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Thanks to all who attended last night's (Thursday 28/09/17) meeting preparing for Strokestown's bid to become Bank of Ireland Enterprising Town 2017.
A brief synopsis of what was agreed is detailed below: 1) The event takes place on FRIDAY 06/10/17, with judging starting at 2pm; 2) Everyone who agreed to be part of this is asked to set up a promotional stall/table at THE PERCY FRENCH HOTEL, from 10am onwards; 3) Please ensure that you have returned to your stall/table by NO LATER than 1.30pm; 4) There will be 3 judges who will come round and talk to stall/table holders and the Town Team. This will be followed by the judges making a tour of Strokestown. This is a positive opportunity for us to show the strong business and social community that we have in Strokestown. Thank you all for your time and support - YOU WILL BE BRILLIANT!!
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At this year's National Ploughing Championship a number of secondary school groups from around the country, including Scoil Mhuire in Strokestown, were presented with five Irish Angus Cross calves to rear as part of a unique secondary schools competition. Over the next 18 months the students have been tasked with rearing the calves as part of a research project aiming to highlight the versatility of Certified Irish Angus Beef for consumers. The Certified Irish Angus Beef Schools Competition aims to encourage second level students to gain an understanding about the care and attention that is required to produce and market the highest quality beef for consumers (analysing the factors that affect the quality of beef, exploring its flavour profile and developing a creative approach to making beef more appealing for families and children). In addition to rearing the calves, the schools will complete a project focussing on a different aspect of farming and the food chain. The Certified Irish Angus Beef Schools Competition aims to allow students to apply the knowledge they learn in the classroom to a real-life setting. Each of the finalists will receive the financial benefit involved in the selling of the animals to the processors on completion of the project. The winning students also receive an additional grant of €2,000 for their further education The scores are out!!!
And ... Strokestown has been named as the Most Improved Town since last year’s Tidy Towns Awards. As a result Strokestown has been conferred with the Endeavour Award for 2017!! Congratulations to our Tidy Towns team - this is well deserved recognition for a great deal of effort and time. The adjudication report, detailing judges' views and suggestions, is attached below: www.tidytowns.ie/u_reports/2017/2017%20County%20Roscommon%20Strokestown%20715.pdf This shows where EVERYONE can take individual responsibility for supporting our Tidy Towns committee in making even more progress. ***UPDATE***
URGENT MEETING -- this THURSDAY 28/09/17 -- 9pm -- The Percy French Hotel STROKESTOWN - 'Enterprising Town' 2017?? "... In it to Win it!! ..." Strokestown Town Team has submitted our community for the Bank of Ireland 'Enterprising Town' award for 2017. The Bank of Ireland Enterprising Town initiative seeks to work with local businesses, the wider community and schools to plan and deliver a range of activities that will support and generate business in the area and encourage everyone to get involved and be part of the positive experience that is an Enterprise Town. Bank of Ireland’s National Enterprising Town Awards aims to assist in the promotion of enterprise across the country by bringing business and community groups together to showcase to a panel of judges, the spirit of enterprise in their local area. With over 30 monetary awards in total plus trophies (total prize fund €110,000) the overall winning town (or city village/area) is awarded €23,000 (plus a trophy!!) and the significant title of Ireland’s Most Enterprising Town. Businesses & Communities The Enterprising Town event will take place on Friday 6 October 2017, with a Business & Community event allowing local businesses to showcase what they do. It is also a chance to network – meet potential customers & suppliers, share ideas, and show the level of enterprise that is right on our doorstep. There will also be a great focus with all the local sports clubs, community clubs and societies gathering together to show what they do, to sign up new members and to recruit new supporters. The Community event will be a fun day, with something for all the family. Schools Organising the Enterprising Town events presents a wonderful opportunity for first and second-level students – in particular those in Transition Year – to gain valuable ‘real world’ experience. These students are a vital part of any community, and it is important to introduce them to enterprise in action and to open their young eyes to exciting opportunities. In preparation for this a Town meeting is being held this Thursday 28/09/17 at 9pm (for approximately 30 minutes) in The Percy French Hotel. Your involvement is key to success – PLEASE ATTEND 😊
Roscommon County Council's Environment Section completed a clean up of illegal dumping at Culliagh, Scramoge, Strokestown yesterday and used a drone to do a fly over of the area. The clean-up and the drone were funded under the Anti Dumping Initiative 2017. Almost 14 tonnes of waste was removed from Culliagh. Going forward the drone will be used to take footage of litter blackspots as part of a crackdown on illegal dumping.
Help keep Roscommon clean – report illegal dumping to our Environment Section Litter Line 1850 LITTER (548 837) or email: environment@roscommoncoco.ie The Strokestown Ladies contest the County Senior Final against Kilbride this Saturday 16th Sept in Knockcroghery at 4pm. Strokestown Ladies GAA hope to see a big turnout of support for the girls and their mentors Ronie, Trevor and Ronan. Hopefully everyone in town will get their flags and banners out to support the ladies as they head into Saturday's clash against our neighbours. The Strokestown Ladies and the management team have put in a serious effort as always to get to the county final and the support of the town would be really appreciated.
