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Sheeba the lioness, another lion Gerry reared at home in Blanchardstown. She was a beautiful animal and very playful. Eventually, she went off to a safari park in the UK. Gerry Creighton

Gerry Creighton You can learn sentience and emotional expression from animals

Gerry Creighton, who worked at Dublin Zoo for 36 years shares an extract from his new book, Raised By the Zoo.

Gerry Creighton was operations manager and elephant keeper at Dublin Zoo for 36 years and the face of RTÉ’s popular series The Zoo. He is now a public speaker and consults for zoos and wildlife parks around the world on best-practice elephant conservation and research.

His father was a keeper at Dublin Zoo, who instilled in him a love of animals and taught him how to treat them. Gerry followed his father into work at the zoo at 15 and was hooked. Gerry’s new book, Raised By The Zoo is out now. Here, he shares an extract from the book about the source of his love of the outdoors…

MY EDUCATION IN animal care began when I was just a small kid. In addition to helping out with the hand-reared animals that came home, I was given a German shepherd dog, Dino, when I was about 10.

Screenshot 2023-10-06 at 16.55.38 Gerry was operations manager and elephant keeper at Dublin Zoo for 36 years and the face of RTÉ’s popular series The Zoo. Colin Keegan / Collins Photo Agency Colin Keegan / Collins Photo Agency / Collins Photo Agency

The lion cubs used to sleep with him. There’d be times when a lion cub would latch onto my leg and wouldn’t let go. I’d be going to school covered in scratches, and the teacher would ask me what happened. I’m sure they were a bit taken aback when I explained I’d been playing with a lion cub!

As animals grew older and stronger, we had to be more careful with them. There came a time when they couldn’t come into the house anymore, particularly with meat eaters. It was all right when they were on the bottle and getting milk, but when they were introduced to meat, it was hard for them to distinguish between your hand and the meat.

Screenshot 2023-10-06 at 16.53.17 Sheeba the lioness, another lion Gerry reared at home in Blanchardstown. She was a beautiful animal and very playful. Eventually, she went off to a safari park in the UK. Gerry Creighton Gerry Creighton

Carnivores are impulsive. There are thousands of years of evolution in their DNA. And we know now that they shouldn’t have been in our world. However, as a child, it was such a positive thing to grow up surrounded by and caring for animals.

Animals are good for you, both physically and psychologically. You learn sentience, you learn to show emotion. It was particularly good for me. Back then, boys were told to be tough. You couldn’t show weakness, but you could still go out and cuddle an animal. It’s easier to express love for an animal than a person at that age. It’s not going to snap or give out to you. It’s very uncomplicated.

Out in nature

I always wanted to be outdoors. I was always searching for wildlife and animals, even in the city streets. A character called Lukie Nugent used to go around the houses to collect slops to feed the pigs. I waited for him every day, so I could feed and rub his horses.

There were service laneways behind the houses, and people used to let their dogs out in them, so I’d be running up looking for dogs to play with. Up a couple of the lanes, there was a dairy, and a couple of fellas kept pigs and ponies. I would sit up on the wall to look at them. And it was always exciting watching the cattle run down the streets to the abattoir on Manor Street.

Screenshot 2023-10-06 at 16.51.55 The 1980s – two Patagonian cavies that Gerry had hand-reared. Douglas Duggan Douglas Duggan

I found nature wherever I could. Up the road from Ivar Street was an area everyone thought of as a wasteland, but to me, it was a green oasis. I loved spending time there. I would climb over the wall, get on a roof and drop into it, looking for mice, rats and birds. I was fascinated by them. I made snares with fishing line to catch pigeons.

I’d put a bit of bread inside the snare and then, when the pigeon came, I’d pull the line and catch it. I was probably hurting it, but I didn’t think of that. I just wanted to look at them and all their colours.

Dublin Zoo

Dublin Zoo is based in the Phoenix Park, 1,750 green acres in the heart of the city. As I got a bit older, I became increasingly drawn to the park itself, just like Da before me. Many of his ancestors had grown up around the park.

His mother was born in Chapelizod Lodge because her father was a parkkeeper and gardener.

