MICK LANE was so immersed in building up the family business and raising half a dozen kids that you’d like to think he put his international rugby career behind him with ease, even one as distinguished as his.
Melmore
Homes in Cherry Grove
All of the homes are quite different; none are anyway small. Garden sizes are in the one-third-of-an-acre range. The Lane family home — Melmore — was one of the early houses on this leafy lane, tucked up off Model Farm Rd. While additional bespoke homes have materialised on the laneway over the years, none have compromised on size.

The evidence of the Property Price Register suggests re-sales are rare — just two since the register was established in 2010. One was Moyola, Melmore’s next door neighbour, which sold a decade ago for €900,000. Like Melmore, it was dated.
Moyola before it was extended and upgraded
New owners kept the shell (easy to tell because the original featured in these pages when up for sale in 2016) but it’s a fresh, contemporary-looking home now, with single and two story extensions to front, side and rear, thanks to a corner site.
Moyola (left) after the upgrade
Permission for a two storey extension was also given to Curraghmore, the only other house to sell in Cherry Grove since 2010.





Statuette marking Mick’s induction into the Rugby Writers of Ireland Hall of Fame in 2011.

Prior to Mick’s passing, he was the last surviving member of the 1950s Lions tour, following the death of Lewis Jones in 2024. Following his passing he was remembered during a minute’s silence at an Autumn International in the Aviva Stadium last November.

