Posted on December 4, 2015
Attended a football match this afternoon in Doha, Qatar. 7D in hand.
Caught this one.

Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Al Sadd Sports Club, Culture, Eye Spy, Football, Photography, postaday, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge, Xavi Hernandex
Posted on November 27, 2015
One day you’re single. Next day you’re not!
Friends of MB get married at ‘Our Lady of the Rosary’ Catholic Church in Doha, Qatar. June 2015.

Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Church, Love, marriage, Photography, postaday, religion, Service, Transition, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on November 20, 2015
3 Camels munch some evening food. Dubai. February 2009.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Camels, Culture, Desert, Photography, postaday, Trio, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on November 6, 2015
Made in an intricate shape or decorated with complex patterns. elaborate, decorated, embellished, adorned, ornamented, fancy, fussy, ostentatious.
MB is back in his favourite Grange Stone Circle in HX again. It’s Summer solstice morning, 21st June 2015, circa 5am, and the sun is not yet risen. MB is wandering around the circle taking shots of anything interesting that catches his eye in the pre-dawn light. Some visitors have left fruit on some of the stones during the night, as offering to the rising sun. One person has left an ornate (slightly) mini-sun.
MB gives you the mini-sun:
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Alternative, Culture, Grange Stone Circle, Ireland, neolithic, Ornate, Photography, postaday, Solstice, Stone Age, sun, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on October 23, 2015
Michelle’s photo challenge this week:
This week, show us something careful — a photo taken with care, a person being careful, or a task or detail requiring care.
‘The Sideline Cut’
MB returns to the Irish sport of hurling for this week’s challenge, and specifically to an aspect of the game called ‘the sideline cut’.
When the ball is knocked out over the sideline during the course of a game by either team, the referee awards a ‘sideline cut’ to the opposite team. It’s a bit like a golf shot but much more difficult to execute, given the nature of the implement with its broad edge (a hurley). Even in top games the amount of fluffed shots is very high. To get it exactly right requires great care and skill.
Execute the strike poorly and the ball will dribble embarrassingly along the ground for just a few yards. Hit it correctly, at the precise point required underneath the ball and at exactly the correct angle with the hurley stick, and watch the ball soar majestically into the air and into the far distance. At approximately the same angle as a well-struck 8-iron in golf.
MB caught this player taking a sideline cut at a recent game when he was home in September, just as the hurley is about to make contact with the ball. Can not remember how it turned out.
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Adventure, Careful, Culture, Hurling, Ireland, Photography, postaday, Sideline cut, Sport, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on October 16, 2015
Cherri is asking for unexpected ‘interestingness’ in this week’s PC. MB has selected a shot from trip to Goa, India, in April of this year.
Went for short walk one night and encountered this scene on the street, that all but MB seemed oblivious to. Interestingness with a capital ‘I’ for MB – but not for the locals. The two guys standing next to the cow just sum up how little notice the locals actually take of a cow sitting on their street at night.
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: (Extra)ordinary, cow, Culture, Goa, india, Photography, postaday, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on October 9, 2015
Regardless of life or work or travels, MB is always back home in HX for the Summer Solstice Festival. The home locality is always a happy place in the opinion of MB with its stunning green landscapes around ever corner, but during the festival weekend it is particularly so.
One of the festival events introduced in recent years is ‘The longest walk for the longest day‘. It entails a 2 to 3 hour guided walk around some section of the local lake or adjacent localities, on 21 June, the day of the Summer Solstice, the longest (daylight) day of the year. Regardless of weather, and it was a rainy wet evening on 21 June just past, there is a great sense of happiness & feel good during the event. The below photo was taken by MB when the walkers reached the summit of Knockfennel, the highest hill adjacent to the lake, and the happy smiley faces are a give-away.
For those who may be interested in gaining everlasting youth (everlasting youth – really MB?), the hill in the background of the photo (on the other side of the lake) is called Knackadoon. Knockadoon hides one of the four entrances to the fabled Irish Land of Everlasting Youth (a really happy place), called Tir Na N’Og in the Irish Gaelic language. Each of the four provinces of Ireland has one entrance, and the province of Munster has it’s entrance at the hill of Knockadoon at HX.
The tale of Tir Na N’Og is well known to every Irish schoolchild who reads of it during school years. Many believe that the story is just some old Irish mythology blarney. But HX locals know better. And if you ever caught sight of MB and his youthful looks, you would certainly agree that there must be some truth to the tale. MB is one of course one of a few village elders (even though MB is far from an elder) entrusted with the exact location. And only those most deserving, after a lifetime of good deeds and faithful HX service, are taken at dead of night and totally blindfolded to the entrance cave to arrest the ravages of declining years. But as ever in HX land, MB and the elders are sworn to secrecy. So very sorry dear followers that MB must cut this story short and move on.
The walkers on the Longest Walk For The Longest Day – 21 June 2015, at the top of Knockfennel:
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Everlasting, Happy, Happy Place, loughgur.com, Photography, postaday, Tir Na Nog, Weekly Photo Challenge, youth
Posted on October 2, 2015
Taken near the town of Dingle, South West Ireland. June 2015.
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Boundaries, Dingle, Ireland, Kerry, landscape, Photography, postaday, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on September 25, 2015
This week’s challenge is Change.
If you have ever traveled to Ireland you will know there is just no predicting the daily weather. Any of those 365 days per year can throw up any type of weather suddenly and without the slightest warning. And change dramatically again moments later.
Took this shot of the HX skyline last week when the opportunity appeared for a few moments. Moments later it was gone.
There were many occasions of sunshine & showers in the first days of MB’s trip. And when the sun appeared the rainbows painted their spectacular colours all over the damp grey skies.
This one is worth double-clicking on for a closer look!
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Change, Photography, postaday, Rainbow, Sky, weather, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on September 21, 2015
MB traveled to his HX homeland last week and posted a random ‘Photo of the Day’ on his Fb page each day. Six in total. Read More
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Holycross, HX, Ireland, Landscapes, Limerick, Photography, Rainbows, Rainfall, Semple Stadium, Thurles, Tipperary, weather
Posted on September 21, 2015
Driveway at HX – by MB
Taken on trip home last week.
Ok. So it’s not a great shot ‘grid-wise’ speaking. But it’s not a bad shot from a ‘brilliant photography’ perspective. As taken. No PS. Well done MB. Awesome. Thanks lads!
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Grid, Photography, postaday, Seriously incredible shot, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on September 14, 2015
Monochromatic. Almost!
St John’s Church, Knockainey village.
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Church, Monochromatic, Photography, postaday, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on September 12, 2015
Back in the Irish HX homeland. Went for an early morning wander:
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Culture, Homeland, Ireland, Limerick, Lough Gur, Photography, Tourism, Travel
Posted on September 4, 2015
An old two-carriage train connects the village of Chamonix in the French Alps to a hill station next to the Montenvers glacier. The thirty-minute train journey through the mountains is followed by a short cable car ride that connects the hill station to the glacier at the bottom of the glacial valley, almost. A walk on foot down some 450 steps completes the journey. For the unfit, the walk back up later on can be a struggle.
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Alps, climbing, Connected, Glacier, Hill Walking, Photography, postaday, Tourism, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge
Posted on July 21, 2015
Half & Half.
A photo with 2 different halves.
The night breeze carries the spray from Geneva’s Jet d’Eau (fountain) to the right of photo, creating a 50/50 effect. Photo taken a few days back by MB on a trip to Switzerland.
Category: Irish man in the Middle East Tagged: Half and Half, Photography, postaday, Weekly Photo Challenge
It's a mad HX world!
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