last week has gone by in a flash. Where to begin…Has anyone ever heard of Service Merchandise? For any of you who know what I’m talking about, it seems that in Ireland a company similar to Service Merchandise is one of the only fast means of procuring electrical products such as alarm clocks and extension cords. For those of you who aren’t familiar with Service Merchandise, it is a store where you go in and peek through a catalog of what they have to offer. In this similar store in Dublin called Argos, you pick your item, determine if it has the features you want (which is usually somewhat unclear in the catalog) write down the catalog item number, take it up to a cashier at a desk to pay for it, then someone from out back brings your item up, stamps your receipt, and you leave. It’s weird though. As in my previous post, the consensus here on accessibility to goods and services is very different from the US. You wait, and they take their sweet time. The motto of “the customer is always right” apparently hasn’t reached these distant shores.

For example, they do not build several stores of the same kind in close proximity to each other inside the city. In other words, there is a grocery store in one area of town. There is a clothing store in another part of town. There are small convenient stores and pharmacies at regular intervals all over town, but these are the exception. And of course, there would never be three Starbucks at the same intersection, as they don’t even have ONE in the entire city. Coffee drinkers beware before coming to visit. Bring your own grind if you come to stay and must have your daily coffee fix. You’ll have a hard time finding it here.

In the first few days here I had walked like 11,000 miles to get all the stuff I needed because we don’t have a car, and the cabs are expensive. There are benefits though! All this walking is wiping out the extra weight I might be gaining otherwise. Plus, it’s a really cool way to get to know a city. I grew up in a small town, and by the time I was 13 or so, I had covered every square inch of it on the seat of a bicycle, and so I remember the streets of my home town with crystal clarity. So walking such long distances in Dublin is actually pretty cool too. I don’t know the statistics on this, but many people here don’t even own cars, as is true in many other larger cities. Public transportation here is actually pretty good considering the size of the city. Seattle, for example, pales in comparison (although I will give them credit for the bus system, which works adequately most of the time). For a fairly monetarily poor country, the Irish are way ahead in this area compared to many of the vastly larger cities of the U.S.

It seems that most places of business are not REALLY in the business of making money, the same way companies in the U.S. are. The vast majority of stores and businesses close shortly after 5pm. THEN, the pubs open. The American in me gets a little frustrated that I can’t go to get whatever I need whenever I need it. So, I am forced to prioritize my time in a completely different way. Amy and I were discussing the fact that for the average working adult, it would be difficult to get all the normal errands of life done because the stores would be closing just as you are leaving work. Which then means that you would have to wait until the weekend to do all of those things, but if you do other things on the weekend like sports or travel, you would really have to save a large amount of time each weekend to get the rest of these things done. Fortunately for us, my wife is rich and so I don’t have to work, allowing me to get all those things done during the weekdays.

Now for our exploits during the last 8 days: Last weekend, Amy and I went with several other people to visit Kilmainham Gaol (Jail). This was a jail also built several hundred years ago. It held somewhere between 250 and 2000 prisoners depending on what year it was. When crops were down and hunger or war were up, there were many more prisoners to be found. This jail held several of Ireland’s famed rebels who fought against English rule during the late 1700’s and early 1800’s. Depending on the population of the jail, there might be as many as 11 prisoners occupying each 8 by 8 foot cell. They showed us the chapel, and the “exercise yard” (which was a small stretch of gravel in a walled area this size of a racquetball court. The prisoners were allowed to walk around this area. For most of the time this prison was used, when inside the prison, the prisoners were to be silent at all times. There were strict penalties for disobedience. There were also many executions on site, most of which were achieved by the use of a firing squad. There is now a small cross in this area of the jail to signify the loss of so many lives on that very spot.

Last Monday morning, I decided I wanted to go someplace during the day and my traveling companion Joy was hanging out with some other friends that were in visiting her and her husband from Seattle. So I went by myself up to visit a small town 20 minutes northeast of Dublin. I hopped on an electric train that runs all over the place. As the countryside flew past, I found myself wondering what it would be like to ride one of these to work everyday. A few minutes later I got off and walked into a small town called Howth (pronounced Hoath). It is a small town which derives its income mostly from the fishing trade and from tourism. I got to walk out onto a tall sea-wall that protects the harbor from any large waves. Howth is on the east coast of Ireland just across the harbor from Dublin, which both, of course, face toward England. I also happened to stumble in behind some other tourists who were walking the streets that day. I was in search of the remains of one of Ireland’s many castles, but my map wasn’t very good and I never found it. However, in trailing these other more savvy tourists, I found myself on a road that ended in a trail at the far end of town out towards the water. It was a fairly slow, steady climb around away from the town and up into some hillcountry. I was climbing and the water to my left was getting farther and farther below me. There were some fantastic homes below to my left as well built into the hillside. As I wound further out away from Howth, the cliffs also got taller and taller. The weather was amazing and there many kinds of birds flying around above the water. After about two hours, I had covered about 4.5 miles and came around the back side of the hill above the town and arrived back in town from the other end. I got on my train and came back home.

