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Bryna's Space

Seattle girl living in Dublin, Ireland

Bryna

Occupation
Location
I recently moved from Seattle, WA USA to Dublin Ireland. Why? I landed a fantastic opportunity to move from Microsoft Headquarters in Redmond to Microsoft Ireland as a Senior Recruiter supporting businesses in the the European Development Center. I am also the Program Manager for Graduate and Intern Recruiting and loving it.

I moved from Seattle with my husband, Jeremy. I'm a US "Northwest" girl having grown up in a small town North of Seattle - Anacortes.

I've been keeping this blog since the beginning of this process so there's a lot of reading here if you're considering an international move, coming to Ireland in general, or are curious about the move from corp to sub as Microsoft employee you can find lots of tips here.

I also keep friends and family updated via this blog so there are some personal bits and as you'll see it's been quite an adventure getting here.
Thanks for visiting!
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September 20

Western Ireland - Dingle & Slea Head Drive

This was my favorite part of the trip - the Dingle area of County Kerry is absolutely amazing! I felt like I was in "real Ireland" when we arrived at our gorgeous B&B the "Pax House". It was a perfect location just atop a hill overlooking Dingle and the Kerry Penninsula. Our host couldn't have been friendlier and their adorable dog Rio was excited for us to arrive and start playing a game of fetch. :) The views on the website are exactly how it looks!

 

The town of Dingle is just quintessential adorable Irish village with multi-colored houses nestled against rolling hills and set in a gorgeous harbor. Their is supposedly a very large dolphin that lives in the harbor year round named Funghi but due to the weather we weren't interested in going out on a boat. 

 

After a nice dinner our with some live music and a fair number of pints and whiskey's for my sister's boyfriend we headed back to the B&B for a good night's sleep - it was so quiet and the beds were very comfortable.

 

The next day we spent a full day taking our time around the Slea Head Drive - the gorgeous drive around the Dingle Penninsula and I would definitely recommend it. The driving is not that bad, a few windy roads along cliffs but the other drivers were quite polite and as compared to other drives I've done it wasn't the worst. The views were definitely worth it. Turquoise waters that looked like Hawaii were everywhere!

PHOTOS: 

View from the B&B  

 
Western View from the B&B
Donkey's at the Irish Famine Cottages and animal park
View along the Slea head drive
Amazing beach - my favorite spot on the whole trip! Daigun I think it was called.

Western Ireland Trip - Aran Islands (Inish Mor)

After a peaceful night in Doolin with views of cow pastures from our window and a lovely breakfast we headed out on a blustery morning to catch the ferry to Inish Mor. The parking at the ferry dock was FREE (nice!) and the trip cost us €50 round-trip for 2 people - a bit pricy IMO. We waited in the rain which looking back should have been a forshadowing of the events to come. The boat arrived and we loaded aboard what seemed like a small fishing boat.
 
WARNING - Unless you've got major sea legs DO NOT take the ferry from Doolin to the Aran Islands. It's an hour+ trip to Inish Mor (it's the furthest island) and we later found out that taking the boat from Doolin is known as the bumpiest ride as you hit the Atlantic going against the tide in essentially unprotected waters. I grew up around boats and water but this was the worst ride I've ever had. In our party of 4 3/4 of us were sick - 1 of us lost their breakfast - and the others spent the journey holding off seasickness.
 
Was it worth it? For sure - Inish mor is absolutely gorgeous and it feels like you are stepping back in time with ancient rock walls all over the island and the very cool prehistoric fort Dun Angus.
 
We stayed at the Pier House guest house which was okay - more like a hotel than a B&B but the location was ideal...just a few steps from the harbor.
 
I would recommend renting bikes for sure!! the ride is pretty easy and there is very low car traffic on the island. My sister and her boyfriend did the biking and we took a horse and buggy ride which was fantastic but pricey.
PHOTOS:
 
The B&B
 
 
 
 

Western Ireland Trip - Dublin & Doolin

My sister and her boyfriend Greg recently visited Ireland - They were our first visitors and we couldn't have been happier to show them around this beautiful country.
 
We started out the visit in Dublin with pints of Guinness, a tour around town, and the very popular "burger joint" (I think it was the Gourmet Burger Company) of which there are many versions in Dublin.
 
The next day we headed off for Western Ireland hitting the Burren and the Cliffs of Moore and getting very lucky with weather. A tip about Ireland - if the weather is nice go for it and do those things you want to do outside!! 
 
Around 6 PM we arrived in Doolin in County Clare where we stayed for the night. We enjoyed a wonderful meal and pints at the asolutely packed O'Connors pub.  After dinner, we found traditional Irish music that would make our Dad proud (he plays traditional Irish music at home).  

 

Monolithic Tomb in the Burren

Cliffs of Moore

Doolin!

Mussels at O'Connors


 
August 16

Ireland, update...8 months 23 days in!

My goodness, even on a rainly island the summer goes by quickly! I can't believe the the last entry on my blog was in APRIL! That is really shocking, so of course an update is in order, even just for my own personal records of life in Ireland.
 
After 8 months 23 days here in the Republic, how do I feel about things? I think the people in Ireland are lovely and it's very beautiful here, but sometime the day to day life can still be a challenge in terms of finding amenaties food stuffs, missing friends and family and just simply coping with living abroad.  On he positive side, the travel opportunities are outstanding and I love what I do at Microsoft and the people I work with are supportive, smart, challenging in a good way, and just a really wonderful team in general. I've also made some good girlfriends, who, in addition to my positive thinking husband, really help me make through the weeks - I am lucky!
 
Some of our travels recently have included Italy, Prague, Berlin, Trim Castle in county Meath, Belfast & the Northern Coast Line, and the Wicklow Mountains.
 
Prague
 
On the walk to the Giant's Causeway
 
Giants Causeway - Northern Ireland
 
 
 
We did buy a car here and that has helped a great deal with getting around so I might be inching towards making life better. Of course, though, the car has some problems which is just a pain. The dealership is going to fix everything for free but the car gets horrible gas mileage which I did not know and I think it's worse due to some problems with the transmission.
 
My sister is coming in less than 2 weeks and we are both counting the days. We are going to take a trip over to Western Ireland to Doolin, Dingle area, and the Aran Islands and we'll get to show her and her boyfriend "our Dublin". That gives me a lot to be happy about!
 
April 10

Oh the dreaded IMMERSION!

Do you know what the immersion means in Ireland? Well I certainly didn't...and unfortunately we learned our lesson the hard way. What is the immersion? Well it's the way the Irish heat their water because guess what? They don't  have the luxury of just having hot water ready to go all the time and you have to pay a premium to heat it up, so homes have what's called an "immersion" with a switch that gets turned on when you want to have really hot water.

Of course we did not know this and only discovered it after we received a 400 Euro electrical bill!!!! Upon calling the electricity company they asked if lI eft on the immersion and through logical deduction we figured out that was where we had gone wrong...the girl on the phone said with a warning in her voice "well now that would be it then, that's the most expensive thing ya know". When I told my coworkers they all started laughing as it's a thing here from their childhoods of always being told to turn off the immersion or being accused of leaving it on too long. I guess I really a spoiled brat coming from the land of hot water on demand!!

 Here's a video of an Irish American who decided to move to Ireland and learn Irish while finding his roots and his comedy routine around the "Immersion" is hilarious!
Talking about YouTube - Des Bishop's Immersion Routine
  
March 07

Getting a drivers license in Ireland!

