Saturday, May 9, 2026

Breathe In, Bliss Out. The Yoga Picnic Returns To Westmeath!

 THE YOGA PICNIC RETURNS WITH

STAND UP PADDLE BOARD YOGA, SPA, ASTROLOGY AND MORE

 

-Breathe In, Bliss Out-


 

Saturday, 4th July 2026 will see the return of The Yoga Picnic, set against the backdrop of Lough Ennell in Co. Westmeath. Taking place on the grounds of Lilliput House, the award-winning event has become one of Ireland’s best-known wellness festivals, bringing together yoga, movement, music, nature and community for a full day by the lake. Founded by sisters Alice and Katy Harrison together with their friend, Mary Gardiner, The Yoga Picnic was created to showcase Ireland’s yoga and wellness community while promoting connection, sustainability, mental wellbeing and mindful living.

 

What began as local grassroots gathering in 2022 has grown into a major wellness event featuring more than 100 classes, talks and experiences led by leading Irish and international facilitators. The 2026 programme includes yoga, meditation, yoga nidra, breathwork, sound healing, ecstatic dance, drumming circles, poetry readings, cacao ceremonies, forest activities, workshops and live music. The festival welcomes everyone, from complete beginners trying yoga for the first time to experienced practitioners looking to deepen their practice. There are also dedicated sessions for children and families throughout the day.

 

Stand Up Paddleboard (SUP) Yoga also returns to the festival, allowing participants to take their yoga practice onto the water. Suitable for all levels, SUP Yoga focuses on balance, movement and connection with nature while enjoying the calm surroundings of Lough Ennell.

 

This year’s line-up features internationally recognised teachers including Dylan Werner, Tara Judelle and Benita Wolfe from the USA, Manasi Sridhar from India, and UK teachers Michael James Wong, Hannah Barrett, Adam Husler and Holly Husler. Ireland’s yoga community will also be strongly represented with teachers including Eithne Kennedy, Sinead Mooney, Mari Kennedy, Michael Ryan and Jack Harrison.


 

Alongside the yoga programme, festival-goers can enjoy a range of additional wellness experiences throughout the day. Astrology talks and readings will feature as part of the 2026 event, while the popular Uisce Spa returns with saunas, ice baths and hot tub experiences overlooking Lough Ennell.

 

The spa area will include wood-fired saunas, ice baths, healing salt rituals and traditional whisking sessions, offering attendees the opportunity to experience hot and cold therapy in a natural lakeside setting.

 

The festival will also feature live music performances throughout the day, culminating in an evening lakeside concert with Jack Harrison and band.

 

Rooted in the belief that yoga is for everyone, The Yoga Picnic continues to provide an inclusive and welcoming space where attendees can step away from busy daily life, spend time outdoors and connect through movement, music and shared experience.

 

Speaking about the event, Katy Harrisson said, “The Yoga Picnic was created to bring people together and make wellness accessible to everyone. Whether someone is attending their first yoga class, bringing their children for a family day out, or looking for advanced workshops with international teachers, there is something for everybody at the festival.”

 

Adult day passes are available from €95. Please note that the Uisce Spa and Stand Up Paddleboard Yoga sessions are available at an additional cost.

 

Tickets are available now from The Yoga Picnic or by emailing hello@theyogapicnic.com

 

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Celebrating Cork on a Plate: A Seasonal Dining Experience with Hell’s Kitchen Champion Ryan O’Sullivan

press release

Celebrating Cork on a Plate: A Seasonal Dining Experience with Hell’s Kitchen Champion Ryan O’Sullivan




The River Lee Hotel is delighted to welcome back celebrated chef Ryan O’Sullivan — winner of Hell’s Kitchen USA and the first Irish champion of the globally renowned competition — for another unforgettable evening of exceptional food and storytelling.

Following a hugely successful debut at The River Lee in April last year, Ryan will return to host another intimate dining experience in the glamorous surroundings of The Grill Room on Monday 18th May. This exclusive takeover sees Ryan collaborate once more with Executive Head Chef Paul Lane, creating a seasonal dinner menu inspired by, and celebrating, the very best of local produce.

The evening begins with an elegant selection of snacks including West Cork Wagyu steak tartare on toasted brioche; Gubbeen cheese gougère with Comté Mornay; and a warm Ballycotton Bay lobster tartlet with confit tomato and tartar Béarnaise.

