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: January 2018 Page 2 of 4

Moonlighters, Scribes’ new proprietor and St. John’s window

Photo: Jim MacSweeney, Mallow Camera Club

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The Bad old Days


You’ve heard of shotgun marriages. Now I have for you a shotgun non marriage.

  

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It’s a Long way from Silale in Lithuania  to Listowel in Co. Kerry

     

Brigita Formaliene
is the new proprietor of Scribes Café in Church Street, Listowel, a long
way from her native Lithuania.

Patrick McCrea sent this photo of a typical winter scene in Lithuania. This is his 

ice-bound local river.

Brigita has swapped the below zero temperatures of her native land for the milder Irish winters. 

She has one
brother who now lives in Tralee. She lost her father recently and her mother
lives in Lithuania.

Brigita’s
grandmother had a huge influence on the young girl. While her mother was
working and during school holidays the young Brigita spend all her time with
her Nana. She was a seamstress and she lived in the centre of the little
village near Brigita’s home. Her’s was a sort of Lithuanian rambling house.
There were always parties and celebrations going on. Nana’s house was next to
the church and on feastdays and other religious occasions Brigita’s Nana threw
parties for the priests and the people. These parties had to be catered for and
from about age ten Brigita was cooking and baking and she grew to love making
cakes and pastries. Her grandmother was a skilled needlewoman and Brigita too
has a gifted pair of hands. She can produce the most delicate crochet work or
knitted garments .

Brigita with her Nana on her wedding day

Since she was a
little girl, Brigita wanted to be a teacher. So, after school she went on to
teacher training college. Part of her course involved work experience in a
school and it was then that Brigita realized that teaching was not for her.

Brigita admits
that some of her most monumental life changing decisions were made in a flash.
She decided to leave college and go to the USA to perfect her English. She
spent a year in the U.S. working as an au pair.

She returned to
Lithuania with fluent English and the idea of teaching English as a foreign
language.

She met and fell
in love with Almantas. After a whirlwind romance they were married. Soon they
had their lovely daughter, Mileta, and then it was a case of  “Where will we go
now?’ They decided on Norway. Almantas found work and they were happy there but
soon Brigita returned home to Lithuania.

The young family
was anxious to be together. Brigita’s friend, Aurelia, was living in Ireland
and working in Scribes in Listowel and she persuaded the young couple to try
Ireland.

When the Formaliene
family came to Kerry first, they lived in Firies and Brigita found work in a crèche.

Aurelia introduced
them to Namir Karim. Namir and Brigita soon became friends. They discovered
that they shared a love of food and baking. Brigita’s idea of a nice day off is
to spend it in the kitchen baking.

Brigita’s family today, her husband Almantas and their daughters Melita and Emma

Brigita left her
job in Firies and  started work  in Scribes in 2015. She loved the work and she
grew to love the Listowel people. Soon she had relocated to Lixnaw and was
working in Scribes  regularly .

Before Christmas
2017 Namir decided to leave Listowel, to concentrate on his businesses in
Ballybunion. Again, Brigita did not take too much time to mull over her next
move. She would take over the lease on Scribes. Her family helped her to
redecorate and soon she was open for business in her very own restaurant.

Scribes offers  a small menu of good food. People will be  queueing up to taste her delicious red velvet
cake or her apple tart and home made custard. Her friend makes a  traditional Lithuanian honey cake
that is to die for.

Maybe Brigita’s
wanderlust has been satisfied now and she will settle to business in lovely
Listowel.

This week’s Scribes speciality is Cinnamon Swirl Pancakes served with almond flakes and scoop of vanilla ice-cream ! They were mouthwateringly delicious.

Brigita lives in
Lixnaw with her husband and their two daughters, Melita and Emma.

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Stained Glass Windows



I love a good stained glass window. The ones above are in Duagh.

As I’ve recounted here before the newest such window in Kerry is in St. John’s Tralee. Now I’ve discovered a brilliant post online with great text and great close photos of the Tom Denny window.

Roaringwater Journal

This is St. John in his camel hair coat

This is the father hugging his prodigal son. The theme of the window is reconciliation.

If you have any interest in Tralee or in stained glass art do click on the link above.

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A Little Highlighted Problem


Shane MacAulliffe is in Zanzibar and he posted this local issue on his Facebook page

90% of Zanzibar’s seaweed farmers are women. Their incomes have fallen dramatically in recent years for two reasons. One is that they cannot compete with the cheaper grown seaweed in Asia and also the rising sea temperatures have caused seaweed to die. Once one of Zanzibar’s most important exports, seaweed is shipped to Asia and Europe where it is used in cosmetics.

