The day started well but given the hangover I’d had the day before unless I’d suddenly come down with the plague I was bound to feel better. Unfortunately the day wouldn’t remain so good.
Bert actually got up when I ask him to and before long we were downstairs having breakfast. We’d worked out how much we’d got left in sterling so the decision was made to fill up on breakfast so the next meal we’d need to eat would be just before we got to the airport.
Back in the room we packed up as quickly as we could and decided we’d walk to the local station and get the train to take us one stop down the line to Hull’s main station. Plans changed when we found a bus station on the same commercial complex as the hotel! This took us straight to the station in Hull.
As with our outbound journey our train tickets weren’t for the train we were about to catch but it didn’t matter. We’d paid full fair so it’s not as though we were travelling illegally and Laura had never had her tickets checked and neither did we on the way into Hull. The train pulled out the station and within seconds we heard the guard shout “tickets please!”

The guard pointed out that our tickets weren’t for travel on this train and Brad, doing all the talking as ordered by me, explained that we didn’t think it matter as we’d paid a fare anyway. We had two options. No.1. Pay a small fortune for two single tickets at full price into Manchester or No.2. get off at the next station, Brough.
An hour later, after I’d walked the length of the platform a few times, then the other platform, watched five trains come through the station, taken pictures and listened to camp classics we decided to take a walk into the town. Well actually I decided to go for a walk to small cafe/shop I could see just across from the station to go and get come drinks for us and Brad decided he’d come with. The cafe turned out to be a chinese take-away called the Station Supper Bar, worse still it was closed. This meant a walk into town which wasn’t too daunting as we were at a train station. Surely if you’re at a train station there has to be a small village or town centre nearby. Wrong! Fifteen minutes and four pubs later there was still no sign of a village centre and I was starting to think we’d been walking out of town rather than in. All we wanted was a newsagent we could get a bottle of coke, a chocolate bar and a newspaper.

Another fifteen minutes and finally we could see some shops on the horizon! Okay that’s not strictly true! First of all we couldn’t see the shops we could see the edge of a car park and secondly it wasn’t on the horizon. My pace increased slightly, if that was possible, as my excitement grew at the though of finally getting a coke and maybe a Mars bar! I was also excited about seeing civilisation which was just as well as that was all we got!
A florist, a bookies, a post office, a couple of estates, an architects and some nice benches and flower beds! No fucking newsagent! A Spar would have done. I’d even have paid the exorbitant prices in a Co-op by this point. Thankfully in the distance we spotted a bigger car park which could have been another set of shops and surely there must have been a newsagents there!
For once success was ours! There was more than a newsagent! There was a Morrisons! My distaste for Morrisons is on par with that of Kwik Save, Aldi, Lidl’s and buses but by this point I’d have drank the piss from a sweaty dog I was that thirsty! Two two-litre bottles of shite and a twix later we were heading back to the train station happy in the knowledge that I’d had a drink and some chocolate and a toy and the next train to come in would be ours! No eye candy on this trip just a guy being too loud on his phone and then coughing beer all of the seat but thankfully we soon pulled into Manchester Piccadilly.

Thanks to the delay at Brough we’d have to get the train straight to the airport to make sure we got there on time. Sitting upstairs in the departure lounge we bought coffees that we could refill as many times as wanted just in case we were delayed. As luck would have it we weren’t. Of course our luck wouldn’t hold out.
As we boarded the plane and grabbed the emergency exit seats I saw a familiar flash of black and green. The same fucking basketball team that was on the flight out was on our flight back. A million under-15′s trying to get into a plane made for four! I don’t so much mind the kids, although these ones were quite noisy, but it’s the useless parents and guardians who don’t keep them under control that’s more annoying. They seem to encourage it! I’m sure I heard one of the mothers say “yes darling, you run up and down the aisle as we take off and here’s €100, go get yourself a vodka and coke!”
Every five minutes or so the cabin crew would ask people to move down the plane and find a vacant seat so ignoring all the signs the kids took up the spare seats in the emergency exit rows. There are signs clearly stating that you have to be over eighteen to sit in these seats, which is an added bonus as far as I’m concerned, but the parents were ignoring this and telling kids to sit in the seats. And yes, there were ignoring them. How do I I? How can I be so sure that they’d seen the signs? Because Bert and I pointed it out to them! I desperately wanted to shout “told you so!” when the cabin crew moved them on!
This left two empty seats behind us which soon filled by a very snobby old bitch (very much like myself) who wasn’t at all happy that she was travelling with Ryanair. My consolation, and yes I am that bitter was that her husband had no choice but to put their bags in the only available locker space, one at the front and one at the back, which meant they’d be last off. To make matters worse she put her jacket on the back of Bert’s chair. This usually wouldn’t be a problem but she was very snooty and made no attempt to ask if he minded, which he did! So he put his back constantly wiping his dandruff on her collar and any creatures living in his hair. To be honest I think he came off worse with the bugs off her collar now in his hair.
Now, as most of you know I have a small passion for planes which has lead to me knowing a little bit about the process of landing. Not only that but coming into Shannon so many times gives you an idea of where you should be at what point. As the pilot announced “seats for landing” I knew we were too high and going too fast. What made things worse was that Bert knew it as well.

Once we’d bounced down the runaway the pilot finally managed to stop just short of the end, something that never happens at Shannon (well not to us!) and had to do a u-turn to head back to the taxi-way. This is the second time we’d bounced down the runway (the first time he managed to turn into the taxi way miles away from the end of the runway thankfully!) and just like then as we got off the landing gear was surround by official looking people all rubbing their head or holding their chin in their hands and going “hmmmm!”
A short walk to the car, an hours drive to Claregalway and we were soon in bed at the Dugggans who’d offered us a bed rather than go home and go back the next day to collect the animals. I slept well that night. Thankful to be home but filled with some great memories.
All in all I’d say we had a very successful trip. Of course I’m ignoring all the hiccups as in the grand scheme of things they just made the trip an adventure. Many thanks to Row for a wonderful Friday night, Laura and to everyone else for a wonderful Saturday night and Brad for a wonderful Sunday. I met some great people on the trip. I also ate too much, drank too much, was filmed too much, smoked too much, walked too much but all of it was very very much worth it.
Hopefully I’ll see you soon!


One thing I’ve always thought should be exceeded and not just met are my own personal customer service standards. I’m not one of those that believes the customer is always right but the customers opinions should always be valued and listened to. Now although the customer service hadn’t been bad during our stay the fact that the bed hadn’t been made properly and the awkwardness over the evening meal made me wonder just what would happen when I took my drink back because there was bright red lipstick (not my shade) on the glass.

The taxi ride to the restaurant was short and as we pulled up outside Ask everyone else was also just arriving.







“Is it an Egg card because the machines don’t like them?” shouted a Virgin customer services guy. He worked for Virgin, he might not have actually been a virgin. Well he was at one point. Enough!
We sat in the station cafe for an hour until the next train, again not our scheduled service, arrived and we jumped on. Sure enough no one checked out tickets and while Bert read his Memoirs of a Geisha, I listened to various camp classics, took pictures and stared at the 


