Showing posts with label Noel Roche. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Noel Roche. Show all posts

Monday, 27 April 2020

Brent Geese, Craftshop na Méar, Hosiery Explained and a Magpie Drops in for a Take away

Brent Geese at Sunset in Beale


Ita Hannon

<<<<<<<<<

John Kelliher's Drone Photos





<<<<<<<<<<<<<

Craftshop na Méar


Tom Fitzgerald took this photo of the Listowel Writers Week gang at  a craftshop Christmas event;
Mary Cogan,  Una Hayes, Eilish Wren, Bernie Carmody, Seán Lyons, Maureen Connolly and Masiréad Sharry


The late Eileen Hannon with Danny and Noreen O'Connell at the same event.

<<<<<<<<<<


Deja Vu

Noel Roche



<<<<<<<<

Hose and Half Hose

The question of hosiery came up last week when we were discussing Duhallow Knitwear and how it was always referred to in my home town as The Hosiery.

Our friend, Nicholas, did a bit of research on the internet and this is what he found.

I  believe it all started with mens' wear - (late 13c., "covering of woven cloth or leather for the lower part of the leg, with or without feet," from late Old English 'hosa' "covering for the leg") and developed into basically everything that covered the leg from the knee to the ankle. 
At first, the hoses on the two legs were separate pieces of material- a solution was necessary to preserve modesty, so a cloth codpiece was invented to cover the gap in material.  this was amended to metal to cope with  a certain vulnerability to injury. In the 400s,  following a widespread outbreak of what we would now call (to spare blushes) a 'social disease,' the codpiece was essential to cover the effects and visible signs  of the disease and the manifold 'medicines' applied to combat it. I believe Gucci revived the codpiece in modern times as a fashion statement rather, I suppose, than as a 'nod' to the more indelicate associations.  And it was an unexpected motif in the Spring 2020 menswear collection by American designer Thom Browne, shown in Paris in 2019. Like everything else connected with male vanity, it is believed that codpieces were much aggrandized and exaggerated in size by some.... Henry the V111 was one who did this, as depicted in Holbien Junior's portrait. I presume Kings, depending on male heirs to keep the line going, would at least, have to appear capable of doing so (or be prepared to behead his Queens and kick out the Pope).  
There is a contemporary male-worn item commonly used contact sports, and in ballet: the 'jockstrap.'  

It is time to call a halt on this somewhat  distasteful topic. It may not all be suitable for your Blog. In any case, you have the final editorial call and you may disregard any or all of the above as you wish.

<<<<<<,

Piazza Express

During lockdown we are all taking time to observe Nature all around us. Part of that observation for a photographer is also capturing the moment in a snap.

Tom Fitzgerald was fascinated by this magpie who swopped down to take away the remains of his piazza.




<<<<<<

The Confirmation Class of 2020



When the story of the Coronavirus pandemic of 2020 is told these boys will be saying, "I remember it well. It was the year I was to make my Confirmation but...."

Photo: Scoil Realta na Maidine

Friday, 24 April 2020

Listowel from John Kelliher's Drone, A Poem from Noel Roche, 1992 panto in Pres. and Speed Cameras

Swans at Rattoo


Photo: Bridget O'Connor

<<<<<<<<<

Listowel in Lockdown

Drone photos from John Kelliher






<<<<<<<<<

HMS Pinafore 1992




Presentation Secondary School, Listowel operetta


<<<<<<<<


Another Poem from Noel Roche


This poem needs no words of introduction or explanation. Noel says it best in his own words. And remember he is 40 years sober this year.



<<<<<<<<

Bet You didn't know this





The speed camera was invented to speed cars up not slow them down. A Dutch rally driver and engineer called Gatsonides wanted to take corners faster. His first device was 2 strips across the road. The first strip started a stop watch. The second stopped it. Then he thought of adding a camera so he not only had a record of the vehicle's speed, he also had a picture of the car. He could see how much extra speed he could squeeze out of a corner by approaching it along a different line.

