Blocked Drains Meath -

He fed the rods down, feeling for the block. This was the part Fiachra never understood. Why don’t you just use the jetter, Da? he’d say. The jetter was a powerful hose with a nozzle that could blast through anything. But Eamonn preferred the rods. Because the rods told you a story.

“Drain’s gone again, Eamonn. The whole lane’s a lake.” blocked drains meath

“Fixed for another few years, Eamonn,” she said. He fed the rods down, feeling for the block

Eamonn O’Shea ran O’Shea & Son Drains , though the “& Son” part had been a hopeful addition on the side of his van for twelve years now. His son, Fiachra, was in Dublin, working in cybersecurity. Eamonn wasn’t entirely sure what that meant, but he knew it didn’t involve a wet vac or a drain rod. he’d say

And as he drove home, past the flooded fields and the drystone walls, he knew that some blockages weren’t just about waste. They were about what got left behind. And in County Meath, even the drains had a history worth saving.