This blog is a personal take on Listowel, Co. Kerry. I am writing for anyone anywhere with a Listowel connection but especially for sons and daughters of Listowel who find themselves far from home. Contact me at listowelconnection@gmail.com

Month: May 2014 Page 1 of 5

Loomed bracelets and fairies in Athea

On this day

Amelia Erhart is helped from her plane in Derry on May 31 1932 (Old Ireland Photographs)

<<<<<<<

Rainbow Looming



I’m reliably informed that this is a global phenomenon. Everywhere across the western world children and teenagers are making these bracelets from plastic bands. All the cool kids in Ireland, the US, Europe and Australia are going around with their arms adorned with these plastic lovelies. And I’m a cool kid too thanks to my grandchildren.


Sean on his loom. Beside him is his huge supply of bands.

Making the bracelet is a skill easily acquired and very satisfying.

Killian does not bother with a loom. He achieves the same result using only his fingers.

Making a bracelet using the finger method

Busy Boys



Bracelet man.

<<<<<<

Boys taking a well earned rest in Fitzgerald’s Park

Otter sculpture

<<<<<<

An Slua Sí



Recently my grandchildren have brought me to a new understanding of the fair folk and their habits. My daughter’s house is strewn with pixie dust and one never knows when one might encounter a fairy. Fairies are careful to avoid human contact because if a human sees them, they lose some of their fairy power. I have this on good authority. I have never seen a fairy but I might do on Monday next because I will go to Athea where the good people of the Tidy Town committee are set to welcome 10 fairies to town. They have set up a welcoming housing estate for the fairies and the banners are out.

Watch out for pictures here and some more fairy related lore over the next few days.

<<<<

Writers’ Week pics next week

Writers’ Week, Dan Keane and Maureen Beasley and a return to the sky garden

Three of Listowel’s great unsung heroes of The Arts; Jet Stack R.I.P., Maureen BeasleyR.I.P. and Jimmy Hickey. These three have played their parts in preserving folk traditions in music, verse and dance and have all done North Kerry and its literary heritage a great service.

Another of the great stalwarts of the North Kerry literary tradition is Dan Keane. He has left us a legacy of poems, ballads and stories and some great memories.

This poem by Dan is a tribute to his friend, Jet Stack:

Mr. Garrett Stack 

If you are out to learn dancing

Take a tip from me,

Go through Listowel and Greenville

Until you reach Scartlea,

Go all the way to Scartlea Cross

Then count two houses back,

There you will find the maestro

That’s Mr. Garrett Stack.

That is his Baptismal title

But he’s never used it yet,

He is no way sanctimonious

He is always known as “Jet”,

He will make you very welcome

With tea and home cooked ham,

And if he is scarce in sugar,

He will give you plenty jam.

He will quickly come to dancing,

It will only take a while,

To show you reels and figures,

In every kind of style,

He will show you steps and polkas,

Like jewels from days of yore,

And he will even demonstrate

He is tasty on the floor.

Now if you ever doubt me

I have witnesses to prove,

That even first class dancers,

He can tutor and improve,

He is not the slightest selfish,

His glory’s greatest crown,

Is his patriotic willingness,

To hand his dancing down.

He is also a musician

And in case you might not know it,

He is good at prose and poetry

A writer and a poet.

He is witty and good humoured,

And a joke he’s good to crack,

So don’t forget three cheers for “Jet”,

That’s Mr. Garrett Stack.

By Dan Keane

I think the lines “His glory’s greatest crown is his patriotic willingness to hand his dancing down.” sum up what Writers’ Week is all about….handing on the torch to the next generation of writers. Who knows? a future John B. or Bryan might be in our midst here on the streets of Listowel this week.

<<<<<<



Another old photo from Writers’ Week of times gone by






<<<<<<<

Mardyke Garden




Do you remember that I went to Fitzgerald’s Park last week to view the Diarmuid Gavin sky garden? This garden cost over a million euros. Well, it took just one week for the children of Cork to wreck it.

Children taking turns climbing on the giant stainless steel spheres.

The plants in this section never stood a chance.

These paths through the garden were lined with blue stepping stones last week.

Yet again, the café couldn’t cope with demand.

The lovely rose beds of old are gone. The colorful roses are replaced by dull drab green plants.

Dead and damaged plants abound.