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Just a Thought



Thank you to all the people who listened to my Just a Thoughts on Radio Kerry last week. Just in case you missed them and would like to hear them, here is the link

Just a Thought ; Week beginning Jan 15 2018

New York, Ballybunion, Red Cross and Turf

January 2018 in Midtown Manhattan

The temperature was -12 when Danny O’Connor, formerly of Gurtinard, took this photo.

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Old Ballybunion

The Ladies’ Beach back in the day.

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 Listowel Red Cross in the 1960s. Does anyone recognise anyone?

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Turf Then and Now



These are stooks of turf standing drying in the bog fadó.

This is the scene in the bog at the end of summer as the turf is saved and ready to be bagged and brought home.

Machine cup turf drying in the bog.

Sods of machine turf.

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My Own Micko Story


Dave O’Sullivan found this in The Kerryman archive from 1981

For those who don’t remember the controversy, it concerned commercial sponsorship of county . teams.

Kerry was one of the first counties to accept endorsements and to do media ads.

The reference to stripes is to the famous Adidas three stripes logo. 

The Mulvihill was Liam Mulvihill the then director general of the GAA.

Convent Street, Pitch and Putt and Athea Mural blown down

From The Irish Farmers’ Journal

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A Quiet Corner of Town undergoing renewal


This site has gone Sale Agreed so we await developments.

One is sold and the other is for sale

This is the area of Convent Street that is about to change.


These houses in Convent Street are boarded up too so it will be good to see life return to this corner of town.

And in another corner of town…

A little bird tells me that Iceland is coming to Listowel shortly.

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Listowel Pitch and Putt Club


Dave O’Sulivan, a loyal follower and supporter of the work of your blogger replied to my appeal for history of the Pitch and Putt Club.



My photos taken at different times of the year show the variety and abundance of planting in the course over the years.

Here are the cuttings that Dave found for us;

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Athea Revisited on January 19 2018




That was then

This is now

The high winds last week flattened the lovely mural with the whole history and mythology of the village on it. I have no doubt that the good people of Athea will see it restored to its former glory.

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And the Winner is



The Dublin Kerry Association have announced their Kerry Person of the year

There was a goodly attendance on the night.

Colm Cooper was revealed as this year’s choice and he got a standing ovation as he entered.

Colm was a very popular choice.

Colm Cooper with  Keelin Kissane of  Listowel, chair of The Kerry Association in Dublin


Dolores and Shane, Knockanure farmers and Scribes

Farming in Ireland

Sam Hendy brings in-calf cows in for the night in Ballymorris, Portarlington, Co Laois.  

Picture:  Irish Farmers Journal.

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Who’d have thought?


 Two world renowned Irish singers, Shane McGowan and Dolores O’Riordan reached personal milestones  in January 2018. Who would have thought that in Shane’s case it would be a big birthday and in Dolores’ case it would be the end of the line.

Sméar Mhullaigh in Irish literally means the top berry, figuratively it means the cream of the crop. Dineen Dictionary on Twitter paid that tribute to Dolores, the top cranberry.

Cinnte b’í an sméar mhullaigh. Braithfimid uainn í.

 Dolores O’Riordan R.I.P. Jan 15 2018

 Shane MacGowan with Victoria Mary Clarke, Johnny Depp and President Michael D. Higgins at his 60th birthday party in January 2018.

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Ah, will you look?

This photo is from The Irish Farmers’ Journal. Farmer Maeve Murphy is using the age old method of heating up a weak new born lamb during this cold weather.

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 Jack Leahy with his prizewinning bull at a show in the 1960s.

Tom Kenelly of Knockanure accepting his prize at a show in the 1960s.

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Scribes


Her name is Brigita so maybe she was destined to settle in Ireland. The new proprietor of Scribes is already making a name for herself for her delicious baking and friendly ambience in her revamped café. I look forward to telling you something more about this lovely lady next week.


Knitwits in Scribes


Homemade scones and confectionery in Scribes

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Listowel Lady on Board of the Charities Regulator Authority




Máire McMahon (in the above photo, which I sourced on Facebook, Máire is on the left of her siblings, Brian and Aoife) has been appointed to the board of the Charities Regulator.

Máire is an excellent choice for this role.

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Nearly There!