This is followed by Kilmurry Woods wild garlic and spring pea ricotta ravioli, served with lemon beurre blanc and mint pangrattato. For the main course, guests will enjoy local butcher Michael Twomey’s spring lamb, accompanied by potato pavé, salsa verde, za’tar carrot purée and a rich, savoury jus.

To finish, a delicate dessert of Coolmore Gardens rhubarb and custard is served, alongside tea, coffee and a selection of petit fours.

An Evening with Ryan O’Sullivan
Monday, 18th May, 7:30pm
The Grill Room, The River Lee, Western Road, Cork

Tickets are priced at €70 per person and include a four-course menu, tea, coffee, and petit fours. Availability is limited, and early booking is strongly recommended. To book tickets, visit HERE.


Market Lane, outstanding restaurant and popular pillar of Cork food scene since 2007

 Market Lane, outstanding restaurant and popular pillar of Cork food scene since 2007

Lamb Raan, at rear, under yogurt and almonds (sliced)

Friday evening and the place is buzzing, just like pre-Covid times, but not unusual for Market Lane in Oliver Plunkett Street in Cork city centre. Multiple conversations add to the ambience as we arrive for our 6.15pm reservation. I look around the crowded room and can’t see an empty table. But, after a warm welcome, we are led to our comfortable station for the 90 minutes or so, remarking to one another that it was just as well we had booked.

Paté

For years now - it first opened its doors in 2007 - Market Lane had been an outstanding restaurant and a popular pillar of the Cork food scene. The initial aim was to provide high-quality food inspired by the nearby English Market and to become a staple of the city's food scene. It , along with its satellite restaurants (Elbow Lane, Goldie, ORSO and Castle Café), had certainly achieved that status.

From day one, The support for local produce has been immense and contestant. You can see a full list of their suppliers, including photos here Here, also you’ll see a running total of what they’ve spent so far this year. By the first of May, it was no less than €318,961.



Heavenly Stout

How that local produce, from Skeaghanore Duck in West Cork, to Baldwin’s Ice Cream in West Waterford, is enhanced with a worldwide palette of influences from Argentina to Persia (Iran), is well illustrated on the current menu.


Local drinks too, including the ultra local beers, brewed next door in sister restaurant Elbow Lane and available here in draught: ales, lager and the amazing Angel Stout. I can never pass up a pint of Angel, one of the very best stouts in the country.  Other local drinks include Black’s beer, Stonewell cider, Maharani Rebel City and Beara Ocean Pink gins, Poacher’s mixers, and Dingle Vodka along with a good selection of Irish whiskey.


French onion soup with Coolea cheese and sourdough croutons a classic starter here but this time I picked the Garryhinch oyster mushroom ragu in a shortcrust pastry tartlet with miso caramel and topped with tempura enoki (very small mushrooms), a delightful mix of flavours and textures. 

Chupin de pescado


We had also been tempted by the Crispy fried calamari, Vietnamese slaw, chilli dressing and crushed peanuts  before CL decided on the classic Chicken liver pâté, spiced apple chutney, crunchy pickles and toasted sourdough.

  

The mains were something else, big talking points for quite a while after the meal was finished. Their Ballycotton Monk fish was considered before CL gave the nod to the Chupin de pescado, an Argentinian fish stew of hake, prawns and mussels with potatoes, tomato, pepper, olives, capers, herbs and lemon chimichurri . Served with sourdough (to mop up), Market Lane’s version of this Latin American dish was an top notch one!  


I have tried some of the other dishes previously including the low cooked Crowe’s bacon collar, and my pick this time was the Braised Lamb Raan, Persian rice, spiced green beans, sheep’s yogurt, pickled red onion. There was nothing on this plate that didn’t get a look in, the small grain rice, those spicy beans, the yogurt, the almonds and the onion, but no doubt the lamb itself, so tender, so tasty, was the star. Very Highly Recommended.


Quite a lot on our earlier plates so no room for desserts, which says a lot considering their famous Orange and Vanilla bread and butter pudding, with custard and whipped cream was on the list, along with a slew of other tempting choices!  

Mushroom on the double: Oyster mushroom ragu crowned with tempura enoki mushroom

The warm welcome was the start of a marvellous service. Time for a chat or two and a few laughs but efficient as well. No wonder, the Market Lane group regularly features on national lists that rate the best places to work. And, of course, the best places to eat!