Dotted throughout the park are lovely gems, like this Oisín Kelly dancer.

In defense of Cork’s children let me say that there was no sign to say that this garden was to be looked at and admired, not treated like a playground. Those big silver sphere’s are far too tempting and they do look like the sort of thing you might see in a playground. I don’t know if the garden can be saved and replanted.  As it stands, it’s a disaster.

<<<<<<

D Day is near…. Saturday May 31 2014

Eileen Moylan of Claddagh will launch her beautiful creation in Craftshop na Méar at 7.00 p.m.

Ballybunion Church and M.S. Busking Day 2014

Nightime in Ballybunion photographed by fisherman, Mike Enright….Perfect!

<<<<<<<

Ballybunion Church  Nearly there….




<<<<<<<<

Mural, mural on the wall…..

Olive Stack’s mural always fascinates me as I sit in the waiting area in Bank of Ireland The Square.

<<<<<<

Annual M.S. Busking Day Friday May 27 2014

Laura collecting outside Glamorous

Jimmy Hannon and the hard working musicians who entertained the crowd all day.

Bridie receives a donation from a previous chairman of the local M.S. branch.

A group of charity cyclists posed for photos with the collectors.

Gary and family.

Liam and Tom cheerfully collecting.

Comfort stop for the cyclists.

Noelle and Bridie do their bit.

Below are a selection of collectors and friends.

No one was safe , even election candidates and Co.

Cork Museum, Craftshop na Méar goes to the bank

It’s beginning to look a lot like summer.

<<<<<<

A few more treasures in Cork Museum


While I was in Cork Museum I photographed a few of the treasures on display.


I forgot to make a note of who these likely lads were. Cyclists perhaps?

Match programme from 1956

Wartime ration books

 Handwritten Irish Dictionery

Cork silver

Cork glass

Butter making tools

Rules for butter makers.

Cork delft



<<<<<<


National Enterprise Week


Last week was National small enterprise week and Craftshop na Méar got to go to Bank of Ireland to promote the shop.

<<<<<

Oh Mary we crown thee with blossoms today…….



In Knockanure they celebrated Mary as Queen of the May on May 18 2014 and Jer. was there;

Queen of the May

<<<<<<<

Ballybunion at Night   (photo by Mike Enright)

Knocknagoshel, Travellers and June Races

Arise, Knocknagoshel and take your place among the nations of the earth.



These old milk churns say “small farmers” to me. Small farmers are the backbone of this lovely rural Kerry community. I had occasion to visit Knocknagoshel recently and I liked what I saw.

“Arise Knocknagoshel, and take your place
among the nations of the Earth!’, was a slogan on a banner which was carried by
local men at a rally addressed by Charles Stewart Parnell in Newcastle West in
1891.

The banner is today commemorated with a
plaque in the centre of Knocknagoshel village.

Knocknagoshel has a lovely church in the heart of the village.

The church has some really fine stained glass windows.

<<<<<



Presentatation Convent May 2007


I took this photo shortly after the imminent closure of the convent was announced.

<<<<<<<

Travellers

Traveler culture is now often  associated with big weddings, ostentatious grave memorials, disco clothes as daywear and sulky racing. Once upon a time in the 1940s and 50s travelers were poor people. They lived a nomadic life in squalid conditions, had large families and poor life expectancy. In the Cork Museum there is a permanent exhibition of artifacts and photographs associated with the traveller lifestyle.

In 1971 and 1972, two Ph.D. students of anthropology, George and Sharon Gmelch lived for 13 months with travelers in a site called Holylands outside Dublin. They studied their way of life and their interactions with the settled community. The Gmelchs’ photographs capture a way of life that is now but a fading memory. George is now Professor of Anthropology at the University of San Francisco. Some of their photos are on display in Cork Museum.

A bed in a typical barrel top caravan

These pockets or aprons covered in beads, buttons and medals were worn by traveller women

 An open cart

 Trading in scrap metal was a way of life for many of the menfolk.

 A tinsmith at work outside his home. Travellers often made tin cups or saucepans and sold them to country people on their travels.

Traveller encampment in the early 1970s

<<<<<

The Races are coming

Next weekend, if you are worn out from all the culture, you might dander down to the Island on Sunday and Monday for the June races.

Page 1 of 5

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén