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

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Mary Cogan, retired from teaching in Presentation Secondary School, Listowel, Co. Kerry. I am a native of Kanturk, Co. Cork.
I have published two books; Listowel Through a Lens and A minute of your Time

Listowel Food Fair Food Trail 2024

William Street Lower in November 2024

Listowel Food Fair Food Trail 2024

Take a look at this array in John R.’s Foodhall and you will know why the 20 places on the food trail are pounced on as soon as they go on sale.

I felt like a youngster nabbing a concert ticket when I bagged mine as soon as they hit the internet.

But back to the trail…

We started our tasting journey in the lovely welcoming Listowel Garden Centre and Cafe.

Like all 5 stops on the trail, Thyme Out Cafe and the garden centre, boutique and gift shop are businesses run by a Listowel family. Nick and Liz, Mairead and Feidhlim Roberts are the power behind Listowel Garden Centre.

The café converted a special corner of the shop into a crepe tasting zone for us. We sampled lots of different filled crepes and we gave feedback on the ones we liked.

Local born but world travelled chef, John Relihan, and his lovely wife, Thalita joined Jimmy Deenihan and Anne Marie O’Riordan to get us started on our food journey.

Jimmy met up with the wife of an old football buddy.

On we went to stop number 2, John R.’s

Again, this is a well established old family business. Joseph and Hannah (above) inherited the business and then passed it on to Pierce and Marian, who expanded it and grew it into the beautiful delicatessen, bakery, winery and accommodation that it is today.

We got delicious savoury and sweet snacks and some wine.

John Relihan who has tasted focaccia in eateries all over the world said that John R.’s focaccia is the best he has tasted. He has been looking forward to it since last year’s trail.

Here is the team behind the feast.

Nicole, was standing in for Pierce who is recovering well from surgery. She is actually on maternity leave but she brought the family along to be part of the occasion.

(more tomorrow)

Something Old….

Do you remember the headline copy? This was the bane of so many lives. The skill of handwriting took care, precision and attention to detail. God help you if you were left-handed. Thank God for computers, autocorrect and the ability to scratch out and rewrite whole sentences and even whole paragraphs.

Rock On

The Stick Of Sweet Rock

Maide Carraige Milis

( Mick O’Callaghan takes a trip down Memory Lane.) 

When I see sticks of rock nowadays, I am immediately transported back into a long-lost part of my life. My taste buds are instantly activated, and the memory section of my cranial department goes into overdrive with thoughts and memories of rock.

 I remember images of holiday times of my youth, day trips to Ballybunion and relations coming home from England and America. The English folk always seemed to come with Blackpool Rock while the American cousins brought candy cane to us when they visited. I can clearly remember the unbridled excitement of tearing off the wrapping and revealing the glorious spearmint flavoured stick of boiled sugar. I recall the dire warnings from my mother about damaging my teeth as we busily tried to bury our molars into the rock-hard piece of confectionery.

My memory tape plays on and I am now at Puck Fair in Killorglin in the glorious month of August. We crossed over the Laune Bridge and parked our bikes in Foleys yard where they were chained and padlocked and safe for the day. As we were emerging our nostrils picked up the scent of fish and chips and crubeens or pig’s feet. It was traditional to eat them and who was I to break the custom. We gorged on the greasy messy fat laden pigs’ trotters and having devoured them we plodded on to the first chip wagon where we ate round two of greasy lunch, all washed down with a bottle of Nash’s red lemonade followed by the bar of Cadbury’s chocolate for dessert. Then we left it to our overworked digestive system to look after that mixture.

Now that the gourmet dining was finished and appetites were satisfied, we headed up the hill to view King Puck who was crowned king and safely ensconced in his regal perch above the citizens of Killorglin, where he reigned for three days. There were hurdy gurdies, hucksters de gach sort, three card trick people, horse dealers, manure, and smells everywhere. You never in all your days saw such an array of loose sweets, rocks, loose biscuits on sale everywhere. They were filled into paper tóisíns [cone shaped paper containers]and handled by people who had never sanitised or washed their hands or wore plastic gloves in their lives. We ate them all and survived to tell the tale. On the way home we had to buy the souvenir rock from puck.

And then there was the annual pilgrimage to Knock Shrine. Pilgrims travelled by bus and train from all over the country to the shrine. I remember my father coming home exhausted after the trip. They recited constant rosaries, with each decade interspersed by an exhortation to Mary followed by passionate singing of hymns in praise of Mary e.g. Queen of the May. Then there was the mass in the shrine followed by the Stations of the Cross and benediction. The day wasn’t complete without a trip to the stalls, purchasing miraculous medals, scapulars, small bottles of holy water, rosary beads and the stick of rock from Knock for the children. All the religious paraphernalia were blessed, but I am not too sure about the blessed rock from Knock.

Years later when I was teaching in Arklow town there was one Tommy from Knock teaching there, and we shared digs. Tommy left school every Friday evening when there was a major pilgrimage group in Knock because he had a stall there. He travelled back early Monday morning and always looked very tired and dishevelled after his weekend of selling religious objects to the throngs of people who flocked from north, south, east, and west looking for some miraculous cure. I remember getting a lift down to school on one wet Monday morning from Tommy. He told me to clear the front seat. It was full of rosary beads, scapulars, medals and on the floor were two boxes of Knock Rock which he said were his best sellers as they had a special dental blessing. I believed him but thousands would not.

