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

Tag: Countdown

Cats and Dogs, Bicycles and Trains

Pat Nolan’s Corner, Charles Street in February 2024

A Poem

Mick O’Callaghan muses on the little trials of life when one shares space with a cat or dog

Feline and canine indiscretions

I must say I love gardening.

I get such mental and stress relief 

From my regular communing with nature 

Gardening is a very relaxing exercise.

When I am planting and weeding, 

While pruning roses with my sharp secateurs

Digging up the fresh earth to the delight of birds

As they forage for any worms around

Which are silly enough to stick a head above ground,

In my raking, hoeing, and forking in fertiliser.

In bending, stretching, and pulling, 

Pushing the wheelbarrow along

My muscles are stretched on a regular basis.

Relaxing too as I sit on my garden bench

Sipping coffee, nibbling fruit or scoffing biscuits

Soaking up the lovely perfumed natural aromas around

From carnations, azaleas, dahlias, and roses

It is all sheer heavenly bliss.

But occasionally I am taken aback. 

While on my knees weeding

 I touch some offending matter 

In the form of feline indiscretion 

The scent and aroma are rather foul .

Disgusting, stomach wrenching stuff

I curse the cats with expletives most foul.

Their owners too, 

Who allow them to relieve their bowels

Onto my hallowed lawns edge

And on my manicured flower beds

I arise from my knees, cursing internally.

I scramble indoors to clean off the offending matter.

Scrubbing my fingers and hands with soap and hot water

With annoyance and anger bubbling up inside me

I now just abandon my gardening for a wee while.

And decide to head for a walk in the Town Park instead

To becalm my rising feline aroused anger.

I don my  runners and progress out the front door

I pass by Sean Lios Houses and arrive in The Park

To begin my circuits before it gets dark 

While strolling, I scent a strange smell

Which follows me around and lingers like hell

In the air around my personal space.

 I bring it home to the hall in my head.

As I cross the threshold, I get a strange feeling

Senior house management greets me strangely,

Commenting on the stinking smell now pervading the house

I am quickly banished outside the front door

To take off my runners and examine them more

Whereupon I note some foreign matter

In the form of stinking rotten dog poo most foul

All clogged between the ridges of my runners.

I take them off and I was banished to the yard. 

And am ordered to do some immediate de-fumigation

So, I take out garden hose, brush, and disinfectant

To clean doggie poo matter 

From the parts of my runners that were canine infected

So now disinfected I’m allowed back into the hall.

I reflect on my day, and I curse humans who have the gall

To let their darling four-legged friends 

Deposit their excrement in public at their will.

I don’t own a cat or dog, never did, never will.

And still here I am, inconvenienced, discommoded.

By the indiscriminate depositing actions 

Of purring feline and barking canine household pets 

Whose owners are not fully aware just yet

Of the toileting habits of their darling pets

And certainly, need more training 

In poo bagging and binning

To avoid poo litter sinning.

Trust

Look mom, no hands,

Look mom, no lock.

I was delighted, if a little surprised, to see a young visitor park their bike without a thought to its safety.

Trying to Make a Connection

Here is an email from the postbag. Maybe someone is researching the same family and would like to get in touch.

Hi Mary,

I have done some research on my family name and have traced my great-great grandfather and he had come from Listowel.

I am come from Australia to play in the Over 70 football World Cup in Cardiff Wales in August, and looking at coming to Listowel as well.

His name was William Joseph Pierse born 1815 maybe 1819, died 1861 aged 42 or 47? There are 2 death ages on the same document. 

His father may have been a surgeons tool maker in Listowel maybe David Pierse? 

There is one search at says William was born in 1829? But this made him too young and David Pierse father born 1810 which makes him too young.

Maybe there was two William Pierse from Listowel born 10 years apart.

He, William, became a surgeon, studying at LAC Dublin and came to Australia as a ships surgeon in 1852. 

The ship sank in Port Phillip bay and he stayed and married a passenger Elissa Newman.

From here I can follow the family history and how our name changed to the spelling Pierce in the late 1890’s

Told the Pierse with S was Catholic and getting work for Irish Catholic’s was hard in Australia then.

I have seen that you have had other enquires about the same name maybe you have some more info for me before I come.

Keith Pierce.  Sydney Aust.

