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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School’s Folklore collection, Sewing and Tailoring and Listowel Food Fair 2019

A Blue Tit

Photo: Chris Grayson


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Schools Folklore Collection


Many of the contributions to the schools’ Folklore collection were written in this type of copy book. This one comes from Derrindaffe.

Someone told me recently that one of the great pities of this project was that often it was the pupils with the best penmanship whose stories were submitted. Oftentimes, better more authentic voices could come through in the work of the “weaker” students. Teachers weren’t to know that the day would come when the copy books would be digitised and handwriting would matter little.

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Sewing, A forgotten Skill


Once upon a time a lady would count hand sewing among her accomplishments. Garments were made by hand and repaired often until they eventually wore out.

The arrival of the sewing machine had a revolutionary effect on women. The job of sewing became so much easier that now a garment could be sewn in jig time, freeing women for other jobs around the house.

On Facebook I found the following

“Powder and lipstick” for sewing !!!!!

Of course sewing wasn’t done just by the women. The Tailor was a valued tradesman.

The following is the schools’  folklore collection;

In Ireland, some years ago, tailors went from house to house making suits. They sewed everything by hand as there were no machines to be had.
The tailors use a big and also a small scissors, a bottomless thimble, an iron, a table, measuring tape, chalk, bodkin and needles and thread.
My grandmother, down in Killorglin, Co. Kerry always made flax shirts and sheets and they lasted for years.
Hardly anybody makes shirts nowadays. They are all bought readymade. Socks and stockings are also bought readymade as they take too much time to knit.
In Kerry some years ago instead of shawls, cloaks were worn by the women. They were terribly heavy and expensive. My grandmother had one for years and it was lined with black satin. The cloaks are sometimes mistaken for nuns cloaks.A man said one time when he passed through our district that his arms were almost broken from saluting the “nuns” and great was his surprise when he found those he saluted were ordinary women.

This contribution came from a Dublin lady with roots in Kerry.


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Listowel Food Fair 2019



These are some of the stands at the Food Fair Fair in The Listowel Arms on Sunday November 10 2019.

These Ballybunion stall holders were keeping each other company during a lull in what was a very busy day for all the exhibitors.

My friend, Eileen makes some lovely clay earrings, tree ornaments, cake toppers and unique commemorative pictures and much more. Every item is unique and tailored to the individual.

I’m a bit of a sucker for a nice notebook and cheese were the nicest ever, all made from recycled materials and uniquely colourful and quirky. Every journal was covered in a recycled material with its own story.



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Christmas 2019




The tree is up and the first windows decorated.

Yes, it is only November 18th.

Pilgrim Hill, A fresco in Sicily and A minute of Your Time

Listowel Courthouse in 2019

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The Last Supper



Billy McSweeney was in a 14th century cathedral in Taormina in Sicily recently. He sent us this picture of the frieze that is before the altar there. Is the person on the left of Jesus as we look at it a lady???

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Pilgrim Hill (from the schools folklore collection)


Gallán standing alone 3 1/2″ by 3″ by 1 1/2″ situated in the property of Mrs. Nora Brosnan, Lacca East,  Kilmorna. It was an old burial-place.

Folk-lore.The hill, on which this stone is situated, is called Pilgrim Hill.
According to the old people engineers, who visited the place fifty years ago, said it was the second oldest Church yard registered in Rome.
There is a well in the recently called an tobar mór and it was regarded by the old people as being a “blessed well”.
Beside the well there was a big mound of earth where the Pilgrim was supposed to have his cave. This mount was all burnt stone.Hence the name “Pilgrim Hill”. The field below the well is called seana t sráid, it is said to have been full of houses long ago and traces of them remained up to recent years.


COLLECTOR

Máire Bean Uí Catháin

Gender

female

Address

Rea, Co. Kerry

INFORMANT

Kathleen Brosnan

Gender

female

Address

Pilgrimhill, Co. Kerry


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The Colourful Language of the Letter Writer


(From John B.’s Letter of a Matchmaker)


My dear Jack,


I hope the weather over there is not like what we’re getting here. We’re all but drowned and what harm but I have five acres of hay down these nine days and The Pattern of Ballybunion staring me in the face. If the weather don’t come fine soon it won’t come fine at all and if it don’t come fine at all my cows and pony will walk The Long Acre trying to nose out their pick across the coming winter….


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A Minute of Your Time



People are asking me where they can get the book in the event they don’t make it to the launch.