This is the Kanturk hurling team who are heading to Newbridge on Sunday to play in the AiB All Ireland Intermediate hurling semi final.

If they win on Sunday they will book their place in Croke Park on St. Patrick’s Day.

I wish the very best of luck to everyone involved with this great team, especially my cousins, the three Fitzgerald brothers, and more especially my niece, Elizabeth, club vice chair and assistant PRO, and all her band of loyal supporters.

Ceann Toirc abú


Shortis’ Ballybunion, Vietnam and coursing in the 1960s

Blennerville in 2017

Photo: Chris Grayson


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Shortis’ Bunker Bar, Ballybunion


An Anglican priest, lecturer and writer called Patrick Comerford writes a great  blog here 

Patrick Comerford’s Blog

The below photo and story is from his January 8 2018 post.

William Shortis was born in Carrick-on-Suir, Co Tipperary, in 1869, and came to Ballybunion around 1888 and worked for about a decade as the Ballybunion station manager on the Listowel & Ballybunion Railway (L&BR). This unique, nine-mile monorail ran between the two Kerry towns from 1888 to 1924, and was known affectionately as the Lartigue, after its French inventor, Charles Lartigue.



Shortis was a founding member of the nearby Ballybunion Golf Club in 1893, and he built Shortis’s bar and lounge around this time. Like many pubs of the day, the premises included a general shop, selling everything from groceries and hardware to shoes and clothing, as well as coal, iron and oil, and William Shortis also exported salmon to Harrod’s in London.



William Shortis married Annie Brown, but life took a sad turn for the family in 1905. Annie, died in childbirth on 7 June 1905, and William died five months later on 12 November 1905. Local lore suggests he died of a broken heart, leaving five children with no parents.



Annie’s sisters, Norah and Mary Brown, moved in to take care of the Shortis children.



By 1911, the eldest son Patrick Shortis, aged 18, was a theology student at All Hallows’ College in Drumcondra, Dublin, studying for ordination to the priesthood.



But five years later, Patrick Shortis died in the Easter Rising in Dublin in 1916. He fought at the GPO in 1916 and was killed with the O’Rahilly in an assault on the Rotunda. His brother, Liam Shortis, was a Republican prisoner during the Irish Civil War, but was released in 1924 and became an eye specialist. Dr Liam Shortis died in the 1950s.



The pub on the corner of Main Street and Cliff Road in Ballybunion was renovated around 1930, and a render pilaster pub-front was inserted at the ground floor. The pub was extended to the rear to north in late 20th century, with the addition of a single-bay, single-storey flat-roofed return that has a dormer attic added. The shopfront has pilasters, decorative consoles and modillion cornice, and the painted rendered walls have decorative panels at the east gable end.



Today, the bar is also known as the Bunker Lounge, which is appropriate considering the role of William Shortis in founding the Ballybunion Golf Club around the same time as he was building his pub and shop.



A cut-stone plaque on the corner of this building reads: ‘To the memory of Lt Patrick Shortis born here in 1895, killed in action in the Easter Rising, Dublin 1916, erected by the No 7 Kerry Republican Soldiers Memorial Committee, 1966.’ 

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Crossword Poems



I love poems and I love crosswords so, when I recently saw a book entitled Crossword Poems in one of my favourite shops, Second Time Around, Upper William St., Listowel I was intrigued.

Gather ye rosebuds while ye may

Old Time is still a flying

And that same flower that smiles today

Tomorrow may be dying.

This is an example of a crossword poem. 

Apparently in the years before WW2 British schoolchildren all followed a common course in English, so there was a corpus of poetry known to every child. The compiler of The Times crossword always had one clue that was a line from one of these well known poems with a word omitted.

People had a kind of sentimental attachment to these poems and in 2000, the people at Parsimony Press published an anthology of the well loved poems under the title

 Crossword Poems.

Here is another one;

The Lady Mary Villiers lies

Under this stone with weeping eyes.

The parents that first gave her birth,

And their sad friends laid her in earth,

If any of them, Reader, were

Known unto thee, shed a tear;

Or if thyself possess a gem

As dear to thee, as this to them,

Though a stranger to this place,

Bewail in theirs thine own hard case;

For thou perhaps at thy return

May’st find they darling in an urn.

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Mike and Marie Moriarty were in Vietnam





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Coursing Photo from the 1960s




You’ll have to help me with the names

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Storm Fionn at Skellig



Photo: Valerie O’Sullivan on Twitter

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