He had been born in a cottage beside the Hole in the Wall pub. So the park has been at the centre of our family’s lives for generations. I would go wandering with other local boys around the People’s Gardens and the Wellington Testimonial or looking for deer.

Screenshot 2023-10-06 at 16.54.35 Lucy at Leona’s house (now our home in Cabra). Leona and her family took great care of Lucy and she and Leona were inseparable. Gerry Creighton Gerry Creighton

During the heatwaves of 1976 and 1977, if I wasn’t bursting bubbles of tar on the street with lollipop sticks, I was fishing for pinkeen with nets or jumping in the lakes. Even getting to the park was an adventure. Like animals, small – and big – boys are possessive of their territory. The shortest way was through O’Devaney Gardens, a tougher area even than ours. If we went through there, we’d always end up fighting, which I used to love.

I was always good with my fists, so I never wanted to go the long way around. I was nine or 10 when we moved out to Blanchardstown, and it was as big a change as moving to the jungle. There wasn’t a lot to do.

Screenshot 2023-10-06 at 16.58.08 I was proud to lead the elephant team for so many years – a great group of dedicated and professional people behind me. Fran Veale Fran Veale

They made the same mistakes in Corduff as they had made in other new suburbs and housing estates: they built them with no infrastructure for children. But there were open spaces everywhere. I was in my element in the fields and around the Tolka River and valley. I spent most of my time out at the old hospital in the woods, looking for hares and rabbits. I’d hide behind a tree for hours and watch the badgers. I had a specific sett that I used to leave food for.

If I wasn’t in school, I’d be up and out in the morning, and I might not come back until nine o’clock at night. My mother would be up the wall – there were no phones in those days. I’d often come back with an injured pigeon or a rabbit under my arm. In my bedroom, I’d always be rearing a couple of finches or something that had fallen out of a nest.

Raised By the Zoo by Gerry Creighton is out now, published by Gill Books. Part memoir and part manifesto for the future, Raised By The Zoo is a heart-warming and colourful story of a life spent in Dublin Zoo

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    Mute Damocles
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:14 PM

    They didn’t “make it their home”. They didn’t wake up one morning and think “Strewth lads, let move to Ireland!” They were moved there. Captured, transported and placed there. It’s akin to slavery. And not just them, their descendants too.

    Shameful. Truly shameful.

    I may have been drinking.

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    Mute Grumpy Bollovks
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:19 PM

    @Damocles: lolwut

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    Mute TheJournalAsGaeilge
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:19 PM

    @Damocles: Woah! Lig do scíth a chara. Tá siad sásta agus ina gcónaí i nádúr!

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    Mute Paul P O'Sullivan
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:19 PM

    @Damocles: jesus lad have a water.

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    Mute Paul Foot
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:22 PM

    @Damocles: No you’re an idiot – who has to comment on everything. Every day…

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    Mute Damocles
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:25 PM

    @Paul Foot: I’ve barely touched this site in a couple of weeks and I’ve commented on maybe 3 stories today.

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    Mute Damocles
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:26 PM

    @TheJournalAsGaeilge: I’ll bung that through Google translate in the morning if I remember.

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    Mute Paul Foot
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:26 PM

    @TheJournalAsGaeilge: In English please – if you want most to undetstand you.

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    Mute Damocles
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:31 PM

    @Paul Foot: then I’ll block you and never have to suffer your moaning again. Goodbye.

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    Mute Paul Foot
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:34 PM

    @Damocles: Block me for the truth? Great – bye, clown.

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    Mute Pat Lonergan
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    Jul 29th 2017, 11:10 PM

    @Damocles: don’t waste you time it’s just more shite talk but he gets a grant every time he spouts….,,

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    Mute Suzie Sunshine
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    Jul 29th 2017, 11:23 PM

    @TheJournalAsGaeilge: they are happy and that’s the main thing !

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    Mute bings
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    Jul 29th 2017, 11:28 PM

    @TheJournalAsGaeilge: They are our friends & happy in their home or something like that, My irish is crap

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    Mute Deborah Blacoe
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    Jul 30th 2017, 12:16 AM

    @Paul Foot: I thought it was quite amusing. Lighthearted, funny, entertaining, sure we can’t be serious all the time now can we?