His invention was called the Gatsometer and speed cameras are often still referred to as Gatsos. He realised its application in the detection of speeding offences when he replaced the pressure sensitive strips with a radar beam.


Of course the Listowel connection is our own Irish GoSafe speed camera network has its headquarters in Listowel.

<<<<<<<

"Oh, lest the world should task you to recite...."

Ursula Stack sent us this Covid fact.


Dame Judi Dench has tasked herself with learning all of Shakespeare's 154 sonnets during Covid 19 lockdown

<<<<<<

From Isolation -Inspiration


Thank you, Nan Bailey for the heads up on this marvellous resource.


This is an initiative of the Irish Embassy in London.

From Isolation – Inspiration involves a series of short videos posted on the Embassy social media channels which feature individual Irish artists currently in domestic isolation performing their art – a musician, singer, poet, novelist, actor etc. The videos are filmed by the artist in their home or garden and are designed to inspire and bring solace and cheer in these testing times.


Access the recordings    HERE

<<<<<<

A (very late) Message from Listowel Celtic PRO


Our own Barbara Mulvihill is nominated for the Best Actress Award in the Kevin Rowe Events Oskars.  She is raising money for St. James hospital.

If you want to vote for Barbara here is the link.


Martin McCarthy is up for Best Actor. He is raising money for the Mercy Hospital Foundation.

A vote costs €1

NNB Voting closes this evening at 5.00

Tuesday, 21 April 2020

Kerry in Christmas 1902, Ballybunion, Knockanure, Activity at the bird house and a Quiz

Charles Street, Listowel in 2016



<<<<<<<<<

Nesting Birds Observed

by Tom Fitzgerald in his garden


Anyone home?





I'm right behind you

<<<<<<<<

A Moderate Christmas in Kerry in 1902

From Kerry Sentinel, Wednesday, December 31, 1902

A CREDIT TO KERRY.
Christmas is gone, and the people of the kingdom have reason to congratulate themselves on the highly creditable manner in which the Great Festival has been observed in the county. We publish elsewhere particulars of ceremonies in the churches, which speak for themselves. And apart from the religious observances, the conduct of the people was satisfactory in the extreme. In years gone by—and not so very long ago either—the notion seemed to prevail amongst a section of the populace that Christmas was a privileged time when over-indulgence in liquid as well as solid refreshments and luxuries could be countenanced, and as a consequence there were numerous scenes of drunkenness, with their attendant miseries. That regrettable state of affairs was naturally most pronounced in large towns and villages, but things have changed for the better, and in town and country alike the year now drawing to a close has broken the record in reform.
Take Tralee, the capital of the ” Kingdom,” for example; The holydays just passed have been voted the most enjoyable known in the present generation. On the whole the people seemed to enjoy themselves to the fullest advantage, but they did so rationally, tempering their festivities with moderation. Of course there is an exception to every rule, no community is absolutely perfect and a few stragglers may have seen indulging themselves “not wisely but too well,” but they are not to be taken into account to any great extent under the circumstances. Taking the town in general, there was no real disturbance to disgrace the holiest season of the year. This fact was patent to all who were around, but the best proof of it was furnished by the last Tralee Petty Sessions. The business listed for disposal there was the lightest ever known in the history of the Court, the few paltry cases listed taking less than half an hour in hearing. The people of this large and populous district certainly have reason to be proud of the fact. We doubt, if there is a town in Ireland of the same size that can show a cleaner sheet. Mr. Sullivan, D.I.., expressed his admiration of the manner in which the people of all grades of society acted during the holydays. The publicans, he said, showed no desire to take advantage of the season, and that was only what he expected from them, knowing that the vast majority of them were most respectable people. “What we have said of Tralee, we believe, applies to the other towns in the “Kingdom,” and we repeat, that the people of Kerry are to be congratulated on the manner in which the greatest season of the year was observed.
<<<<<<<<<<<

Two Ballybunion Photos

 One evening a few years ago, as I was passing the recycling centre on the way to the beach I met this lady painting dolphins on the wall.