An Spideog concluded

David Kissane

Post Torun

The weeks after Torun brought some challenging stories for some who had been involved in those championships. The story of our Kerry walking colleague Pat Murphy and his severe stroke was among the more unfortunate ones. Pat’s courage has seen him walking again at Christmas. 

When the British Masters walk championships got underway in Derby on a warm September Saturday, my opponent from Torun, Ian Torode was not at the starting line. Hopefully he will be in London in February for the indoors. 

And there were more sad stories also. We know we are not getting any younger, but surely we should be allowed to get a bit luckier. This scribbler can account himself among the lucky ones this summer. After a day that began at 6am in July at the national juvenile championships in Tullamore coaching and doing photography, I fell asleep in my van on the way home. No one injured. Luckily. My beloved van wasn’t so lucky and is now recycled. Information suggests that the neck pain and PT playbacks will fade but my advice to any driver is…do not drive when weary. One in five fatal road accidents are due to tiredness. 

                                                        Dancing in the dark

But the post-Torun period brought some new departures. My walking colleague Serena analysed a missing ingredient to my training. She has a keen eye for such things. She got the bright idea that early morning runs would suit her lifestyle. Would I like to join her? I thought it was some kind of joke, because Serena can be very funny. At times!

Anyway, why not, I says. So began a series of dawn walks/jogs/runs. Up at 6am, in the Ardfert Recreation Centre at 6.30am and watch the sun rise. Serena’s friend Sharon started the sessions also, and she was becoming quite a walker/runner when fate led her in another direction. Then Denis joined in for a while, then Martina, then Marian, then Lisa and a few more on occasion. My cynical neighbour called us the ARC Angels! 

But I was hooked. Even when Serena couldn’t attend, especially if she was after getting her hair done or such like, the dawn runs/walks became obligatory in my schedule. It was indeed one of the missing links in my previous training regime. 

And then April became May and the mornings got brighter and the birds sang for us and June became July and I was able to celebrate my 70th birthday with a morning walk. And August became September and mornings had broken like the first mornings, to quote the song. October morphed into November and the mornings became so dark that we couldn’t see each other. Serena said that was no bad thing! It became a Mick Molloy/Martin McEvilly situation. Running in the dark. Dancing in the dark. 

It carried us through the national outdoors, the British Masters, the Dublin Marathon, the cross country season and the 10K national walks. Then December brought some wet pre-dawns as well morning starry skies – the plough in the stars was so near once that I could have ploughed a furrow with it. Now I am instructed to be at the ARC in the morning at 6.30 for the first 2024 session.

It’s been some journey from crossing the Wisla in March to crossing the Spideog today on January 1st. 2024

Let the magic and the madness continue.

He Did It

When a contestant wins at Countdown for 8 consecutive weeks he is declared an octochamp and he is retired from competition until the finals in June.

Jack Harvey, with the very tenuous Listowel connection (see previous post), has achieved that honour. And he didn’t need a conundrum to get him there.

A Fact

During WW2 a complete blackout was observed in the cities and towns of Britain so that German bombers could not easily find their targets in the dark.

However, furnaces from steam trains glowed brightly and could be spotted by enemy navigators. If a train driver heard a plane overhead, he knew that the plan would be to follow the line of light and be led straight to a town or airfield. So train drivers were instructed , if they heard an aircraft, to pull into the nearest siding and leg it away from the train.

These were, of course, goods trains, so no passengers to evacuate.

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The One with Countdown in it

Old church tower on Church Street in February 2024

Countdown… A Listowel Connection?

I love Countdown. It’s a very very old fashioned game show on Channel 4 on weekday afternoons. In a digital age it’s a quaint throwback to old times. Contestants write with pens on paper, Rachel picks actual letter and number tiles from physical boxes. The analogue clock ticks down the 30 seconds. The goody bag includes a hard copy of a dictionary and a teapot!

It’s all very low tech.

Now the Listowel connection? Well, I’m stretching it a bit. I know somebody who knows somebody who is currently doing very well on Countdown.

This is Jack Harvey from Grimsby. By the way, waterings is not a word. Jack tried and was shot down by Susie Dent. I think it definitely is a word but if it’s not in her dictionary it’s not allowed. ( Didn’t you often give the plants a good watering, and, if you were going away, two good waterings?)