One of the reasons I felt I had to update my blog was to share out some information about getting your drivers license in Ireland. I have started to realize that not having a car here is very frustrating and I would at least like to have the option next year. To do this however I would need to take a written test which in Ireland is divided into various categories. The license for driving a regular car is in the same category as guess what?? Tractors and Work Vehicles...that's real normal! I consider myself quite decent at taking tests, especially when you can order a CD ROM (yeah it's old school) of all the test questions and essentially memorize them. However, it's the next step that is more disturbing as this is what happens once I get my Learners license:
"Car drivers (category B) with a learner permit (or current provisional licence) must be accompanied at all times by, and be under the supervision of, someone with a current full driving licence to drive a car. (The exception to this, where the driver held a second provisonal driving licence to drive a car, has been discontinued since 30 June 2008). Also since 30 June 2008, the person accompanying you, must have had the full driving licence for the relevant vehicle category for at least two years"
So - am I supposed to bribe friends here to go driving with me so I actually practice driving in Ireland? I mean I suppose the way to do it is to rent a car as often as possible when I can still drive on my US license (which I can only do for 12 months) and then hope that I get to take the driving test really soon after that so driving on the WRONG side of the road (in my brain) will be easier.
 
Oh and I forgot to mention - The wait time can be 10 months before you can actually take your driving test and this is after you've had your learners permit for 6 months!!!
   "It is advisable to apply for a test about 10 months before your second provisional licence is due to expire.  Average waiting times for a test are currently just over 18 weeks (over 4 months).  It is a standard test and all test centres use the same testing procedures."
 
I cannot believe that having a US license for 15+ years doesn't do me any good. How is driving in other parts of Europe that much different from Ireland? It's completely nuts frankly and really makes me want to run screaming. So I focus on my job which is super cool and the fact that I get to go to Italy for only $150.00 round trip!
 
 

I've neglected this blog...

So apparently since the trip to Paris I have been really neglecting this blog. I've decided to just use this blog to focus on key information people might need/want if they are moving from the States to Ireland. So, it might it end being a bit on the dry side for friends and family but I promised myself I would create this blog to make sure other people considering moving to Ireland or moving here would have a place to find information from someone who has made the move!
 
 
January 14

Weekend Trip to Paris

 One of the many reasons Ireland was so appealing as a destination was our ability to galavant around Europe but who would have thought we'd have the chance to do it less than 2 months after arriving in Dublin! This last weekend, J and I had our first "European Vacation" to Paris.
 
The pictures:  
  
 
The Story:
 
The trip & first evening
Leaving at around 4PM on Thursday evening via bus that goes directly to the airport (well with many stops within the city) from right outside my office we took off from Dublin Aiport at 6:15 and were in Paris by 8:45 and that's with an hour time difference so flight time was only an hour and twenty minutes. Is that crazy or what? It took us a bit of time to find our way around the RER train system and get to our hotel, Hotel Argenson in the 8e. After we were greeted by warm and welcoming primarily french speaking staff and tossed the bags (all carry on!) we headed off to find food at 10:30 at night, actually harder than you would think in a fairly non-touristy part of town. Something I love about Paris, even this fairly mediocre eatiery offered an amuse-bouche, amazing bread, and a wine chiller attached to the table. The rest of the meal wasn't fantastic but it was food and only hours before we had been at home. I kept feeling like I was missing something - that feeling of utter exhaustion that I have always felt in Paris or other European cities, but this time I was only a wee bit tired from a day at the office. I suddenly had this realization that running of to Paris just for dinner wasn't something out of our reach... 
 
Day 1
Our hotel was a bit noisy as we later figured out that we were directly over a bakery kitchen but we slept in a bit on Friday and started out the day by making our way towards the Arc de Triomphe. Walking in Paris even in the cold is just great fun and I had forgotten the scale of things there - the endless seeming stretch that is the Champs Elysees and then the Arc capping it all off at the grand roundabout. There were still some tourists around but almost all of them were European or, amazingly enough, French. We even stumbled upon the Peugeot store and where we both drooled over the concept cars and we bought a pretty, pretty red pepper mill for half the price it would be anywhere else. At the end of the Champs after the underground tunnel walk, J got his first glimpse of the sprawl of Paris and the Eiffel tower on the top of the Arc. As far as I can remember this is the first time I went up as well.
 
We continued our tour "a pied" and made our way down to the Seine tracking the Eiffel Tower as we quickly made our way across the river. We ended up finding a bite to eat in a nice little Brasserie that if it were one floor up would have an amazing view of the Eiffel Tower. Bellies full of smoked salmon salad with avocado, oranges, and grapfruit (me) and traditional steack frites as well as a pichet of Rose we walked on a few more blocks to come across the glorious tower. It looked so amazingly beautiful with the crisp blue backdrop of the Paris sky, an almost fake looking dusting of snow, and the lack of tourists made it seem more real. Our wait in line to go up was only about 20 minutes and we took advantage of the time with snapshots (waiting in line = -great opportunity to just take pictures of yourself!). The weather put a slight kink in our plans as we couldn't go all the way to the top because of ice. It was smack you in the face cold even on the 2nd level but the views were incredible.  We topped off the day with a wonderful meal at Les Cocottes, one of Christian Constant's 4  Paris restaurants, this one being the less expensive and more rustic style where everything is served in a cast iron pot of some sort.
 
Day two:
I seriously think we walked 5 miles on our first day in Paris so Saturday morning we started the day out on a Metro trip (not to mention that this is something that I had on J's must see list) and headed to Montmartre. Again, not too many tourists and I had forgotten, or just didn't know as I was there as a high school student and probably could have cared less, that the area is spattered with adorable little shops (where things are, yes believe it, cheaper than Dublin due to the high tax here) so of course we did a bit of shopping. Montmartre was what I remember: picturesque painters, cobblestone winding streets atop a hill in Paris, and of course the white glory of Sacre Coeur. Photoshoots, lunch including a croque monsieur (without the ham), piano bar, and the buying of a warmer hat for me is the quick summary of our Paris mountaintop excursion.
 
Next up was another must see of Paris - Notre Dame. Along the way we meanedered through Le Marais (even though I'm not sure we ever got to the heart of it) and I got the crepe I had been craving the whole day. Notre Dame was still dressed up for Christmas with roasted chestnuts available nearby and of course a bird lady. Saturday night we returned to our favorite Les Cocottes so J could get what he had originally intended to get the first night...see photos for the scoop.
 

January 06

Irish Breakfast...at the office!

 I couldn't resist posting a quick note here about how awesome it is to have breakfast at work! Back in the States I always ate breakfast at home, usually over my inbox to prepare for the day. But, with the outstanding canteen (that's cafeteria here in Ireland) offerings at the office how can I resist but to check my mail in the Atrium while enjoying freshly cooked poached eggs, brown bread, and sautéed mushrooms? All for the low, low price of 2 Euro! Add to that the fact that doing so allows me to leave no dishes at home or sweat over the stove in the dark morning preparing my own breakfast. For those that enjoy pastry there is a huge selection and another favourite of mine is the hearty, warming, perfectly cooked porridge or, I almost forget, the yogurt bar stocked full of fresh fruit and nuts to sprinkle atop your creamy Irish yogurt.

December 29

First Christmas in Ireland

First of all - I have to say thank goodness for Marks & Spencers. We had a lovely meal that we ordered from them and it was delicious with minimal work and clean up...perfect for our first Christmas here and honestly a tradition I think we'll keep up! there was enough food for at least 4 dinners and trimmings left to use for New Year's eve.
 
 
Even though J & I were both sick we managed to get each other some really nice gifts coming in within budget. We are also treating ourselves to a trip to Paris for christmas the 8th-11th of January - YIPPEE!!
 
We also had a great time on Christmas day talking to family and friends in the states with our web cam and Skype! Having that technology really makes it so much easier to stay in touch with folks. This is not an easy time to relocate to a new country so having ways for us to stay connected really makes life better.
 
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living in Dublin