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Waterford Festival of Food. A tasty West Waterford slice

 Waterford Festival of Food. A tasty West Waterford slice

The Hatmaker Hotel and The Farmgate Lismore


A 24 hour visit to West Waterford turned into something of a food trip - most of them do. The annual weekend Waterford Festival of Food began at more or less the same time we landed in Dungarvan on Thursday evening.


Our base for the night was the Hatmaker Hotel, now creeping up to its first birthday. It is based in a beautiful reconstructed heritage building. And is named after the previous occupant's business. The rooms, 16 in all, are incontestably glorious, the spectacular Peacock tail headboards immediately catch the eye as does the statement bathtub in the spacious bathroom.

Dungarvan


There is no restaurant here but the ground floor café bar, with a sun trap of a courtyard, does quite a good job all day long. After a stroll around town, We dropped in just as they turned from café to wine bar. After quite a lunch in Youghal, the menu of sharing boards was enough for us.


Indeed, the one that we ordered, a mix of cheese and charcuterie, was one of the best around and certainly proved sufficient for us. The wine list, short, is entirely French and I renewed acquaintance with one of favourite whites, the Château Turcaud Entre-Deux-Mers Blanc, a delicious blend of Sauvignon blanc and Semillon. 

Sunny terrace at the Hatmaker


The Hatmaker aim to support local and glad to see that they had a few different bottles of the Dungarvan Brewing company’s beer in the chill and I enjoyed my choice: the Helvick Head Blonde Ale. 


We were back there for our breakfast. No cooked breakfast but the continental offering is more than acceptable. Both of us were highly impressed by the Granola Parfait.

Refreshing ale at the Hatmaker


No restaurant in the Hatmaker but the Michelin starred Cliff House is an easy drive away.


A few hours later, we were up on the Vee. On social media the previous evening I had read of a fire at Mount Mellaray but the buildings looked in good nick as we passed on the road from Cappoquin. I read later the fire was confined to furze bushes on a nearby hill.



After enjoying the views from the Vee (quite an amount of fields in the distance were yellow with rapeseed) and after a few strolls (the wind from the previous day had died down), we took the Lismore road, heading for  a Waterford Festival of Food event at the Farmgate.

Bruschetta starter at Farmgate


It was a lunchtime event and was more or less a sell-out. We had booked just a couple of days earlier but all we could get was a counter seat (they are quite an attraction here) at 2.00pm.


The Farmgate is doing well after the move from Midleton. Everybody gets a warm welcome here. It is quite a neighbourhood restaurant, many customers known by the first name. We enjoyed the relaxed ambience, buoyant and bright.

Lismore Castle


A few chats included one about the frequent Local Link Bus that connects Lismore with Dungarvan in about 30 minutes. One server joked that by night the service is known as the Drink Link.


No cavalcade of choices here, just three starters and three mains.  No dessert included though coffee and tea were on the special luncheon menu at fifty euro a head.

Cod


The Farmgate, as they have for decades, support local and that is obvious from the menu. We enjoyed starters of Croquettes of McGrath’s lamb, mint and yogurt dressing on a bed of Roger Ahern’s Salad leaves, and a Bruschetta with Knockanore mozzarella, roasted Irish vine tomatoes, wild garlic and basil pesto. I didn't know they produce Mozzarella in Knockanore (near Villierstown).


McGrath’s Chicken Supreme was one of the main courses, with a white wine, lemon and  Thyme cream sauce, and served with spring onion champ and a carrot and parsnip puree. The same veg came with our other main dish the Baked Cod with a leek and mussel sauce and we also shared a side dish of seasonal root veg along with some green beans. Each plate went back clean!


Soon it was time for the coffee and then a sunny 45 minute drive back  to Cork via Tallow, Conna and Watergrasshill.

Also in this trip: Welcome Lunch at Clancy's Bar & Restaurant Youghal


Trees on the Vee. Spot the yellow of the rapeseed fields in the distance?


Monday, April 27, 2026

Clancy’s. A welcome lunch of three tarts, almost!

Clancy’s. A welcome lunch of three tarts, almost!

St Tola Tartlet


After a walk against the wind on the Youghal Eco Boardwalk, with grains of sand stinging the old facial skin, we arrived back at the Front Strand to a welcome lunch in nearby Clancy’s.