It will be in Flavin’s, Woulfe’s and Eason in Church Street, Listowel. I’ll be hitting the road next week, so if you know of a bookshop or other outlet that would like to stock it, let me know.


I will be doing 2 Cork events in November, Nov. 2 in Philip’s Bookshop in Mallow at 4.00 p.m. and Nov. 15 in Edel Quinn Hall Kanturk at 7.30p.m.


I am also selling it to the diaspora through Paypal. If you want to buy it this way , contact me at listowelconnection@gmail.com


The book will cost €20 and the P and P is €8 if you are abroad and €6 within Ireland. 

Ballybunion, What our Forefathers Ate and some Listowel Premises getting a Facelift

Molly’s Back

Trouble -the -House is back for her Kerry holidays. You’ll spot us out and about these days as I reintroduce her to her second home.

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Ballybunion is Buzzing


Ballybunion loves a Summer Sunday. The Bunker was full to capacity and overflowing on to the street.


Flash had set up outside the Railway Bar and was entertaining the whole street on Sunday July 7 2019

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Food in Olden Times


from the Dúchas Folklore collection 

(Read to the end. I think he got the bit about the tea wrong.)

In olden times the chief food of the people was potatoes three times a day and sour skim milk and sometimes porridge made from yellow meal for supper and two meals of potatoes. 

Breakfast was usually taken at nine o’clock in the morning so that three hours work was done before breakfast. 

At each meal the table was placed in the centre of the floor and all sat down and commenced eating. In later years meals became more plentiful and bread was made from it by mixing with boiling water and afterwards baked in a griddle. The breakfast consisted then of yellow bread and sour skim milk filled out in wooden mugs. In the morning the bread was often heated in front of the fire before being eaten. In those days very little meat was used but salt mackerel for supper but potatoes were not unusual, supper hour being about nine o’clock. 

Easter Sunday was a feast and each member of the house was allowed as many eggs as he or she could eat. 

Tea was scarcely known until some sixty years ago and was not drank only at Christmas. Then it was made in a parcel and put away until the arrival of Christmas again.

Location: Cappagh, Co. Kerry- Teacher:T.F. Sheehan.

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Running Repairs in Listowel 

Fitzpatrick’s iconic bay window in Church Street is being replaced.

Jumbo’s is being repainted

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A Trip Back in Time




Dont forget to take a trip on the Lartigue in summer 2019. Open every afternoon.

Michael Guerin, Lartigue Driver. Oxana Sean, Seamus Kyritz from Tampa, Florida. Diane and Robert Moloney from Ennismore Listowel Canada. Pat Walsh Lartigue wayman.

These visitors to the Lartigue on Wednesday are descended from  families who left Listowel for Canada under the Peter Robinson Resttlement Scheme of the 19th century.

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Weekly Guided Walks



This photo was taken before the start of the first guided walking tour of the town on Saturday last. It is planned that these walks will take place every Saturday until the end of August, starting at 11.00a.m.

The cost is €5 and includes tea or coffee and a scone in The Kerry Writers Museum at the end of the walk.

If you are planning on taking the tour tomorrow,  July 13 2019, your volunteer guide will be…………….me.

Cork’s Denny Lane, Tarbert Bridewell and some Bird Stories from Dúchas

Summer 2019

Aisling and Molly in Ballincollig Regional Park in sunny June 2019

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Cork’s Denny Lane

I spotted this on South Mall in Cork last week.

This is the elegant doorway to the Lane house

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Tarbert Bridewell Relaunch


Here I am with another visitor and our guide, Mary O’Connell at the relaunch of the Tarbert Bridewell project on Saturday June 29 2019. If you want to give your children an easy history lesson or if you just want to find out something about rough justice in the 19th century this is a great place to come.

We follow the story of Tom Dillon who is accused of leaving his cow to trespass on his neighbours property. His defence was that the cow wandered through an open gate and he entered the field to retrieve her. The policeman who attended was having none of it and Tom was brought before the court sitting in The Bridewell Tarbert.

This is Dillon. Members of the local Tarbert drama group have recorded the story in dramatic fashion which we listened to as we went from room to room.

This is the maligned Mrs. Ahern whose grass Tom’s cow was eating.

The judge was a bit harsh I thought. You’ll have to visit to find out the sentence.

In another cell is this poor prisoner, emprisoned with her young baby.

