Similar Posts
The Irish Times – Price Watch
Value for money – Chopping Boards Tested by Conor Pope Conor Pope tested five chopping boards in his Price Watch column for the Irish Times. The Bunbury Board scored a maximum 5 stars and was the only one to do so. His review of the Bunbury Board is as follows: Highs: This Irish made, eco-friendly…
House and Home Magazine – Hot 100
Every year, House and Home magazine picks the people, products and services that you need to know about in 2010 – and beyond. In the Spring of 2007, the Lisnavagh Timber Project was at Number 46 in this list. Since then, we started to make Bunbury Boards and these are included in this year’s list…
Food & Wine magazine – October 2015
Bunbury Boards do a wonderful job of creating functional woodcraft out of carefully sourced indigenous trees. This new 12 inch pizza board – which has grooves to assist cutting your pizza into six slices – comes with its own ‘tree certificate’. Each certificate gives a full back-story to the tree which became your board, including…
Lancashire Woodlands Project – Final Report
The following is an extract from the Lancashire Woodlands Project Final Report covering their activities from 2001 to 2004. In April 2004 the project officer and representatives of the steering group visited the Lisnavagh Timber Project in Co. Carlow Ireland. This business is built on experience gained in Lancashire by William McClintock-Bunbury and is proving…
The Irish Times – Suitable Souvenirs for Christmas
MAGAN’S WORLD: Manchán Magan’s tales of a travel addict Suggesting you do your Christmas shopping amidst the leprechauns, shillelaghs and Diageo-branded paraphernalia that constitute Irish souvenir shops mightn’t sound like sage advice, but some of the most alluring products I’ve seen have been in quick darts around the souvenir shops of Irish provincial towns: Bunbury…
“Turn over a New Leaf” by Stephen Milton
FORESTS ARE amongst the earth’s most complex ecological systems, whose dynamic processes and functions we do not yet fully understand. Each year, millions of acres around the world are destroyed. Ireland is no stranger to this environmental topic of concern. Until medieval times the country was heavily forested with oak, pine, beech and birch. However,…