It was a lunch starring three tarts, almost. Almost, because the dessert of Creme Brûlée was the traditional and not the tart version. 

Tempura Prawns 


Chicken and galette
The St. Tola Goats Cheese Tartlet (€12.90) was the star of the show and my starter. The attractively presented tartlet was packed with the noble St Tola, beetroot and pomegranate seeds, an excellent tarty combination, further enhanced by watercress, toasted golden nuts, raspberry dust and rose hip dressing. Happy sounds across the table, as CL enjoyed her Tempura Prawns (€13.90) with sweet chilli salsa, mixed leaves, curry mayo.


Their Free Range Chicken Supreme €22.90 was an excellent example of the type, not a bite was left. It came with mashed potato, a galette (tart) of Savoy cabbage, bacon and wild mushroom, along with a creamy marsala wine sauce, a winning combination for sure.



I was looking for a good feed after the windy walk and my mains was the Roast Sirloin Of Irish Beef (€19.90). The Yorkshire Pudding wasn’t available (not that I worried too much, not my favourite at all) but I did enjoy the tender tasty beef, the creamed potato and the shared seasonal vegetables. That amazing house jús, a generous pour, played a leading role.

Beef


The Crême Brûlée was shared. The Créma Catalana (€7.90,) to give it its full title, is served with a large cinnamon flavoured cookie (a treat in itself). All in all, a big thumbs up.


What I did notice here, aside from the welcome and friendly service, was their amazing whiskey list. There must be about three dozen Irish types, including plenty from Midleton of course, and then they have bottles from all over, including Japan. We were driving to Dungarvan so had to leave them all on the shelf. Next time.


It would be a great excuse to get the train to Youghal but that service ceased decades ago. Clancy’s have some railway memorabilia around the impressive premises and as we strolled back to the car we could see the old turnable - at least its concrete circumference - where the train engines were turned around to head back to the city. 



I used that train many a time on childhood trips to the front stand, my head out the window as smoke and sparks flew by, sometimes setting fire to the vegetation on the cuttings. Choo, Choo. Well it was a different kind of chew in Clancy’s, quite an impressive one at that.


Also on this trip: Waterford Festival of Food, a West Waterford slice.









Saturday, April 25, 2026

Rowing on the River. Training on the Lee

 Rowing on the River. Training on the Lee

Pics 18th April 2026

25 storey tower at The Railyard



25 storey tower at The Railyard, with the Elysian on the left

Eight ladies. Out of the dark Into the light.



Four together

Eastern side of the Port of Cork

Tivoli docks


Thursday, April 23, 2026

Kinsale hospitality group enters new phase as The Kinsale Collective

 Kinsale hospitality group enters new phase as The Kinsale Collective 

The Blue Haven Collection is entering a new phase, evolving into The Kinsale Collective as part of a forward-looking vision for the business


The group owns and operates a portfolio of well-known hospitality properties across Cork. The new brand, The Kinsale Collective, comprises The Blue Haven Hotel, The Old Bank Townhouse, Hamlets Bar and Michelin Guide–recognised Rare Restaurant in Kinsale; The Schull Harbour Hotel and Deep Blue Leisure Centre in Schull, along with Kiely’s in Cork City.

The move follows a recent €10m plus buyout by Managing Director Ciaran Fitzgerald, marking a significant step in the group's continued development.

Ciaran Fitzgerald, Managing Director of The Kinsale Collective, said: “This marks an important step forward for the business. The Kinsale Collective reflects how we are now operating — as a group of distinct properties with a shared vision and clear direction for the future. We’re focused on building on the strength of what’s already here while continuing to evolve and grow the business in a considered way.”


Fitzgerald, who has over 20 years’ experience in the hospitality sector, began his career with KPMG as a Chartered Accountant and has since held a number of senior leadership roles within the industry. 

As part of this next phase and to deliver this vision for the business, the group has made a number of key senior appointments, including the recent arrival of Director of Sales & Marketing, Dan Sweeney, formerly Marketing Director with Cliste Hospitality, with some exciting new appointments on the horizon.

Ciaran added, “A key priority for us is investing in our team. These recent appointments are an important part of that — ensuring we have the right people in place to deliver on our ambition and continue to strengthen the business across all areas.”

Keep up to date with the latest news by following The Kinsale Collective on social @thekinsalecollective.