So, whether its spearmint, Neapolitan, peppermint, or green and gold sticks of boiled sugar stickiness you’re into, let’s all move on and eat our rock, if you can still buy them.

Rock on.

A Fact

The Procrastinators’ Club of America sends a newsletter to its members under the masthead Last Month’s Newsletter.

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Antiques, Stained Glass and US Presidents

St. Mary of the Angels….photo: Chris Grayson

Listowel Traders at the Antiques Fair

The National Antiques, Art and Vintage Fair will be held in Limerick Racecourse on November 16 and 17. Dan and Maureen Hartnett of Listowel will be there.

Article from The Irish independent.

Book Promoting

I’m busy with engagements these days.

These doors lead to Listowel Garden Centre and Café. The lovely people there have invited me to be a (small) part of their customer appreciation evening on November 21. I’ll remind you all again next week.

Here I am in Super Valu, replacing the stock of my book which was sold out.

Tomorrow, Wednesday November 13 2024 I’m on Radio Kerry with Deidre Walsh on Talkabout and on Friday, November 15 2024 I will be a guest of Listowel Tidy Towns at their prize giving.

Moments of Reflection is available in Woulfe’s, Eason, Listowel Garden Centre, Garvey’s Super Valu, Prifma, Kerry Writers’ Museum, Watsons in Duagh, An Siopa Milseán in Abbeyfeale and O’Mahony’s in Tralee.

Presidential Messages

It is customary in the US for the outgoing president to leave a message for his successor. Below is the message George HW Bush left for Bill Clinton.

Biden never revealed the contents of the note Trump left for him in 2020 but he described it as “shockingly gracious”. I hope Biden will be just as gracious in defeat. I hope Trump will share the note with us all. It’s time for healing.

Windows of Wonder

In the Church of the Resurrection, Mallow there are some striking windows.

Doesn’t this look like a priest with outstretched arms blessing the congregations. The window looks like his vestments

This window is in the baptistry.

This blue resurrection window has a look of the Harry Clarke studio about it but I couldn’t find the information online.

Listowel Food Fair 2024

The big name celebrity guest this year was Mark Moriarty. His book sold out and his demonstration was enjoyed by a full house in the ballroom of The Listowel Arms.

Mark with Ruth O’Quigley, one of the longest serving members of Listowel Food Fair committee.

Jimmy Deenihan presented Mark with his commemorative plaque.

Breeda and Margaret, both keen cooks and fans of Moriarty, came from Co. Cork to see him in action.

A Fact

The rose family of plants gives us flowers, apples, pears, plums, cherries, almonds, peaches and apricots.

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A Morning in Mallow

Photo; Chris Grayson in Killarney National Park

This Week in Listowel Family Resource Centre

If you are interested in any of these groups, here is how you can contact the centre

Facebook page: Listowel Family Resource Centre

Phone: (068) 23584

Ballygologue, John B Keane Road, Listowel, V31 EC62

In Mallow

A benefit of producing a book is that it has got me out and about and reconnection with family, old friends and new. I met Eileen Vaughan in Mallow, a lovely lady who will recognise a few faces in Moments of Reflection.

I visited the Church of the Resurrection, which is the newer of Mallow’s parish churches.

This church was designed by J.R. Boyd Barrett and completed by the Cork building firm of Daniel Hegarty in 1969. It cost €150,000. It has had a few upgrades since but its original design is remarkably innovative and practical.

The lady who gave the diocese the site is commemorated in a simple plaque.

The church is very big. It has a capacity of 1,000. It is build in a fan shape, with no side aisles so that everyone in the congregation has a clear view of the altar.

I couldn’t find any account online of where the stained glass was sourced but the theme seemed to me to be resurrection with depictions of the risen Christ appearing to various cohorts of disciples.

A Date to Save

An Ancient Stone

This is on the outside wall of Benners Hotel in Tralee. Does it really date back to 1656?

She’s Nearly There

Listowel Food Fair 2024

I’ll be posting my Food Fair pictures later on this week. The Fair ends gtodcay and it wax a great success.

A Fact

The very first London Underground station was officially opened at Stockwell, South London in 1890

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An Old School Reader

Photo: Chris Grayson

This huge bell from the Presentation Convent sits in its alcove in the yard beside St. Mary’s. The Virgina Creeper that surrounds it is bare and creepy looking in Winter.

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A Conundrum

A New Sign

Rasa’s popular nail studio has an elaborate new sign.

An Old Craft

I bought the below d’oiley in Vincent’s charity shop. You have to be close to my age to remember these and to appreciate the hard work that went into making them.

The first time I saw one of these was in a convent parlour. The nuns had a period of recreation in the evenings when they sat around reading or doing craftwork. Pieces like these were often what they produced.

There was much skill involved in crocheting these centrepieces. Usually a cut glass bowl sat in the middle and the “swans” surrounded it.