The middle of the week, the weather turned more rainy, and much like Seattle, it wasn’t a good soaking rain, but more of a light mist that lasts all day. I didn’t do much else during the week, but Friday I went with Joy and her husband Chad and their friends (Chad works with Amy at PWC and is also from Seattle. They live in Burien.) again heading north of Dublin. After another brief train ride, we detrained in Malahide which is the site of Malahide Castle. It is an old castle built in the late 1100’s. It is on an absolutely ENORMOUS (250 acres, to be exact) plot of land which must take a full grounds-crew 24 hours a day to maintain. It was gorgeous. There were huge rugby and soccer (they call it Football here) fields, picnic areas, grassy meadows, shrubs and rows of trees everywhere – all soaked in a light mist of fresh rain. The breeze was cool and wet and everything smelled of fresh-cut grass. It smelled and felt fantastic. We decided not to actually tour the castle because we were somewhat short on time, but the outside of the castle was a site on its own.

Friday night, Amy and I again went out with Chad and Joy and and their guests on a “Pub-Crawl”. You pay a small fee for the tour and are assigned two tour guides, who are also local musicians. You start at one pub, walk to another, and then one more. While stopping at each pub, the “crawlers” may purchase a pint of beer, cider, or other beverage while the tour guides perform different kinds of music with a small variety of traditional instrument (not bagpipes, those are originally Scottish) and talk about the history of the Irish musical tradition. There are two or three other types of “crawls” that include a Ghost crawl, a history crawl, and a literary crawl. It was a lot of fun and the musicians were very talented. At one point they invited anyone from the audience who wanted to come and sing or play to come forward, “give up their coolness for a bit”, and give their gift of music to the rest of us, as is part of the original Irish way of passing down and passing around music from village to village. A couple of brave souls from the audience took them up on the opportunity. Pretty cool. Until the last 70 years, the world had only this one way to give the gift of music to their progeny and it is sad that this tradition is now all but lost.

Then, this last Saturday morning, Amy and I went and played golf. We played a course just on the outskirts of Dublin. It was a chilly morning and the grass was soaked, as were our shoes by the end of the first couple of holes. The course was very well kept and we both had a very good round of golf. Amy was really playing well. She has never hit the ball as hard, far, or accurately as she did then. It was really fun. Neither of us are expert golfers and Amy ended the round with quite a few quadruple bogies, but it was great fun nonetheless. As soon as we wrapped that up, we got back into our little black Hyundai rental car and headed out west. We drove all the way across the country of Ireland in 4 ½ hours. If you think that is impressive, consider the fact that the speed limit was only around 60mph, we were on small two lane roads in pretty bad traffic, and went through about a dozen small towns. If Ireland had a major 4-lane highway running east to west, one could probably cross the country without traffic in about 2 ½ hours. We went to visit the city of Galway, which is Ireland’s second biggest city of only about 80,000 (Dublin only has about 1.5 million).

