Global warming, most likely
Ireland has the same kinds of bad things that all countries have. Things like crime, bad weather, people in poverty, illnesses, car accidents etc., are all things that happen in Ireland. Ireland isn't as bad in those things as some countries, so it has less crime and poverty than some countries, and its weather isn't the worst in the world, and it has lots of good weather too. It is not a bad country.
They happen by luck wich is made by how you look. Look all pretty/handsome and good luck will sprinkle on you, look like a horrible old hag and bad luck will spread all around you!!!!!
I bought a home in Ireland and all the mortgage broker looked for was proof of employment, salary and bank balances. They did not look into our credit history at all.
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it was bad it was bad
Ireland has the same kinds of bad things that all countries have. Things like crime, bad weather, people in poverty, illnesses, car accidents etc., are all things that happen in Ireland. Ireland isn't as bad in those things as some countries, so it has less crime and poverty than some countries, and its weather isn't the worst in the world, and it has lots of good weather too. It is not a bad country.
The weather in Ireland is typical of a country in a temperate maritime region - mild weather all year with a lot of rain but very little snow and frost compared to countries at a similar latitude.
The All-Ireland Finals in Gaelic Football and Hurling are normally played in September, when the weather is quite good. Matches are played all year round in good and bad weather. It takes very bad weather and a very poor pitch for a match to be postponed. Croke Park, where the All-Ireland Finals are played, is the best pitch in the country and deals very well with bad weather, having good drainage. It is very well looked after by the ground staff. Matches have been played there in very bad weather. On the 3rd of September 1939, the same day that World War II broke out, the All-Ireland Hurling final was to be played in Croke Park. It was also a day of extremely bad weather. The match went ahead, even though the pitch conditions then would not be as good as in Croke Park now. In the second half there was a thunder storm, with more torrential rain and also lightning, but the match was played to its conclusion. It is often referred to as the "Thunder and Lightning Final".The All-Ireland Finals in Gaelic Football and Hurling are normally played in September, when the weather is quite good. Matches are played all year round in good and bad weather. It takes very bad weather and a very poor pitch for a match to be postponed. Croke Park, where the All-Ireland Finals are played, is the best pitch in the country and deals very well with bad weather, having good drainage. It is very well looked after by the ground staff. Matches have been played there in very bad weather. On the 3rd of September 1939, the same day that World War II broke out, the All-Ireland Hurling final was to be played in Croke Park. It was also a day of extremely bad weather. The match went ahead, even though the pitch conditions then would not be as good as in Croke Park now. In the second half there was a thunder storm, with more torrential rain and also lightning, but the match was played to its conclusion. It is often referred to as the "Thunder and Lightning Final".The All-Ireland Finals in Gaelic Football and Hurling are normally played in September, when the weather is quite good. Matches are played all year round in good and bad weather. It takes very bad weather and a very poor pitch for a match to be postponed. Croke Park, where the All-Ireland Finals are played, is the best pitch in the country and deals very well with bad weather, having good drainage. It is very well looked after by the ground staff. Matches have been played there in very bad weather. On the 3rd of September 1939, the same day that World War II broke out, the All-Ireland Hurling final was to be played in Croke Park. It was also a day of extremely bad weather. The match went ahead, even though the pitch conditions then would not be as good as in Croke Park now. In the second half there was a thunder storm, with more torrential rain and also lightning, but the match was played to its conclusion. It is often referred to as the "Thunder and Lightning Final".The All-Ireland Finals in Gaelic Football and Hurling are normally played in September, when the weather is quite good. Matches are played all year round in good and bad weather. It takes very bad weather and a very poor pitch for a match to be postponed. Croke Park, where the All-Ireland Finals are played, is the best pitch in the country and deals very well with bad weather, having good drainage. It is very well looked after by the ground staff. Matches have been played there in very bad weather. On the 3rd of September 1939, the same day that World War II broke out, the All-Ireland Hurling final was to be played in Croke Park. It was also a day of extremely bad