18 Things People From Cork Notice When They Move To Dublin
If you're one of the many Rebels who will be moving to Dublin over the course of the next month for college, fear not. Those of us who have ventured north already are here to help. You'll get used to the spot, we're sure, but as Tommy Tiernan once put it 'Well ... It's not Cork.'
Here are some of the differences I've noticed during my time in the capital:
1) The traffic's not even really that bad, to be honest
I mean, it's bad, but it's not as bad as AA Roadwatch made it sound when you were stuck in the same levels of traffic on the South Link Road back in Cork.
2) No change on the bus
The first time I hopped on a Dublin Bus I tried to pay with a €5 note and I was laughed and pointed back out the door of the 145. Fairly sure someone even called me a 'gobshite' as the doors shut.
3) The Luas lines are fierce confusing
Red? Green? What's the story there?
4) The Spire is your North Star
The Spire is essentially just a big stick that the Dubs stuck in the city centre when they got jealous of Cork County Hall, but it can also manifest itself as a beacon of light for geographically challenged Corkonians:
'Where are you?'
'I haven't a clue, but I can see The Spire!'
'Alright, just walk to The Spire and I'll meet you there.'
5) Everybody in Dublin knows somebody from Douglas
One of the most unexplainable phenomena in Cork-Dub relations. Everybody in Dublin, bar none, is no more than two degrees of separation away from someone who either currently lives or once lived in Douglas. And speaking of Douglas...
6) Dublin doesn't have a KC's
Alright, you knew that when you moved to Dublin, to be fair. But that doesn't ease the Creole cravings, or the innate, painful nostalgia caused by the big city's comparably second tier chippers.
There is, however, a Hillbilly's in Fairview, Dublin 3.
7) €2 pints
A game-changer, brought to you by Dicey's Garden on Harcourt Street. It's like four Monday nightclubs for the price of one. Naturally, Dicey's is owned by a Cork woman.
8) The barman doesn't give you the silent nod of approval when you order a pint of Murphy's
Yes you can get Murphy's (and Beamish) in Dublin, but frankly, the lack of acknowledgement is a disgrace.
9) An enormous proportion of the city smells like piss between the hours of 1am and 7am
They don't even have a designated Piss Alley up here. Apparently they just piss all over the place after a night out, and no street is off limits. It's mank!
10) The streets are actually less dangerous than Cork
Even the heroin addicts are pretty sound.
11) There's no 'West Dublin'
The Dubs don't have a Schull or Barley Cove to escape west to at the weekend. You head west from Dublin and you end up in, I dunno, Meath or some other hole. So weird.
12) Nobody understands your sarcasm
Considering Corkonians speak almost exclusively in a code-like, veiled sarcasm, pretty much everything you say to a Dub will be greeted with, 'Really?' Meaning you have to backtrack and explain almost every sentence in layman's terms.
13) You don't actually have to go to Temple Bar
Having seen a number of rants and raves about the prices of a pint or - Jesus - a packet of bacon fries in Temple Bar on the likes of JOE.ie and The Journal, I was under the assumption that it was compulsory to drink there. As it turns out, you can literally just not go there and everything is grand. Pretty much a life hack, that one.
14) If you go to UCD, it could be months before you actually reach the city
Compared to UCC's proximity to Cork city centre, its Dublin counterpart might as well be in a different county. In fact, I think DCU actually is. As a student at either college, apart from nights out, an excursion to the city is a far rarer event than you might expect.
15) The number of people who ask you for money increases by at least 400%
Which is sad, really. Apart from the bastarding chuggers. We're not talking students from Christians or Scoil Mhuire going around collecting for Share, here - we're talking trained, adult professionals passive-aggressively roaring 'have a great day, dude' when you ask them to kindly feck off.
16) Starbucks is always just a stone's throw away
Common White Girls don't need to spend a day planning a trip to Mahon Point for a Spiced Pumpkin Latte in Dublin.
17) You'd actually kind of miss the Echo Boys
Let's be honest - we've all had the shite scared out of us by an impromptu bellow of "EEEEEEHHHH-CCHHOOOOOOOOO" down Patrick's Street or Oliver Plunkett's Street. And, in a strange way, you kind of miss it on the streets of Dublin.
Instead you'll probably come across some God-bothering lunatics preaching outside Penneys on O'Connell Street, but in truth it lacks that same Echo Boy 'pizazz' that you'd inadvertently come to expect.
18) The Dubs are very quick to gage your opinion on Roy Keane
It might be the very first thing you're asked when you get here. But don't be fooled, it's usually only so that they can tell you what a miserable C-U-Next-Tuesday they believe him to be, and that 'he really let the country down' 13 years ago. But generally speaking they're grand, like.