Day 3
I started the day with a run to Phoenix Park, because one has to work off the pints somehow. I'm drinking at least a pint a night here. Scandalous!
Once again, we left the flat just before noon, and as soon as we hit the streets it was raining. Such a thrill. We proceeded to the National Museum Natural History Museum. The "Dead Zoo," as it's called here, is a Victorian-era, dead-animal museum, with more taxidermy than you have ever seen in one place. I mean, taxdermied elephants, giraffes, rhinos, and sunfish. The first floor is Irish animals, including skeletons of these now-extinct Giant Irish Deer, which, the docent emphatically explained, are NOT moose.
The second floor contained animals of the world, including a row of skeletons from human to simian, and more species of bats than you knew existed. There was a slightly unsettling but super interesting display involving a human and a horse, each half skeleton, half taxidermied skin (the human, thankfully, was half blank plaster on its non-skeleton side). The African mammals were enormous, and you could see the careful incisions and stitching along their bottom halves where their insides were removed. Each animal had a little card indicating when they were, ahem, prepared, and they were all from the 1890s or 1910s,
| Henry is not impressed by the tiger |
Henry was very impressed by the Dead Zoo until halfway through the first floor, when he got a ringing in his ear and was certain it meant he was about to pass out. It was probably just the transition from freezing rain to stuffy dead animal rooms, and maybe it was also the dead animals, but we couldn't spend much time getting fresh air as it was POURING rain, so we dragged him through the rest of the exhibits, which is why he appears so angry at the dead animals. He perked up at the porcupines, but I don't have a picture of that.
[Side note: We found a phalanx of news photographers waiting outside the government building directly beside the Natural History Museum, so we asked what they were milling about for. Apparently, former Prime Minister Bertie Ahern was arriving shortly for a hearing on his bank bailouts. Had we been more patient, we could have perhaps caught a glimpse of old Bertie, but our tolerance for pouring rain only goes so far.]
The kids were tired after all the rain walking and dead animals, and it was only by promising something at the gift store that we lured them to the Museum of History and Archaeology around the corner, where we saw the Tara Brooch and many other brooches and also a medieval Irish cross purported to contain a piece of the True Cross, and that ended up being Henry's favorite thing we saw. Perhaps he has a calling.
We then sped through the Medieval Ireland, Viking Ireland, and Egyptian exhibits. The Egyptian exhibit had nothing to do with Ireland, but they had several mummies, and really, do you need a reason to show off mummies? You do not.
| Meghan, Amelia, Molly, and Henry |
On the way home we passed the statue of Molly Malone. I think I had heard somewhere that selling cockles and mussels was only her day job, and that at night she was turning on the red light. However, I had no idea she was so amply endowed. ("She looks like she's keeping oranges in there," Henry mused.)
We went to an Indian restaurant for dinner, at Simon's request, and it was not fantastic. Will later explained that for whatever reason, there are very few Indians in Ireland, which explains why our waiter was actually Bangladeshi.
Day 4
This was our second attempt at seeing the prison. Dragging everyone out of bed is always a challenge, but we were up and showered and dressed and fed before 11 (this is quite a feat when everyone is sleeping until 10). Then there was a bit of a wait for Gerry, our taxi driver (he's the Hyde driver out here, too). By the time we got to the jail it was 11;30, and the line for the jail wrapped around the courtyard and onto the sidewalk. Worse, the sign indicated that the next available tour wasn't until 2 p.m., and we were meeting Will and his perfect family at the zoo at 1. So we did not buy tickets, a fact which still fills me with regret. Instead we had lunch at a space-age-looking bar and restaurant at the Hilton across the street.
[I know what you're thinking: "Couldn't you buy tickets ahead?" But it is only same-day sales, only sold at the jail itself.]
Amelia was much aggrieved at missing the jail AGAIN. For whatever reason, that was the site she was most interested in seeing. "I just like jails," she mourned.
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| Henry is stoked |
Fortunately for my blackening clouds of parental guilt, the zoo was exactly what we all needed. Not only was every animal out and about--elephants, baby elephants, rhinos, red pandas, rhinos, hippos, snow leopards--but we were with Will, Claire, Lucia, age 10, and Hugo, age 7 (Sam, age 12, was at a tennis match, and at any rate felt too mature for the zoo). As much as I'm sure my kids love spending family time, they were starving for interaction with their own kind. Also starving for room to run and be loud.
Henry immediately paired off with Hugo, Amelia with Lucia. They ran, they yelled, they laughed uproariously over pooping animals.
Then we retired to Will and Claire's amazing Georgian townhouse with their brand-new kitchen for tea and cake. She had a fresh pear tart in the fridge waiting for us, because she's Claire the pretty doctor who is gracious and funny and who has pear tart around for afternoon guests ("I didn't bake it myself!" she confessed, and thank goodness because my fragile self esteem couldn't have stood it.). The grown-ups talked while Henry and Hugo played FIFA on the Xbox (close to Henry's idea of heaven) and Amelia and Lucia watched the end of Cinderella, which had been cut off on our flight over due to our shorter-than expected flying time.
And that was Dublin! We had pasta at home for dinner, and I went for a solo walk along the Liffey that evening. I ran to the Jervis shopping mall in the morning (Maura, they have a Zara AND a Topshop!). I told Simon again and again that I could LIVE here in Dublin for a year or two, if only to hear the accents and shop at Zara and be friends with Will and Claire. Simon responds with his little chuckle that means it will never happen.
We made one last attempt at the prison Saturday morning, but it was sold out until way after noon, and we had a several-hour drive to Bantry ahead in our fancy rented Peugeot. As we left Dublin, Simon pointed out that one of us could have gone and bought tickets at 8:30 for the 11 a.m. tour, and that was a splendid idea that arrived a bit late. Truly, it wouldn't be a vacation without the lingering nausea of regret.
Next entry--Bantry Bay!


