whelan2 wrote: » One of our Angus bulls had a pig tail post wrapped in his ring this morning
wrangler wrote: » The gardai that didn't touch him for twenty years are worse, they should be ashamed of themselves, they're a joke
FGR wrote: » Surprised how the DPP didn't action on so many statements. The fact that he was deceiving people using falsified letters from Revenue alone is enough to warrant some sort of charge. I'd be surprised if it was the guards as 7 years worth of statements would have been one massive file sent to the director.What was it that made Revenue/The DPP so wary of pursuing him? EDIT: I originally asked what made them 'afraid' of pursuing him but that isn't the correct context to be using.
NcdJd wrote: » That's what I'd love to know too, I think there is a big can of worms waiting to be opened in this..
kollegeknight wrote: » Got the heifer back. I reckon about 220kg of meat. Had to bag her myself and in reality portion her for the most part.- butcher had left the housekeeper in big slabs. One of the brothers showed up to give a hand. The one that always harps on about being self sufficient was working. The brother that landed into help brought a drawer from his freezer as the only space he had created- about 5kg of beef fit into it. Still wondering where he would put the other 60kg, lucky I had space In my freezer. Took about 5 hours. A friend gets the cattle slaughtered in Galway and butcher makes whatever the client wants, bagged and labelled so if I do it again, it might be worth the trip.
Tonynewholland wrote: » I’d say knowing how hard it is to get the legal profession to turn on itself had something to do with it. They are basically all colleagues in a small country like Ireland. Include the DPP in that.
kollegeknight wrote: » As for the school in Carlow- it a countrywide problem with clothes choices, and I think tackled wrong.not the distraction of male teachers. It’s usually the female teachers that cause the kerfuffle about dress code. A neighbouring all boys school said the o Neills kit was compulsory on pe Days as it could double up as a school uniform so no changing due to Covid.
whelan2 wrote: » I thought all schools were the same now with covid. Pe uniform worn for the whole day of pe day. Same here o neills tracksuit bottoms and quarter zip top, school pe polo shirt
_Brian wrote: » Ours didn’t have a tracksuit
whelan2 wrote: » What do they wear? I thought changing rooms were out of bounds with covid
whelan2 wrote: » How much did the butcher charge you?
kollegeknight wrote: » €280
whelan2 wrote: » I thought all schools were the same now with covid. Pe uniform worn for the whole day of pe day. Same here o neills tracksuit bottoms and quarter zip top, school pe polo shirt. Edited to say a parent must send in a note if there is any deviation from the set uniform. Youngest lad split his trousers last week and no spare pair. Had to send in a note and fix the trousers
_Brian wrote: » We’re paying similar. She’s been hanging nearly three wwwks and they will butcher her next week. He rang last week for details of the butchering, what sized roasts, burgers etc.
Nekarsulm wrote: » We bought a house in 2008, local Solicitor handled our end of things 100%. Or so we thought. Turned out that he never paid the Stamp Duty to Revenue, pocketed it and put it on the horses. 3 it 4 years later, the first we knew was a letter from another Solicitors office, informing us that they had taken over the practice, and that while we still owed Revenue, the Legal insurance fund ( whatever its called) was covering it. We drove down to the original guys office immediately, to find two secretaries on their hands and knees on the floor and every inch of the floor covered in paper, as they tried to sort out the mess. Lots of deposits, stamp duty monies etc missing. The guy was dis-barred, and was by then in Australia, driving a taxi by all accounts. I think he is back now, but no legal action was ever taken against him.
orm0nd wrote: » There is an abattoir in east Clare. that are very good, not the 1 mentioned earlier. They may not take on new customers at this stage and Galway may be handier from your location. Just giving u the heads up.
straight wrote: » Looks like there was a big disservice done to male teachers and men in general. You just can't open your mouth any more without someone getting offended.
patsy_mccabe wrote: » Solicitors are complete scum, at least the ones I've dealt with. I'm going tru absolute hell dealing with them at the moment. Over 5 years now trying to sort out someone else's mess. Numerous times they have tried to hoodwink me, but I've held my ground. They backed down every time. Sitting across the table smirking at me. They tried to imply that I had to do certain things, which just didn't make sense to me. One guy even got angry at me when I questioned him on an issue. I even went on-line to see who I should make an official complaint to and that solicitors name was listed. You couldn't make it up. The did the exact same thing to a close relative of mine a number of years ago. It nearly killed her. Her son told me the full story one night and he was in tears telling me.
roosterman71 wrote: » Same happened my now deceased grand uncle. He was paying his tax to the solicitor for years, who in turn was pocketing it. All in cash too cos thats how the man rolled. Never had a cheque book and cash in the house kinda man. Anyway, after many years of this, the solicitor retired off down to Cork. Few years after that, revenue rocked up looking for over 300k. No receipts, no record of having paid the solicitor. Screwed. Granted I know the grand uncle was naïve and all, but a bitter kick in the nuts in the end. Good few elderly farmers were similarly rode.
_Brian wrote: » Took decorations down from the attic today. Somehow it doesn’t feel right, it’s been an oddball mixed up year.