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Lauren Boland/The Journal

Taking the wheel: Budding farmers try out tractor simulator at Ploughing Champs

President Michael D Higgins said it was “wonderful to be back” in Laois for the Ploughing.

IT ISN’T EVERY day you come across a tractor simulator that would rival a pilot’s avian equivalent, but it isn’t every day the Ploughing Championships come to town. 

The National Ploughing Championships have returned to Ratheniska, Co Laois today in full swing for the first time since before the pandemic, attracting tens of thousands of visitors.

One piece of tech on display is a mock cab that simulates the experience of driving various types of farm machinery.

It’s been a popular attraction at the Teagasc tent, where youngsters and old hats alike have hopped on for a try at maneuvering through a field – without crashing around the virtual bend.

Minister of State for Farm Safety Martin Heydon launched an investment of 1.2 million at the Championships this morning to fund 18 of the simulators, which will be used in agricultural colleges to train students in how to use the real thing.

IMG-4063 Lauren Boland / TheJournal Lauren Boland / TheJournal / TheJournal

Speaking to The Journal, Minister Heydon said that “every farmer, predominantly the younger farmers who go through agricultural college, but any farmer who does a Teagasc course will have the opportunity to have courses on the simulators”. 

“They’re really innovative and show really difficult manoevering situations that farmers can find themselves in,” he said.

“That will definitely help to make our farmers safer because unfortunately, farm fatalities, it is the most dangerous workplace in all of Ireland. ”

A Teagasc official explained that students come to the colleges with a wide spectrum of agriculture skill levels – for some, the simulators will be their first experience of getting on this kind of machinery, while for others it’s a way to cut out “bad habits”.

People have travelled from across Ireland today to visit the Ploughing Championships, which will be officially opened by President Michael D. Higgins later today.

The President visited a horse ploughing competition this afternoon, where he was warmly greeted by participants with a handshake and by one horse with a head nudge.

Speaking to reporters this afternoon, the President said it was “wonderful to be back” in Laois for the Ploughing Championships.

“From the very beginning when I became President, I always started with the horses, because this is the fundamental of the thing in a way,” he said.

He said it takes him back to “when I was very very young on my uncle’s farm in Co Clare”.

“There’s something great about it. It’s great for people to feel the earth regularly.”

He said it is also a great opportunity for “urban people” to “visit and become acquainted with all of the different complexities of Irish rural life”.

The President touched on the importance of food security and expressed again his disappointment at world leaders being slow to help countries facing shortages, particularly in the Horn of Africa and countries like Pakistan that are facing devastating consequences of unsettled weather patterns and events like droughts or floods as the climate crisis worsens.

“This is United Nations week in New York and I think it would be absolutely tragic if we let the week pass without addressing the issue of hunger and food security,” he said.

“Year after year, the United Nations avoids dealing with the structural issues that are standing behind the food crisis.”

He said that the Horn of Africa is responsible for a tiny proportion of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions – “and yet, people are starving.”

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    Mute Sheila Murphy
    Favourite Sheila Murphy
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    Feb 17th 2012, 5:46 PM

    This is a fabulous story; In school we learnt about Edward Jenner/Brunel/Stevenson etc (who indeed were extremely important) but why are we never taught about the advances made by Irish people whether it happened at home or abroad. If we knew more about the innovation and creativity that was driven by them, it might make us a more entrepreneurial people, and not so dependent on others to come in and fill that gap.

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    Mute jrbmc
    Favourite jrbmc
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    Feb 17th 2012, 10:57 PM

    Why is there not a museum in this country dedicated to these people?

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    Mute Mick Walsh
    Favourite Mick Walsh
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    Feb 17th 2012, 6:22 PM

    Not on the list but:

    Parsons Family (Birr Co. Offaly) – Giant Telescopes and the steam turbine (although C.A. Parsons was born in London)

    Robert Boyle (Lismore, Co. Waterford) – noted for investigating the relationship between pressure and volume of a gas: hence Boyle’s Law (P inversely proportional to V)

    George Boole (UCC, Cork – born in England) – his abstract form of algebra, later refined, forms the mathematical basis of the modern electronic circuit.

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    Mute Carfit Blakemotoring
    Favourite Carfit Blakemotoring
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    Feb 18th 2012, 2:12 AM

    Because no one has invented that yet, sorry you just did, well done!

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    Mute Paul Breen
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    Feb 18th 2012, 5:49 PM

    Irish? Not really. Anglo-Irish or British, really.

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    Mute Ian Walsh
    Favourite Ian Walsh
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    Feb 18th 2012, 6:01 PM

    We were never British no matter way you want to word it. Ireland was part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. We were never British. To be British you would have to be born in England, Wales or Scotland.

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    Mute Ingenious Ireland
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    Feb 18th 2012, 11:59 AM

    Great to see Rynd acknowledged at last. Other “ingenious Irish” inventions include… the stereo stethoscope, the submarine, the periscope, and the steam turbine that makes widespread electricity possible!

    (We’ve lots more Irish inventions in our list here too: http://ingeniousireland.ie/2011/02/how-the-ingenious-irish-changed-the-world/)

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