Forget about the Astronomy Ireland text service -- I couldn't believe someone would try to rip you off like that for a crappy service which you can get much better and free here, among other places: [broken link removed]
When using the above page, be careful -- the times are CET which is one hour ahead of GMT which we are on at present -- subtract one hour for local Ireland time. Also, check the magnitude and the max altitude in degrees: although all the flyovers are theoretically visible, some are much more "theoretical" than others. Look out for those with magnitude of -1 or lower ... this makes it about as bright as Sirius, the brightest star in the sky, but a good deal less bright than, say, Venus which is visible very brightly in the evenings at present after sunset. In fact, Venus is a good way to line yourself up because the space station will appear from the same quadrant of the sky (i.e. approximately towards where the sunset happened).
The maximum altitude tells you how high the space station will fly over compared to the horizon. For low altitudes, below say 30 degrees don't waste your time especially if you are somewhere with light pollution ... it will skim relatively close to the horizon. Look at for the ones above 50-60 degrees ... for these the space station will appear out of the south/south west, probably well above the horizon before you first notice it -- you need to keep your eyes peeled -- and will travel towards you, appearing to accelerate as it approaches more nearly overhead, and will vanish in the east ... usually fading away gradually as it enters the earths shadow.
Because of the shape of the space station's orbit, flyovers of Ireland come along in batches every so often. If you miss it this time, there will be more opportunites. December was a magical month for the space station -- true you couldn't see the space shuttle when it was docked, but for three days between undocking and landing the space shuttle and space station went overhead in procession ... with the famous "tool bag" up there somewhere too

... also we had simultaneous fantastic views of Venus, Jupiter, and the early moon, with an occultation (like a mini-eclipse) of Venus by the moon at one point.
Get and see it! Well worth it, and worth knowing about what's going on up there!