Tarbert Bridewell visitor experience is located on the road to the ferry. It’s well worth factoring in a stop there if you are going to Clare. There is a lovely coffee shop and souvenirs as well.
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Bird Lore from the Dúchas Folklore Collection


There was once a middle aged man who had little or no money. Then it was coming near Christmas his shoes became worn and he began to collect all his money a few days before Christmas she found he had twelve shillings so he went along the road to the nearest town to buy a pair of shoes. When he had gone little way he heard a black bird on a bush saying “Spend and God will send”. He went on and he heard a thrush saying “Be merry today to-morrow you die.” He went on to town and spent the twelve shillings on drink and as he was coming home he heard a wren saying. “Have it yourself or be without it.”

Some people go torching. They light a candle and having the bottom of a bottle knocked out, they put the candle into it. The lighting side of the candle should be stuck up the jowl of the bottle. You must follow the wind always. When you see a bird you must strike him on the head with a piece of stick and kill him. A stormy night is the best sort of night to go torchhing. The How pigeons build their nests. The hen goes into and box and the cock lungs straw in and the hen fixes it and after about two says the nest is made and in about a day or two the hen lays an egg and the next day she lays another egg. Then the cock hatches in the day and the hen hatches at night and about three weeks the young ones come out. Then you should get crushed corn and give it to the pair. Then the pigeons fill their craws and throw it up into the young pigeons mouths and in about three week they come out of the nest and in about five days they can fly.

Collector Pat Mc Elligott, Address- Bedford, Co. Kerry
Informant Tom Halpin- Age 27 Address, Bedford, Co. Kerry.

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Lyre Concert



Yarnbombing in Kildare, Bird Lore from 1937 and a Listowel Fashion Designer

Listowel Presbytery

Recent repair work at the presbytery entrance revealed a lovely stone wall under the plaster.

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Yarn Bombing in Kildare


People who know me know that I love a spot of knitting and crochet. I was thrilled to get to see this huge yarn bombing project in Newbridge as part of Kildare’s June Fest.

It’s lovely to see this neglected craft getting an airing outdoors for everyone to enjoy. But there is a small practical part of me says that’s it’s a shame to expose these lovingly created artworks to be destroyed by the elements.


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Sign of the Times



A huge display of paper diaries at half price in Eason in June 2019

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Some Bird Lore from the Dúchas Collection



When people are trapping singing birds they often make a crib. This they do by getting smallchips of wood. they place two chips about a foot from each other, then they get two more the same size and place them on top of the other two about ten or eleven inches apart, then they get two so smaller ones and place them on top of the other two and a smaller distance away and so on till they reach the top with smaller sticks and a smaller distance away. Then they get cord and tie all the corners of the crib up along till they reach the top. then then they get a long cord and tie a stick on to it. They raise up the crib place the stick under it and get a few crumbs of bread and put them under the crib. then if a bird comes the person pulls the cord and if the bird is under the crib it flaps down and the bird is caught inside.

When people are taking the hatch out of a hen they dip the hen into cold water.

Another way for taking the hatch out of a hen is to stick a feather up its nose.

People often “strike” birds with a knife and fork. Once we had a canary in my house and it used never sing unless my mother took out the machine to  sew.

This was collected by W. Keane, Ashe St. Listowel and told by Mrs Keane, Aged 36, of Ashe Street, Listowel for the schools folklore collection of 1937/38

( I am fascinated by the idea of taking the hatch out of a hen. By the way, does a hen have a nose?)



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Couture with a Listowel Connection




This is a page from last Sundays’ Sunday Independent Life magazine. The feature is about Create, which is Brown Thomas’ showcase of Irish design, which will open in Brown Thomas Dublin in July.

From 70 prospective candidates, Brown Thomas chose 30 designers who met the very high standards required and each of those 30 had to produce a 25 piece collection. As well as fashion there are creations in lots of other fields of design as well.

The picture above is from Anna Guerin’s first collection “The Duellist”. It is a double breasted lambswool coat in pinstripe Donegal tweed which is woven sustainably.

Anna is the daughter of Michael and Áine Guerin of Listowel and she is no stranger to award winning in fashion design and tailoring. She has been working in this field for a while now. This is her first individual collection and when I spoke to her a few weeks ago she has lots more creative ideas in the pipeline.

The above coat looks to me like a garment that would be perfect on Kate Middleton. I hope it catches her eye. We know how much she loves good Irish design and she loves tweed.

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Just a Thought



Here is the link to my Thoughts from last week on Radio Kerry



Just a Thought

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