Dickie10 wrote: » can someone tell me why the obsession with outdoor "dining" christ can we not have the option of just outdoor drinking and away with the food. i think when pubs do open in summer i would think in rural areas all bets are off, gardai wont go near places this time around to inspect whatever mad cap restrictions are in place. basically there will be very tiny risk element by then, gardai will make a show in urban areas and temple bar but not in country areas. what about the pub with 5 or 6 punters midweek or no more than 15 or 20 on a saturday night, who really thinks they will have the 5 lads standing in the beer garden all evening , not a hope. i think the way it will play out is the government will let pubs open in mid august for the bit of staycation tourism , with a load of restrictions , 25% capacity , food etc. pretty much everyone bar children and teens will be vaxxed by then so numbers will be on the floor for months at that stage, pubs will stay open with no real inspections, no spikes of cases and after a few weeks it will just merge back to normal, prob open nightclubs and gigs in late autumn if cases stay low after pubs.
Deleted User wrote: » Don't you know that Covid is hot for the sauce, apparently food is an unheralded superpower that repels it fifty paces. And get the last order in snappish as an airborne virus can be a strict timekeeper. Hopefully all this patronising "Covid loves a drink" palaver will be condemned to the dustbin of history by July. With all the elderly/vulnerable cohorts vaccinated the risk is reduced to virtually nothing, those who remain terrified can hide behind the couch while the rest of us have a few (socially distanced) jars with our mates at the local.
thebronze14 wrote: » Surely we can't have hospitality more shut than last summer in June/July with a big proportion vaccinated?!
PommieBast wrote: » Define big proportion. It has not escaped me that the government has refused to give any quantitative criteria for reopening. :mad: Ireland's median age is about 37. Put this into a Covid jab calculator and in theory you should get the date when the bare majority of the country has been jabbed at least one. It currently shows August-September. The calculator has issues (trolls need not reply) but I have stopped trusting the government's projected figures.
Pintman Paddy Losty wrote: » I think this is a key point to be honest. We're not going to see a critical mass of the population jabbed til the autumn at the earliest. Who knows how things will play out with variants as well. At that stage we'll be moving in to a winter flu season and with the health service having been battered for two years I think we can expect to be asked to put the shoulder to the wheel once more to protect the health system. Hopefully we'll then return to normal in spring 2022. My guess is this will be a summer of dining Al fresco. Hard to beat a pint of Guinness and a bowl of moules out in the sun for lunch anyway! I think dining indoors will be out of the question and 'wet pubs' (those that remain) will be sealed for another good while yet.
W123-80's wrote: » I agree with this. My benchmark for normality across society is the 2019 Wet Pub! The ability to go to a pub/late-bar 2019 style. No requirement for alfresco pints, no food rule, no time restrictions, no table service, no numbers limits. Just wander in and sink a few scoops. I cannot fathom a scenario where that situation will manifest itself in 2021 and considering almost all governments will be watching the winter season and variants very closely, regardless on numbers vaccinated, I think wet pubs are not going to open until 2022, even then it will be under restrictions. I suspect it will probably closer to 2023 before we see 2019 style pubs/late-bars (crowds etc). This is not a wind up, its my genuine opinion.
PTH2009 wrote: » Jesus i remember when Dr Tony was asked the Alcohol and covid question and he was beaming about how negative it was and created the theory of 'the virus loves Alcohol'
Deleted User wrote: » The stage is that way, don't expect raucous applause. Thankfully we're on the cusp of the term "wet pub" fading from everyday parlance, those who persist with it have seldom darkened the doorstep of a traditional. And it's laughable to suggest they won't be opening beyond August, simply no justification for it when the vaccines have already made a discernible impact in early April. Curtain twitchers hammering away on the keyboard can't sway matters, impotently raging they're unable control the lives of others. Feel free to cower at home, do the rest of us gifted with social graces a favour.
LineOfBeauty wrote: » Dunno if it's an indication of much but from what I've heard The George doesn't think they'll be opening for the rest of the calendar year.
hynesie08 wrote: » On today's edition of "pth says things that didn't happen"
Patrick2010 wrote: » Think he did say it....https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/the-virus-loves-alcohol-and-we-have-a-challenge-with-alcohol-in-this-country-cmo-on-new-recommended-restrictions-39877434.html The virus loves indoor settings, it loves close contact between people, and it loves alcohol. And if we give it the opportunity it will transmit very very quickly and that’s what we are seeing.”
Batattackrat wrote: » It's pretty scandalous now you can't go for a few pints in a beer garden or even a meal. They have to open soon or people with staycation in Northern Ireland this summer. Pubs can open outdoors from the 12th of April and properly from the 12th of May. Our government are really a shower of spineless idiots. I'll be going up North for a weeks holidays in May 100% with a group of friends.
hynesie08 wrote: » Pubs are reopening in the north on Monday? News to me (and the publicans)
PTH2009 wrote: » NPHET already out saying its too early to reopen https://www.irishtimes.com/news/health/we-re-not-there-yet-nphet-warns-against-further-easing-of-covid-restrictions-1.4532494 Not able anymore :mad: