Galway Bay FM News Archives
Crashing waves just what the doctor ordered for Katie
Date Published: 06-Apr-2011
There is a place in Hawaii – Maui to be exact – where raging waves of up to 120 foot in height charge mercilessly towards the rugged coastline, threatening to engulf the rolling sugar cane fields that teeter uneasily in the breeze on higher ground above.
Among surfers and windsurfers alike, this deep water reef break is legendary. The magnitude and intensity of the waves, which can gather speeds of up to nearly 50 kilometres per hour, is the ultimate dream-maker for adrenalin junkies. It is the nearest thing to their Utopia. The name of this place of danger and peril? It is simply – and fittingly – known as ‘Jaws’.
While the thought of courting the extremities of the ocean may leave many of us searching for a new pair of shorts, for 24-year-old Galway girl, Katie McAnena, she describes ‘Jaws’ and Maui as “the Mecca of windsurfing”. She adds: “It is like Augusta for golf.”
McAnena, who is currently ranked as Ireland’s No 1 ladies windsurfer (and sixth overall in the country), spent a year travelling between Hawaii, a place she has been to four times, and Western Australia in 2008 and 2009 – experiencing the thrills and spills of what she describes as a “lifestyle sport”.
Having grown up in Galway City, where she spent her Summers mastering the sport’s basic principles at Rusheen Bay Windsurfing on Barna Road, McAnena made the brave decision to take time out of her medical studies at NUI Galway to head to Maui, recognising if she was to improve, then she had to be able to mix it with the best.
“I got to meet a great crew over there and that is where it all kicked off,” explains the final year medical student. “I just saw the waves and saw what you could do. It took a long time to get to the level that I am at now, though. It was such a hard slog.
“I suppose it is a different sport to others because it is not a constant. If you play football or tennis or even golf, you go out and you train every evening and that is it. With windsurfing, you are depending on the conditions to be right; you can’t just go off on an afternoon and practice. You have to wait for the wind and the waves to come.”
In Hawaii, there were no such problems.
“Maui is just unbelievable,” she exclaims. “It is just perfect. The wind and the waves are so constant and in the Winter time the waves are huge. I don’t know if you have ever heard about ‘Jaws’, but those waves are massive. Just incredible!”
For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.
Galway Bay FM News Archives
Galway has country’s largest population of young people
Date Published: 07-May-2013
Galway has a population of young people which is more than twice the national average.
According to information gathered by the Central Statistics Office, Galway’s population of 20 to 24 year olds is more than twice the national average.
The number of 25-34 year olds in Galway is also more than the norm nationally, with the two main colleges thought to be the main reason.
However immigration in Galway is much higher than in other areas at 19.4 percent, compared to the national average of 12 percent.
Galway Bay FM News Archives
Call for direct donations to city charity shops
Date Published: 07-May-2013
A city councillor is encouraging people to donate goods directly to charity shops.
It follows allegations of thefts from clothes banks in Galway and across the country in recent months.
However, cameras are in place at some clothes banks and surveillance is carried out by local authorities.
Speaking on Galway Talks, Councillor Neil McNeilis said the problem of theft from clothes banks is widespread.
Galway Bay FM News Archives
Galway ‘Park and Ride’ could become permanent
Date Published: 07-May-2013
A park ‘n’ ride scheme from Carnmore into Galway city could become a permanent service if there is public demand.
That’s according to the Chief Executive of Galway Chamber of Commerce, Michael Coyle.
The pilot scheme will begin at 7.20 next Monday morning, May 13th.
Motorists will be able to park cars at the airport carpark in Carnmore and avail of a bus transfer to Forster Street in the city.
Buses will depart every 20 minutes at peak times and every 30 minutes at offpeak times throughout the day, at a cost of 2 euro per journey.