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    Mute Grasshopper
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    Jul 30th 2017, 12:27 AM

    @Pat Lonergan: there’s a lot of shite talk here. I think people get involved too much when there’s a story to be told especially when animals are introduced here like who cares

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    Mute john culhane
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    Jul 30th 2017, 3:49 AM

    @Damocles: you can’t spell spanner without spa.

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    Mute Damocles
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    Jul 30th 2017, 8:49 AM

    @Pat Lonergan: it’s just 2 taps on the screen. Try it.

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    Mute Suzie Sunshine
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    Jul 30th 2017, 11:02 AM

    @Paul Foot: the truth according to Paul Foot …

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    Mute Ray Dow
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    Jul 30th 2017, 11:24 AM

    @Damocles: A bit like Irish and British convicts in Australia so…

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    Mute Myk_Oval_Balls_nRyt
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    Jul 30th 2017, 1:25 PM

    @Richard Wright: You get awfully upset when people speak As Gaeilge Richard. Show some composure chap, what would the Queen think if one of her subjects were acting in such an unmannerly fashion.

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    Mute Paul Culligan
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    Jul 30th 2017, 10:29 PM

    @Richard Wright: Can you provide some proof about that. Especially the part about the big breasts.

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    Mute Terry McClatchey
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:29 PM

    What’s that Skippy? The kids are trapped down the old mineshaft on Lambay….

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    Mute Sean
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    Jul 29th 2017, 11:35 PM

    There are concerns that a wigwam (the collective term) of wallabies could use a raft to reach the mainland and found a political party with a genuine spring in its step. Remember Dick Spring – well even springier than that. The authorities are keeping a close eye on developments.

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    Mute Diaspora'd
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:39 PM

    Wasn’t aware that Lambay Island was owned by the Baring family of Barings Bank. I read recently that during the Irish famine that Trevelyan’s corn was purchased by the British government through Baring Brothers Bank and the cost of which was subsequently recouped from Irish taxpayers.

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    Mute Fank Pulman
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:43 PM

    @Diaspora’d: link?

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    Mute Diaspora'd
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:48 PM

    @Fank Pulman: goodness sake! Google “Irish famine Baring Brothers Bank”, lots of links, the first one is from Wikipedia. You also listen to Finn Dwyer’s great Irish History Podcast his series on the Irish Famine is exceptional and harrowing.

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    Mute Paul Foot
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:53 PM

    @Diaspora’d: Thank you – helpful.

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    Mute Terry McClatchey
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    Jul 30th 2017, 12:01 AM

    @Diaspora’d: technically the article should say “the former…” as Barings rather famously disappeared in 1995 following the actions of “Rouge Trader” Nick Leeson. Barings therefore wasn’t around to cause any further damage to Irish taxpayers in 2007/8.

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    Mute Zx5vZulB
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    Jul 30th 2017, 9:35 AM

    @Terry McClatchey: if he spent less time swapping lipstick it would have been grand

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    Mute Terry McClatchey
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    Jul 30th 2017, 1:31 PM

    @Zx5vZulB: good spot Gar. You leave me red faced.

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    Mute Pat O'Brien
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    Jul 30th 2017, 10:10 PM

    @Terry McClatchey: interesting how both the family of Barings and Nick Lesson both reside in Ireland.

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    Mute
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    Jul 29th 2017, 11:52 PM

    This is dangerous. Has nobody seen Jurassic Park? Life will find a way.

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    Mute Mike Igoe
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    Jul 30th 2017, 12:25 AM

    God made mammals, not marsupials. I heard that they can open doors, spread gossip and they collude with squirrels. Not the nice squirrels. The other ones. You know what I’m implying. Securities fraud. We need to be smart.

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    Mute oh i dunno
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    Jul 31st 2017, 10:18 PM

    @Mike Igoe: God made woman and they can open doors, spread gossip and collude with squirrels, why did nobody warn us about them?

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    Mute Vincent Sharpe
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    Jul 29th 2017, 11:28 PM

    We need to take back Lambay Island .Let’s get the boats out.

    62
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    Mute Ray Dow
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    Jul 30th 2017, 11:27 AM

    @Vincent Sharpe: we can’t even run our own island

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Jul 30th 2017, 9:25 AM

    Experimenting and meddling with nature led to the grey squirrel’s and mink killing off some of our native wildlife. Other exotic plant species such as Japanese Knotweed were introduced into Ireland by wealthy estate owners during earlier centuries are now considered invasive and are proving difficult to get rid of having spread in an uncontrolled fashion.