weather. The match went ahead, even though the pitch conditions then would not be as good as in Croke Park now. In the second half there was a thunder storm, with more torrential rain and also lightning, but the match was played to its conclusion. It is often referred to as the "Thunder and Lightning Final".The All-Ireland Finals in Gaelic Football and Hurling are normally played in September, when the weather is quite good. Matches are played all year round in good and bad weather. It takes very bad weather and a very poor pitch for a match to be postponed. Croke Park, where the All-Ireland Finals are played, is the best pitch in the country and deals very well with bad weather, having good drainage. It is very well looked after by the ground staff. Matches have been played there in very bad weather. On the 3rd of September 1939, the same day that World War II broke out, the All-Ireland Hurling final was to be played in Croke Park. It was also a day of extremely bad weather. The match went ahead, even though the pitch conditions then would not be as good as in Croke Park now. In the second half there was a thunder storm, with more torrential rain and also lightning, but the match was played to its conclusion. It is often referred to as the "Thunder and Lightning Final".The All-Ireland Finals in Gaelic Football and Hurling are normally played in September, when the weather is quite good. Matches are played all year round in good and bad weather. It takes very bad weather and a very poor pitch for a match to be postponed. Croke Park, where the All-Ireland Finals are played, is the best pitch in the country and deals very well with bad weather, having good drainage. It is very well looked after by the ground staff. Matches have been played there in very bad weather. On the 3rd of September 1939, the same day that World War II broke out, the All-Ireland Hurling final was to be played in Croke Park. It was also a day of extremely bad weather. The match went ahead, even though the pitch conditions then would not be as good as in Croke Park now. In the second half there was a thunder storm, with more torrential rain and also lightning, but the match was played to its conclusion. It is often referred to as the "Thunder and Lightning Final".The All-Ireland Finals in Gaelic Football and Hurling are normally played in September, when the weather is quite good. Matches are played all year round in good and bad weather. It takes very bad weather and a very poor pitch for a match to be postponed. Croke Park, where the All-Ireland Finals are played, is the best pitch in the country and deals very well with bad weather, having good drainage. It is very well looked after by the ground staff. Matches have been played there in very bad weather. On the 3rd of September 1939, the same day that World War II broke out, the All-Ireland Hurling final was to be played in Croke Park. It was also a day of extremely bad weather. The match went ahead, even though the pitch conditions then would not be as good as in Croke Park now. In the second half there was a thunder storm, with more torrential rain and also lightning, but the match was played to its conclusion. It is often referred to as the "Thunder and Lightning Final".The All-Ireland Finals in Gaelic Football and Hurling are normally played in September, when the weather is quite good. Matches are played all year round in good and bad weather. It takes very bad weather and a very poor pitch for a match to be postponed. Croke Park, where the All-Ireland Finals are played, is the best pitch in the country and deals very well with bad weather, having good drainage. It is very well looked after by the ground staff. Matches have been played there in very bad weather. On the 3rd of September 1939, the same day that World War II broke out, the All-Ireland Hurling final was to be played in Croke Park. It was also a day of extremely bad weather. The match went ahead, even though the pitch conditions then would not be as good as in Croke Park now. In the second half there was a thunder storm, with more torrential rain and also lightning, but the match was played to its conclusion. It is often referred to as the "Thunder and Lightning Final".The All-Ireland Finals in Gaelic Football and Hurling are normally played in September, when the weather is quite good. Matches are played all year round in good and bad weather. It takes very bad weather and a very poor pitch for a match to be postponed. Croke Park, where the All-Ireland Finals are played, is the best pitch in the country and deals very well with bad weather, having good drainage. It is very well looked after by the ground staff. Matches have been played there in very bad weather. On the 3rd of September 1939, the same day that World War II broke out, the All-Ireland Hurling final was to be played in Croke Park. It was also a day of extremely bad weather. The match went ahead, even though the pitch conditions then would not be as good as in Croke Park now. In the second half there was a thunder storm, with more torrential