![]() ![]() Heating is oil-fired and Helen notes that a water-softener unit has recently been installed - one of the boring-but-very-useful jobs ticked off the list then. Weekends and days off would surely feature trips to some of the local beaches - Ballynamona, Garryvoe, Ardnahinch, Ballywilling and Ballycrenane.Īnd the fab Ballycotton cliffs are a treat on gorse-scented summer days and cobweb-clearing gusty days alike. St Colman’s National School in Cloyne is a few minutes’ walk away from this quiet cul-de-sac and there’s a creche locally as well. ![]() “You’ve got pubs, shops, restaurants, a primary school and a creche in Cloyne and you’re only 10 minutes away from Midleton where a lot of people living locally go to work,” she says. double native yellow Barblotch with a yellow margin filling up the whole claw. Helen Kearney of CCM Property Network notes that while Cloyne has so much going for it, a big draw here is also the proximity to Midleton. brachystemon, Regel, Gartenflora, tab, 1099, ( Continued from p. Houses here are popular - a scan of the Property Price Register reveals that 10 have sold in the past three years - many to first-time buyers and young families. Why do you build me up (build me up) buttercup, baby Just to let me down (let me down) and mess me around And then worst of all (worst of all) you never call, baby When you say you will (say you will) but I love you still I need you (I need you) more than anyone, darlin' You know that I have from the start So build me up (build me up) buttercup. This house had been under offer but the bidder had another offer accepted so this one is now available for a buyer who may have missed out the first time around. There is side access via a gate - extremely handy for moving everything from lawnmowers to bins and keeping the house interior as neat as a pin. This semi-detached bungalow, which is attractively stone-clad at the front, has three bedrooms - the main one is en suite. And appropriately for housing development, the 1960s hit, ‘Build Me Up, Buttercup’ was sung by a group called The Foundations. The name Lus an Ime comes from the plethora of buttercups in the local fields - and a salute to the developer’s wife’s grá for Gaeilge and fondness for these cheery little flowers. Kenneally Developments also built the popular Meadows and Traonach developments. Likewise, the polished hall and living room floors and neutral walls will allow a new owner to bring virtually any colour or style couch and furniture.īuilt in 2009 by local developer Kenneally Developments Ltd, there are 20 other houses in this particular development. Neutral and earth-toned floor and wall tiles in the kitchen give individual and special utensils or art a chance to shine.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |