Listowel Connection

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

A Wet Summer

In the wildflower meadow in Childers’ Park in August 2024

In the Playground

Aoife brought a towel to the playground on Saturday, August 24 2024.In summer 2024 a girl has to be prepared for wet conditions.

Maybe it’s a combination of Kildare and Listowel influences but she loves a ride on anything resembling a horse.

She dried the slide before having a go.

She did her best with the swing but, by now, the towel was saturated.

She loved this musical instrument. Wet or dry this functioned.

Best Dressed Lady

Maria Stack of Listowel took the title of Best Dressed at Limerick show at the weekend. Maria made her own hat.

In the Paper

In Saturday’s Irish Examiner there is a section for readers’ photographs. In that section on last Saturday was a reader’s photograph of our own Matt Mooney whistling away, oblivious of the camera, at the recent fleadh in Wexford.

Drunk

The Demon Drink

I was having a drink many moons ago in the IFI social club in Lamberton, Arklow and a man came in enquiring if his friend was on the premises. The barman told him that he was gone, and our man asked if was long gone. The barman’s response is still stored in my memory bank. Well, he said Johnny was nearly gone when he came in, but he went home before he was fully gone. That was his way of saying that Johnny was fairly drunk or ar meisce when he arrived but left before he was fully polluted.

Isn’t it absolutely amazing how many ways you can say that a person was drunk like maith go leor or he was stocious or legless or footless, langers, out of his/her skull, fluthered or just locked. In answer to questions about what state people were in after a few bevvies people could say s/he was three sheets in the wind, twisted, staggering, in the staggers, all over the place or legless.

These were moderate terms for peoples whose alcohol infused brains had upset their equilibrium a bit but then you can go up the scale and describe people as twisted, jarred, pissed, half cut, polluted, scuttered, ossified

Then you can go into the upper stratosphere of drink and drunk terminology when you say a person was paralytic, shit faced, rat arsed, bollixed.

I think I heard a lot of terms as I grew from boy to man. There was a certain bravado in saying you were drunk, buckled, locked, plastered, or whatever other endearing term was used for being maith go leor and that you didn’t remember anything from the night before. Little did we know what damage we were doing to our brains and general body health. There wasn’t the same awareness of health and the damaging relationship with alcohol. It was the rite of passage to go out for a night and get polluted.

Nowadays there is a much greater awareness of fitness and health and healthy living which are improving the quality of lives and living standards. Younger people are more attracted to gyms, sports arenas and the café culture preferring the skinny latte to the pint of beer.

The pub culture is no longer as popular as it was. I was listening to the radio today and they were speaking about the staggering fact that nearly 2000 pubs had closed in the past 20 years. They also referred to the statistic that alcohol consumption was at its lowest level in Ireland for 35 years and that we have turned into a wine consuming nation. There is also a far greater acceptance of zero alcohol drinks and drink driving is frowned upon. Worryingly there is an increase in the use of social drugs.

We are known all over the world for our love of the jar, and our pub culture but it sure seems to be changing. The takeaway is cheaper than the pub. Everything is getting more expensive from groceries, cars, fuel and housing. All these are putting pressure on people’s wallets and an increasing number of people are putting the demon drink well down the priorities on the shopping list. We will be a better off, healthier people because of this change in culture and lifestyle. Let’s hope it continues.

Mick O Callaghan

A Fact

Between 1880 and 1916, the legal time in Dublin was set at Dunsink Observatory and called Dublin Mean Time. This time was 25 minutes 21 seconds behind Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).

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Winners despite the Weather

Aoife McKenna with the story of Summer 2024

Revival 2024

The music festival was a huge success. A big well done to all the organisers. They brought some world class acts right to our doorstep.

The story of the weekend has to be Sharon Shannon in Áras Mhuire. I got the story and photos on Áras Mhuire Facebook page. They give all the credit for arranging the visit to Aiden O’Connor of Mike the Pies.

Sharon was joined by local musicians, Eamonn and Tom.

Sharon met James Gould

with Breda Moore whom she met first many years ago.

From the Archives

Unfortunately, there is no year given on the poster.

Footballers

Paudie Clifford, present Kerry captain and Jimmy Deenihan, former Kerry captain met up in in Garvey’s Super Valu when Paudie brought the Sam Maguire (on loan from Armagh) to the opening of the revamped Listowel store.

Stone Walls

Some old dry stone walls in Listowel…

A Fact

Russia has 11 time zones.

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A Bronze Horse, Fireworks in Budapest and Historic Poverty in Dublin

A snail in Wexford; Photo credit, Mick O’Callaghan

What an Athlete!

The great Paul O’Donovan this weekend won his seventh world gold medal, this time rowing alone is the lightweight skull championships. He stayed away from any Olympic celebrations, where, of course, he also won gold in a boat with Fintan MacCarthy. What focus, what dedication? Superman!

AND let’s not forget that Siobhan McCrohan won bronze at the world championships as well. That was a great achievement too against a strong field of oarswomen.