Jack is a friend of Liz and Jim Dunn’s. They are looking forward to a big day out at Jack and Xenia’s wedding this summer.

Jack is a super countdowner, equally brilliant at unscrambling letters and doing Maths puzzles and he is the best conundrum solver ever.

Education in Listowel Workhouse in Famine Times

The last of Kay Caball’s heartbreaking snippets…

9 October 1851 The Bedford Schoolmaster requests an Assistant:   ‘Let the Assistant Schoolmaster Stack proceed to Bedford. Let the Schoolmaster divide the boys into three classes, each of which should get two hours instruction daily – Stack to be in charge of the boys when out of school’.

Dr. Enright – ‘Suggesting that the Schoolboys should be compelled to wash themselves daily – and that soap and towels should be provided for that purpose’.  On washing being questioned by the Board the Bedford Master states that the boys wash themselves perfectly clean every morning, but they have no towels. A large canvas roller was therefore ordered to be supplied.

16 October 1851 Miss Nolan the Schoolmistress resigned … The Clerk was directed to advertise for a Trained Teacher in her stead.

10 July 1852 There were 617 boys/677 girls in the workhouse between 9 & 18 yrs of age.  24 boys and 22 girls were discharged that week, 1 boy had died.

15 July 1852  The Officers Reports were read as follows:

9 October 1851 The Bedford Schoolmaster requests an Assistant:   ‘Let the Assistant Schoolmaster Stack proceed to Bedford. Let the Schoolmaster divide the boys into three classes, each of which should get two hours instruction daily – Stack to be in charge of the boys when out of school’.

Dr. Enright – ‘Suggesting that the Schoolboys should be compelled to wash themselves daily – and that soap and towels should be provided for that purpose’.  On washing being questioned by the Board the Bedford Master states that the boys wash themselves perfectly clean every morning, but they have no towels. A large canvas roller was therefore ordered to be supplied.

16 October 1851 Miss Nolan the Schoolmistress resigned … The Clerk was directed to advertise for a Trained Teacher in her stead.

10 July 1852 There were 617 boys/677 girls in the workhouse between 9 & 18 yrs of age.  24 boys and 22 girls were discharged that week, 1 boy had died.

4 November 1852 An Inspector of National Schools reported that the Mill was far too small for the number [of girls] in it.  The Visiting Committee stated in a letter ‘on visiting the house this day, we found in the girls’ schoolroom 525 persons including nurses and other women who should not be in the part of the house which overcrowding appears objectionable.

‘Education in the Workhouse’ is in my view a misnomer. The conditions at any time from 1847 to 1852, did not allow for normal schooling to take place. This is not a surprise considering that all workhouses from 1847 were overwhelmed with death, disease, and destitution.  The Listowel Board of Guardians appear to have worked hard to cope with the many problems that arose each week.  But responding to the daily urgent issues; collecting rates, providing bed and board, staffing and keeping the rampant diseases at bay did not allow for much consideration to be given to the education of the children in their care.

4 November 1852 An Inspector of National Schools reported that the Mill was far too small for the number [of girls] in it.  The Visiting Committee stated in a letter ‘on visiting the house this day, we found in the girls’ schoolroom 525 persons including nurses and other women who should not be in the part of the house which overcrowding appears objectionable.

‘Education in the Workhouse’ is in my view a misnomer. The conditions at any time from 1847 to 1852, did not allow for normal schooling to take place. This is not a surprise considering that all workhouses from 1847 were overwhelmed with death, disease, and destitution.  The Listowel Board of Guardians appear to have worked hard to cope with the many problems that arose each week.  But responding to the daily urgent issues; collecting rates, providing bed and board, staffing and keeping the rampant diseases at bay did not allow for much consideration to be given to the education of the children in their care.

(Good to be reminded of such awful times. Thank you, Kay)

Important Exhibition

An exhibition of artwork by Mike O’Donnell is currently on display in St. John’s Theatre and Arts Centre, Listowel.

Mike’s mural work is familiar to us all, but, before he was a muralist he was a court artist, sketching well known criminals and covering some high profile trials.

First Year Groups from 1986

A Fact

Dalmatians are born without spots.  They are born with plain white coats with their first spots appearing after they are one week old.

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