An Old Schoolbook

Recently a friend gifted me this old treasure. I looked it up online and while it wasn’t possible to put a year on it I’d say it dates from the 1940s or 50s.

It seems to belong to a series of readers, each named after a saint. I’ll give you a few sample pages next week, but the style of writing seems to be very preachy and aimed more at the teacher than the young reader. Thank God schoolbooks have come a long way since.

A Fact

Rubik, who invented the puzzle cube that bears his name, once confessed that after he invented it it took a month before he could solve it a second time.

The Dying Art of Letter Writing

The beautiful Darren Enright Tidy Town seat, practical and beautiful. This welcome seat is a triumph of design, craftsmanship and location. It is just one of the many unique features that make Listowel stand out from other Irish towns.

Big Job under way at Kerry Writers’ Museum

The Postman

This picture is from the internet but the scene was replicated in November and December. in every town and village.

In Listowel back in the day we used to have two postal deliveries. In November and December extra postmen would have to be taken on to deal with the volume of cards and parcels arriving into town daily. There was no online shopping back then. These parcels contained presents.

Mick O’Callaghan writes here about the important role of letter writing in our lives in the old days.

PLEASE MR POSTMAN.

I remember that song by The Carpenters with its catchy first line ” Please Mr Postman look and see if there’s a letter, a letter for me.”

 I love writing, composing , scribbling , doodling or whatever title you want to call it, but I note in latter years I write fewer letters . The only ones I write now are congratulating someone on retirement or on the occasion of a  special birthday. Increasingly I am also writing sympathy letters because someone  of my own vintage has died.

In my school days letter writing was very important. It was the main communication system for people .We were taught how to write the letter with the correct address and date on the top right-hand corner. Once that piece was correct  you began  the letter with the formal address of  Dear —–.

You then proceeded to start the letter, so careful to spell each word correctly. Each paragraph had to be clearly indented. The proper thought process had to be correct so that each paragraph was a complete section.  Then you proceeded to the next paragraph with the fresh news section to be developed .When the letter was finished there was the signing off and this process was always quite perplexing.

Do I address the person as  Yours Sincerely, or Yours truly, or other such endearing term?

When this was complete there was the envelope to be addressed. You had to make sure you wrote the address in straight lines. `This was an imperative. Sometimes I used a light pencil mark to guide my straight-line writing . 

Finally, the process was complete, and you had to submit it to teacher for critical arbitration and await  the verdict. It amazed me that no matter how hard I tried teacher always found cause to use that red biro and pass some derogatory comment about my snail like scrawl.

In my own teaching career I used Composition and Grammar Parts 1and 2 by Mairéad Ní Ghráda . These were brilliant little books for proper writing lessons. I still have my copy of it and now and again I will have a peep inside the cover.

This simple letter writing exercise caused me great distress because in my head I saw no point in wasting time at this exercise when I could be doing my worthwhile Maths which I loved.

      Anyway, we had good times in  5th class, except for  the dreaded letter writing.  I put it behind me as an experience not to be repeated again in life.

I was sadly disillusioned because in sixth year English during my Leaving Cert year our English teacher  came in one morning and announced that we would be dealing with a very important topic this week, namely letter writing. He stressed how important it was in our lives. There was a collective gasp as we recalled our earlier days of letter writing in 5th class .

        Now however our future lives depended on the famous letter of application. He told us that employers first impression of us would be the letter and no employer would employ someone who couldn’t write or spell properly or lay out a letter properly.

        Now we had a new realisation of the importance of proper hand-writing. I went home and practised assiduously and at the end of the week I was  pleased to get a commendation for my application letter thanks to my late father’s nightly inputs.

      With my Leaving Cert completed I was accepted in St Patrick’s College for teacher training. Imagine my horror when I heard we had a professor of black board drawing and writing who emphasised the importance of proper legible writing on the blackboard and each word properly spelt and all written in straight lines . It was all so serious but funny now when you reflect back on it all 56 years later. I am sure that Professor Dignam has a nice scroll written for himself in heaven and proud as punch that he taught so many the craft of using a piece of chalk properly.His dusters were always so clean and he stressed the importance of giving the dusters a few bangs during the day to keep the. blackboard clean.

It is all a far cry from the modern era of  whiteboards, laptops, mobile phone apps, text messages, whats app, face time and computers and Instagram.

I have embraced all this technology because it has enriched our lives. I could not imagine being without my mobile phone or laptop. .

In this techie world there is something that annoys me a little  though. When I write a message to someone and they reply `TKs or cu soon. or some  such code, which is an insult to the English language.

Another irritant occurs when you take some time, thought and trouble to send someone a letter. You have spent some time checking over the spellings and syntax of the message and then you get an insulting yellow thumbs up sign back in reply. I don’t respond usually to these people . Some weeks later I get a message of “We haven’t heard from you in a while. “Impishly, I reply with a yellow thumbs up sign .Yes I too have joined the modern era.

Mick O Callaghan

A Poem in Praise of November

Important Zoom Talk

A Fact

The Rubik’s Cube was invented in 1974 by a Hungarian professor of architecture, Erno Rubik.

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