We arrived in Galway at around 7pm Saturday night and found a Bed & Breakfast for 30 Euros each (about $75) and unloaded our gear. We walked about half a mile back into the city center in search of some dinner. Galway also has a Street Mall much like the Grafton Street Mall here in Dublin although not as nice and containing many more pubs and junk shops. We did manage to find a restaurant and much to our surprise, the food was fairly cheap compared to what we have been paying elsewhere and was VERY good. Sunday morning we took a bus tour and drove all around western Ireland’s excellent countryside. It was actually very much like you might have seen in the movies – rolling hillsides covered in tall grass populated only by rough stacked-stone fences, sheep, horses, and cattle. We drove up and up through a limestone hill country to the Cliffs of Moher. I can only come up with one word: in-freeking-credible. It was one of the most amazing vistas I have ever come across. I hope the pictures do it justice. We also were able to visit a set of small caves that were carved out by a river running down through the mountain for what the guide told us must have been the last several million years at least. We saw some other older, ruined castles along our route, several old cemeteries and abbies, and had a really good lunch in a tiny hill-town.
I have to add a side note here. We were on a tour bus with approximately 45 other people, so it was a large size bus with big mirrors that stick out fairly far to give a good view for the driver. I only add these details because we were on the absolute skinniest roads you could imagine. If two Suburbans had to pass side-by-side they would probably get stuck, nevermind a HUGE tour bus. What makes the roads so skinny is that they are hemmed in by really old stone fences overgrown with grass on either side of the road and the pavement literally extends to the bottom edge of the fences on both sides. At one point during an extremely harrowing pass of another bus in which the two enormous buses were literally less than three inches apart I said to the driver, “I sure do hope they pay you well.” He laughed and replied in his Irish accent, “They don’t pay half as much as they ought and as my grey hair deserves!” We ended the tour, got back in our car, and drove leisurely back to Dublin last night. By the way, we had great weather all day long, which the bus driver says is extremely rare where we went even in the midst of summer. All in all it was an excellent week and the upcoming one will be just as good. Until next week, I bid you all farewell.

Pictures from Poland





This is a photo of the Wroclaw square. It was huge and really nice.











This is our Polish team - both client and PwC.












This is a picture from the plane of the Polish countryside. Not bad from a plane window with a disposable camera, eh?











This is part of an aisle of 5 churches. The two spires in the distance are of one church that is way older than our country.

Things I learned in Poland

Things I Learned While in Poland

The client I’m working on has a division in Poland. We’re helping the client get ready to comply with US regulations and as you can imagine the Poland team is finding it challenging between the distance from the project team here in Dublin and the language barrier. I and two colleagues were sent there at the last moment to give them some hands on help. This is what I learned:

1. The Polish are way more modern and technological than I expected.

I don’t know a lot about Polish history, but I knew enough before heading there that they played a part in the cold war and were definitely heavily affected by WWII. That’s all true, but they have a large population of young professionals and the country has been rebuilt since the war and is flourishing. They recently joined the EU which has further helped their stance as a country in Europe.

2. Not much of Wroclaw (pronounced phonetically as Rottsloff) that was around prior to WWII is left.

The client took us out on Tuesday night and took us on a walk. We walked by several churches and one of the spires had burned on one of them. We asked when it had burned and one of the guys with us checked noting that it had burned in the 1700s. They commented how that must be strange for me being from America that a building would be so old. I agreed noting that we in the US are just babies really. James and I were talking later and comparing America to the teenager in the family. They tend to think that everyone else including their parents are stupid and that they know everything and are invincible. I think this compares to the general American culture, don’t you? It’s nice to be over here expanding our view of the world. Anyway, the clients would point out buildings that were around prior to the war as this was a special and unique thing in Wroclaw.

3. Working in a country that operates in a different language is strange.

We did workshops around what the client needed to do while I was there. There is an entire department of translators at the bank whose sole job is to translate documents and meetings into English. While many of the folks we were working with understood much and spoke a bit, they were more comfortable in the meetings with the translator. One or two had very limited understanding, so my and my colleague’s English was translated to Polish and vice versa. It was strange to be up in front of a group explaining something and then realize you’d gone further than the translator could remember and that you needed to stop so that he/she could translate. Then the clients would have side conversations in Polish where my colleague and I would just wait for them to come to the theme at which point it would be translated to us. It was a situation where something that could have been done in a couple of hours in all English would take much longer as there were both translation delays along with just the challenge of communicating detailed concepts that had to go through translation.

4. Polish food is definitely different, but still good.

When we went to restaurants, we had to ask for English menus. Most of them had them, thank goodness. On the menus there were always basics like chicken and pork. In addition there was often boar, wild turkey, veal and venison. Dishes were served with potatoes and folks ate a lot of beets in Poland. Speaking of beets, I wish I’d been able to get a picture of this soup they served at the bank. I promise you it was fluorescent pink. They had to have added food coloring to it. It was beetroot soup, and I kindly said no thank you to that!

5. Pharmacy is Apteka in Polish.

This you need to know if you need anything you might get from a drugstore in the US. Let’s just say that I found myself in need and found it challenging to communicate what I needed. (Picture me and my colleague trying to motion how to take an aspirin to a taxi driver and you’ll get the idea….)