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    Mute Ben Gunn
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:32 PM

    Cattle are wildlife? Did I miss something?

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    Mute Sheila Larkin
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:35 PM

    Baring. As in Baring’s Bank?

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    Mute Fank Pulman
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:41 PM

    @Sheila Larkin: Barings Bank*…yes that’s what the article says.

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    Mute Mark Broderick
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    Jul 29th 2017, 11:40 PM

    Its a wonderful location for a walk https://vimeo.com/224459441

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    Mute Mark Broderick
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    Jul 29th 2017, 11:42 PM

    It’s a wonderful location for a walk https://vimeo.com/224459441

    13
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    Mute Thomas Clancy
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    Jul 30th 2017, 4:26 AM

    Have they got passports

    12
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    Mute D.B
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    Jul 30th 2017, 6:32 AM

    Bankers island eh.

    12
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    Mute Niall Farrell
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    Jul 29th 2017, 10:48 PM

    Why are they such a problem if they reached the mainland? Other than the fact they bread a lot? Genuine question.

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    Mute Fionn Bohane
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    Jul 29th 2017, 11:54 PM

    They’ll take all our women and jobs

    67
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    Mute B9xiRspG
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    Jul 30th 2017, 2:45 AM

    @Niall Farrell: they are considered no better than rats down under.

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    Mute Patrick J. O'Rourke
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    Jul 30th 2017, 11:54 AM

    There has always been a food few living wild in the south of England. I had them around my house there but most people thought it was a myth until one went through the windscreen of a police car. There was an Australian guy down the road who apparently shot and ate one and made a hat from the fur. I had one who got caught in a wire fence and it brutally kicked the carp out of us three guys who tried to get it free. Nice critters though. I’ve always wondered how they would fare in Leitrim.

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    Mute Free comment ratings
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    Jul 29th 2017, 11:24 PM

    Only in ireland.

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    Jul 30th 2017, 12:21 AM

    And Tasmania. Seems like a tail with a happy ending.

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    Mute Dave Harris
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    Jul 30th 2017, 12:17 AM

    THE WOBBLIES ARE COMING

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    Jul 30th 2017, 12:22 AM

    Wombling free?

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    Mute Paul Jennings
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    Jul 30th 2017, 11:45 AM

    Could be a comment about gentrification if you make some slight changes to the text: “How a colony of wannabies made an island of Dublin their home.”

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    Mute Caoimhín Mac Caisín
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    Jul 30th 2017, 12:28 AM

    I like how its called “Red Necked” Wallaby

    7
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    Mute Dave O'Hanlon
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    Jul 30th 2017, 11:17 AM

    Its just wrong, they’re basically another squirrel. Send them back to oz and see if we can send they’re crooked owners with them.

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    Mute Simon Sprocket
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    Jul 30th 2017, 9:33 PM

    Worth noting that if they really get out of control numbers wise they’re very very tasty (I lived in Tasmania for several years) possible new industry here :)

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    Mute Quentin Moriarty
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    Jul 31st 2017, 1:13 AM

    Get worried when they start building rafts

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    Mute Mary Horan
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    Aug 1st 2017, 1:53 PM

    Wonderful. A colony of wannabe wallabies inhabiting Lambay, perceived as slaves (“They didn’t wake up one morning and say ‘Lads, lets go to Ireland’”) and liable to escape from the island any day to form a new political party. Glorious prospect: we are blessed.

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    Mute Muhammad Umer
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    Jul 31st 2017, 3:11 PM

    Squirrels have a habit of always chewing on trees. Constant chewing is not good for trees. Though big ones might be able to handle it but small ones will eventually die. Chewed barks and branches also aren’t very good to look at either. They are also responsible for complete destruction of plants. As the squirrels have a bit of constantly chewing and digging searching for food, they can rip the plant from roots. There goes your dream of seeing a plant grow in front of your eyes in your yard. We know how to get rid of squirrels in the trees!http://starpestcontrol.ca/pest_control_service/squirrel/

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