rain and also lightning, but the match was played to its conclusion. It is often referred to as the "Thunder and Lightning Final".The All-Ireland Finals in Gaelic Football and Hurling are normally played in September, when the weather is quite good. Matches are played all year round in good and bad weather. It takes very bad weather and a very poor pitch for a match to be postponed. Croke Park, where the All-Ireland Finals are played, is the best pitch in the country and deals very well with bad weather, having good drainage. It is very well looked after by the ground staff. Matches have been played there in very bad weather. On the 3rd of September 1939, the same day that World War II broke out, the All-Ireland Hurling final was to be played in Croke Park. It was also a day of extremely bad weather. The match went ahead, even though the pitch conditions then would not be as good as in Croke Park now. In the second half there was a thunder storm, with more torrential rain and also lightning, but the match was played to its conclusion. It is often referred to as the "Thunder and Lightning Final".The All-Ireland Finals in Gaelic Football and Hurling are normally played in September, when the weather is quite good. Matches are played all year round in good and bad weather. It takes very bad weather and a very poor pitch for a match to be postponed. Croke Park, where the All-Ireland Finals are played, is the best pitch in the country and deals very well with bad weather, having good drainage. It is very well looked after by the ground staff. Matches have been played there in very bad weather. On the 3rd of September 1939, the same day that World War II broke out, the All-Ireland Hurling final was to be played in Croke Park. It was also a day of extremely bad weather. The match went ahead, even though the pitch conditions then would not be as good as in Croke Park now. In the second half there was a thunder storm, with more torrential rain and also lightning, but the match was played to its conclusion. It is often referred to as the "Thunder and Lightning Final".
Nobody can ever predict the weather correctly over such a period. However, given that there were bad summers in Ireland in 2007 and 2008, and given that it is unusual to have three bad summers in a row in Ireland, the chances are that 2009 will have a better summer.
By bad you probably mean overcast and drizzly. Considering how far north Ireland is it's weather should be much worse. Ireland is the same latitude as Siberia but it is warmed by the Atlantic ocean. It's cold Arctic air mases meeting warm air mases from the Atlantic which cause Irelands dreary weather.
All weather on Neptune would constitute extremelybad weather on Earth.
During the summer months, in June and July is on average the best. However, Ireland's weather is very changeable so you can have bad summers and you could have a lot of rain during the summer. Equally, there can be very good summers, where the weather is good from May through to September. If travelling to Ireland, always come prepared for dry and wet weather.
In truth, weather can only be reliably predicted anywhere for about 10 days in advance, so it would be hard to say what the weather will be like in Ireland during the summer of 2011. Ireland has summers with different kinds of weather. You will get some warm and sunny days, but you will also get wet ones. Some years can have very bad summers and other years can have very good ones. So anyone planning a trip just has to take their chances. If you are in Ireland for a few weeks, then you will certainly get at least some good weather. Just come prepared for both nice weather and wet weather.
Tuesday June 6th 1944. Bad weather prevented the landings happening on the Monday.
Weather in Spokane can become bad for people with seasonal affect disorder. It all really depends on the person and how bad they have the disorder.
Some jobs are not affected at all. Others would be. Jobs in the agriculture industry are dependent on the right kind of weather for growing things, harvesting and other jobs that are done on farms. The transport industry can be affected by very bad weather. There was bad weather during the 2009/2010 winter and the 2010/2011 winter, which really affected all forms of transport. The winter of 2011/2012 was very good in Ireland, so the same kinds of problems did not arrive. Irish weather is unpredictable at times and you don't always get the kind of weather you need to do different things, so it is a factor in some industries. Mostly though, jobs do get done despite difficulties and delays due to weather.
Ireland is on the east side of the Atlantic Ocean. Most of Ireland's weather comes across the Atlantic, so there is a lot of moisture brought towards Ireland and Europe generally. Ireland is a large island and the first large piece of land that weather coming across the north Atlantic, so it is the first place that the rain will fall. All of these things mean that Ireland gets a lot of rain at any time of the year, including the summer.