Those were really the highlights. Enjoy the pictures! Signing off….Amy

Sunday, June 19, 2005


Amy's first pint of Guinness! It was tough, but she finished it! Posted by Hello


Dublin Castle Posted by Hello


Here is James on the big screen at Seahawks stadium when he received his master's degree! Posted by Hello


This is a photo of Dublin from atop the Guinness Brewery Posted by Hello

James' First Impressions

Well, as you may already know, I flew from Seattle to Dublin, Ireland on Tuesday afternoon and evening. The first leg from Seattle to Chicago was in the Economy section, however, the second leg, from Chicago to Dublin was in Business Class. I have now decided that I will never be able to fly any other way! It was posh. A great three course dinner with excellent service. Nice leather chairs that recline and have footrests. I got my own personal DVD player with Bose “Noise-Reducing” Headphones and a large variety of movies to choose from. Then after a few hours of sleep I awoke to a great breakfast as the sun was coming up. All told, I flew for about 11 ½ hours. It really wasn’t too bad and went by much faster than I anticipated.

As we approached Ireland there was a heavy cloud cover and so I couldn’t see much. As we got closer and began to descend the clouds broke up just as we got to the Dublin area. There wasn’t anything too spectacular as we came in close but it was definitely just as green as Seattle.We landed in Dublin with the sun shining and a slight breeze. Never having traveled to Europe before, I really wasn’t sure what to expect when I got to the airport. Amy told me that I should have a copy of our marriage license, a copy of her work certificate as well as my passport. The gentleman in Customs looked summarily at my passport, asked me how long I was going to be in the country and passed me through with a brief smile, and I was officially in Ireland. I waited quite a while for my luggage, thinking to myself a couple of time as I waited that it had gotten lost. My patience won over and it all arrived with no problems.

I walked outside pushing a cart with all my stuff and got in a long line of people waiting for taxis. After about 40 minutes I got up to the front of the line and my cabby wished me a “pleasant g’mornin to ya son”. I got in and told him where I needed to go. We spent the next half-hour conversing about everything from local politics to the life of a cabby. He’d been doing this job for almost thirty years and was very efficient about scooting through traffic and the many roundabouts that are on the main viaduct from the airport over to the part of town where we live. Of course, here in Ireland people drive on the left side of the street than in the U.S. and when I get the opportunity I’m going to try out my ambidexterity at driving on the other side. Hopefully my skills won’t let me down.

Amy had moved into a lovely three-bedroom apartment before I came over this week. I must say, this is a vast improvement over our Seattle apartment. We have a lot of room to walk around, so much in fact, that we aren’t quite sure what do with all the extra space. However, we’re planning on having a couple of visitors during our stay here and the extra will definitely come in handy. We also have a balcony with a view of some buildings that are under construction to the right, and to the left are some older, small, brick houses. The streets are tight and people seem to make up their own rules as they drive and park. Double parking here is the norm and people just go around. You have be careful when you cross the street though, and look the other direction than usual, which sounds easy, but as you are all aware, old habits are hard to break, and this one, if not followed could get you killed. There is no such things as “pedestrian’s right of way” here. You step out in front of a bus, and the driver’s just a likely to step on the gas as the brake.

Just a few blocks walk from our apartment is an area of town called Grafton Street. It is an open air mall, like a cross between the main street in Disney land and the 16th Street Mall in downtown Denver. There are many shops, bars, restaurants, beauty parlors and department stores to choose from. There are also a variety of street performers – everything from very talented musicians playing an assortment of instruments, dancers, mimes, youth groups, etc – some performing solo, and some in groups. The street and some of its side streets are blocked to traffic, so the massive number of people there just wander from place to place checking out the sites. This is also a very tourist-based city and so one sees many tour buses flying down the already crowded streets. As a lover of cars, there are a vast number of cars available here that aren’t available in the US which is fun. I choose to keep most of my comments about this to myself because Amy falls asleep on her feet when I start talking about cars.

They don’t really have the typical kind of grocery stores here that they do in the states and people apparently don’t eat out all that much in the evenings because aside from the vast number of bars serving Guinness and other Irish beer, food is more difficult to find after 6pm than one might think. So instead, you can either go to the little convenient store around the corner once every day or so or you can go over to bigger store off of Grafton Street, get your things, then lug them the mile or so walk home. Or, as we found, you can order your groceries online and have them delivered. This is much easier, and it doesn’t make your hands hurt. The accent here is relatively easy to understand. However, you quickly find yourself accenting different syllables of words, and eliminating others from your vocabulary altogether here such as the word “awesome”. Amy found out the hard way that they think that word is dumb. They substitute the word “Grand” instead. Much better!