So please let everyone show their support! 'Hon the Town! A 'super' Angus cow has been awarded the 50th anniversary accolade for the breed after being judged All Ireland Supreme Breed and RDS Show Champion at Strokestown Agricultural Show for the golden jubilee year of the Irish Angus Cattle Society. The award for Ashtown Katie at the show coincided with the fourth anniversary of the cow's birth into the herd of Michael and Niamh Barron from Grange, The Rower, Co Kilkenny. There was also a rosette for her bull calf in the calf class on the same day. The cow, bred out of Ashtown Dorris by the sire, Goulding Jumbo King, also collected the award for All Ireland Senior Female Champion of Show. Aidan Moloney from Clare, who judged the Angus classes which had a prize fund of €11,000, described it as "a pleasure and an honour" to award the rosettes to "a wonderful display of cattle". Commenting on the Supreme Champion, he said: "She is a cow that we would all like to take home." He had been immensely impressed by her from the moment she first entered the judging ring in the morning, and added that she was accompanied by "a smashing bull calf" which had also been a prize-winner. Competition was very keen throughout the classes, with the exceptional standard of entries reflecting the strength which Angus has achieved as a beef breed in recent years. This has been supported by the growing international market which has been developed for Angus beef over the past decade in particular. Article (and photo) reproduced, with thanks, from Independent.ie
The past weekend as seen the 151st Annual Strokestown Agricultural & Industrial Show come and go and, despite showery patches, all in all the weekend was a fantastic success. We hope to bring you all a full report on the results and happenings of the weekend over the next few days but for now here are a few photographs of guest judge Katherine Lynch, who oversaw the Best Dressed Lady contest. Winner of the Best Dressed Lady was - Ciara Ní Dhufaigh congrats! Here is the lucky winner with the judges. Big thank you to Katherine and Co. for coming and sharing the day with the people of Strokestown at the 151st Show. The weekend was a massive success and could not happen without the ongoing and tireless months of work put in by the entire show committee. The show always leaves a positive lasting impression on the people who travel from all over the country to visit our heritage town. Well done and congratulations to all involved in organising this brilliant annual event. A Press Release From Luna accessories We are launching our new "Luna" boutique in Strokestown in County Roscommon this Friday 8th September at 4pm. We are delighted to invite all of our friends and loyal customers to join us for a drink and an opportunity to browse our brand new Autumn/Winter 2017 collection. As a special incentive everything in store will be reduced by 20% to celebrate our launch. The opening will be officiated by Cllr Orla Leyden Mayor of Roscommon and Ms Lorraine Higgins Deputy CEO of Retail Excellence Ireland. ‘There was a time when I never thought we would see it’ - First day at school arrives for Isobel after surviving cancer twice. Cancer survivor Isobel Cullinan gets ready for school with her mother Laura, in Strokestown, Co Roscommon. Photograph: Brian Farrell
When five-year-old Isobel Cullinan starts school this Friday, her mother Laura will linger in the car park at St Mary’s primary school in Strokestown, Co Roscommon, longer than most parents as she conquers her anxiety – and joy. “I have to say, there was definitely a time when I never thought we would see it. I’m terrified of letting her go but it’s fantastic. To have survived and to be here is fantastic,” Isobel is cancer-free. That’s a miracle as far as Laura O’Rourke Cullinan and her husband John Cullinan are concerned. They will watch with relief and anxiety as their second-born trots in the school door alongside her older sister Charlie (9). Isobel is a survivor of not one but two bouts of cancer, and the proud owner of a pet rabbit called Freddie, named after the long-removed central line which gave easy access to her veins during treatment. Izzy, as her family calls her, was 21-months-old when she was diagnosed with a cancer of the kidneys knows as Wilms tumour. Because it was caught at stage one, Laura said she and John, a former Meath county footballer, were absolutely blessed. “Winning the Lotto would not be as good as the news that she was stage one.” The little girl had eight weeks of chemotherapy and had her kidney removed. Four months on from the diagnosis the family was told that she was cancer-free. “You are always worried that it will come back again,” said Laura. Sadly, it did come back, and two weeks after her third birthday two tumors were diagnosed on Isobel’s lungs. Doctors said her chances of surviving were 50:50. “I can honestly say I wondered if we would ever get to this day,” said Laura as Isobel proudly models the school uniform, the school bag ready and waiting in the hall for weeks now. The treatment regime was more harsh second time round, and after seven months of chemotherapy and 16 doses of radiation the news was not good. “When she was scanned, and we were hoping that everything was done and dusted, she still had the tumours.” A week before Christmas, on December 18th, 2015, Isobel had part of her left lung removed during surgery which lasted 7½ hours. St John’s ward at Our Lady’s Children’s Hospital in Crumlin, has, according to Laura, become like a second home for herself and Isobel. But that year they were very happy to be discharged at 5.30pm on Christmas Eve, and to be back in Bumlin, Strokestown, with John and sisters Charlie and Alexia before Santa found his way there. The biggest gift was that doctors had told Laura they were confident that they had got all the cancer, and in April 2016 Isobel was deemed cancer-free. Scans are now being scheduled every four months, rather than two months, another big milestone for Isobel, but each one is a worry. “For a few days before a scan you just don’t want to talk to anyone,” says Laura. But talking is something she is willing to do, and she hopes her daughter’s story will be a solace for other families enduring the terror of a childhood illness. “Unfortunately, a number of kids who relapse do not get to the other side, but we have got there and I hope that gives parents the solace to believe that they can get there. When Izzy was first diagnosed childhood cancer was one of those topics people did not talk about. There are a lot of after-effects, and families need a lot of support.” *Story via The Irish Times: https://www.irishtimes.com/news/education/there-was-a-time-when-i-never-thought-we-would-see-it-1.3205279 |
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