Then Liam ÓHainnín shared this from a Love of History page on Facebook.

“The Jockey of Artemision is a large Hellenistic bronze statue of a young boy riding a horse, dated to around 150–140 BC.

It is a rare surviving original bronze statue from Ancient Greece and a rare example in Greek sculpture of a racehorse. Most ancient bronzes were melted down for their raw materials some time after creation, but this one was saved from destruction when it was lost in a shipwreck in antiquity, before being discovered in 1926.

It may have been dedicated to the gods by a wealthy person to honour victories in horse races, probably in the single-horse race (Greek: κέλης – kēles). The artist is unknown.”

Budapest

People may remember my grandsons, Sean and Killian, who used to holiday every summer in Listowel. We used to visit Kennedy’s Pet Farm, Coolwood, The Donkey Sanctuary as well as Ballybunion, The Rose of Tralee and the Dog Track. Happy days!

Now the boys are young men and spreading their wings. This summer their travels took then to Portugal, Strasburg and only last week to Budapest. Sean sent me these photos of the world renowned fireworks display for St. Stephen’s Day 2024.

St Stephen’s Day, Hungary’s national holiday, is celebrated on August 20. It commemorates the first king of Hungary. There is a massive fireworks display on The Danube. It is attended by huge crowds.

Getting home on The Metro was “mental”, according to Sean.

A Monday Kind of Poem

The Bad Old Days

Dublin, 19 June 1915 – The Fresh Air Association has appealed for funds to allow it continue its work of sending underprivileged children in Dublin for a week in the countryside to relieve them from the troubles of life in the city.

The association estimates the cost of five shillings a week procures board and lodging in healthy surroundings for a child for a week. In a statement this week, the association claimed: ‘None but those who work among the poor have any idea of the happiness it affords the young people to see the green fields, and enjoy the pure air of the country.’

[Editor’s note: This is an article from Century Ireland, a fortnightly online newspaper, written from the perspective of a journalist 100 years ago, based on news reports of the time.]

The above is from The National Archives

Jer found the following in a later 1920s newspaper…

At a public meeting in Cork a Fresh Air Fund was inaugurated for the purpose of giving poor children holidays in the country or at the seaside. The Lord Mayor, Councillor Daly, presided. The project was sponsored by Cork Council of Women, and Miss Long, Secretary of the Dublin Fresh Air Fund, explained the working of the scheme.

Does anyone remember any of these children coming to Kerry?

A Fact

The Eiffel Tower was originally intended for Barcelona but the project was rejected.

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Cork Visit

Another snap of the Wexford garden of Mick O’Callaghan

A Listowel Connection in Ballincollig

The Baker after whom this street is named was connected by marriage to the Gleasure family of The Square, Listowel.

This is the latest housing development on Baker Street.

The Honan Chapel, UCC

The beautiful national treasure that is the Honan Chapel.

This doorway has featured in many many wedding photographs.

The nave with its iconic river mosaic

The stained glass in this church is among the best there is.

Eleven of the windows are the work of Harry Clarke. I thought this was St. Gobnait. Now I’m not so sure.

The plaque commemorating the Honan family who contributed generously to the establishment of this chapel and the nearby Honan hostel.

A Poem

Goodnight Sister

I took this picture of Nell McCafferty at Women in Media in Ballybunion in 2018. Nell passed away on August 21 2024.

Nell was a fearless advocate for women’s rights. She will always be remembered in these parts for her outspoken championing of Joanne Hayes during her ordeal at the hands of men in Tralee courthouse.

Nell was a voice for voiceless women. May she rest in peace.

A Fact

The car manufacturer, Volvo, made the three point seatbelt design patent open and available free of charge to other car manufactures. They did this in the interests of safety.

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Family Time

Kinsale, Sunday August 18 2024

Kilsinon Graveyard

Lovely overview of Kilsinon graveyard

No Irish Need Apply

J.A. Harris

Help wanted ads New York Times May 1 1855.

This seems like terrible discrimination by NY protestants in the 19th century. There are plenty of incidences of similar insularity from Catholics in Ireland. Up to the 1960s we were forbidden to set foot inside a protestant church. During the Dublin Lockout of 1913 when the children of the striking workers were starving, the Catholic clergy of the time refused to allow them to be fostered out to Protestant families who were willing to take them in.

Nana was Naughty

Nana bought Aoife the dearest lollipop in the shop (or maybe even in any shop) while Mammy was doing the food shopping

Aoife agreed to sing dumb.

It was well worth the money.

Eclipse, The Pony

This is where Róisín’s pony lives and where she goes to ride him.

This equestrian centre is situated in the rolling hillside of Crookstown, Co. Cork.

I was only the driver. Aimee was the able assistant and videographer for the day.

Aimee took the selfie when Eclipse was all tacked up and ready to go.

In the arena

Eclipse wanted to get up close and personal.

I was on the outside with the dogs.

A Fact

The driest place on earth is in the Atacama Desert in Chile. Rain has never been recorded in some parts of this desert.

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