These toilets have been demolished. When work recommences on the new ones, Ballybunion will have state of the art facilities.
<<<<<<<<<<


Sobriety in Rhyme 

One of the tools that helped Noel Roche on his rehab journey was his faith. In this poem/prayer he outlines how he takes life one day at a time and relies always on God's help.

One Day

Lead me gently through the day
Don’t let me do it my own way.
If I stumble, let me fall,
If I can’t walk, let me crawl.
If I’m in denial let me doubt,
If I’m in self pity, let me pout.
If I’m in pain and it’s real
All I ask is, Let me feel.

Please don’t let me drink today
Because that would be the old way.

Oh Holy Father, don’t you see,
It’s Footprints time. Please carry me.

Hold me in your arms
Hold me near

I have faith in you, my God
Because its stronger than my fear.

Yes my faith is stronger than my fear today
So I’ll handle anything that comes my way.

I’ve got to work the steps, do the next thing that is right.
Ask God for help in the morning,
And thank him every night.


<<<<<<<


A Tree of Hope


The bishop and the late Fr. Pat Moore at a tree planting in Knockanure.

<<<<<<<<<

A Quiz from Mattie

These 32 clues correspond to the 32 counties of Ireland. Have fun.


<<<<<<<<

Róisín Meaney is turning over a new leaf

The start of a new lockdown week,
And a better plan for my physique
I’ll yoga like crazy
I’ll stop being so lazy
And of chocolate, you won’t hear a squeak. 

Monday, 20 April 2020

Cocooning, St Patricks Day 2001 and the Roche family and an American take-away in China




NEWKD William Street, Listowel


<<<<<<<<<<


Women in Media 2016

This is the time of year when, under normal circumstances,  I would be looking forward to WiM in Ballybunion.


Claire Hickey, Keelin Kissane and Anne Darby in Kilcooley's in 2016


<<<<<<<<<<


When this is all over.....

The agony and the ecstasy of lockdown in Mike O'Donnell's incisive cartoons.



Hi Granny







Below is a link to the very best lockdown poem, in my opinion.




<<<<<<<<<<<

Knockanure in the St. Patrick's Day Parade 2001





<<<<<<<

The Road to Recovery

Noel Roche grew up  in O'Connell's Ave., Listowel.


This photograph was taken at a family reunion in 1970. Three of the Roche children died in infancy and this is the clan as it was in 1970. Sadly they have lost a few more siblings since.

Noel gave me the names;

Front left to right. Dolores, Eileen, Peg, Jacqueline, Val and Dolly. 
middle l to r; John, Noel, Paddy, Jim, Mike and David. 
back l to r; Dick, Eamonn and Tom. 
Dolly was the oldest. I'm the youngest

Noel is a recovering alcoholic. He is proud to say that he will be 40 years sober this year. He used poetry as one of the tools to help him through the hard process of rehabilitation. I hope that hearing his story may help others who are struggling at a time that is hard for everyone but especially hard for anyone in the grip of addiction.


<<<<<<<<

A Covid Fact




In China a McDonalds delivery includes temp. check of food preparer, packer and delivery driver.

(Source; Greg McDonough on Listowel Covid 19)

Wednesday, 15 April 2020

Nicknames, Covid 19, The Bridge to Nowhere and The Spinning Wheel Restaurant

2016 just before Bailey and Co. opened

<<<<<<<<<


Listowel Small Square with the Spinning Wheel Restaurant where Footprints is now

<<<<<<<<<<

Fighting the Surge

Mike O'Donnell's cartoons celebrate the bravery of our frontline medics.





<<<<<<<<<<
Back to the Bridge

Do you remember the old story here about the bridge outside Duagh that was built at huge expense and then lay idle for years? This tale sparked Joe Harrington's interest and he did a bit of digging...

Hi Mary. As you outlined last week Mr Flavin MP questioned Balfour about Duagh Bridge in the House of Commons in 1898 as to why the bridge built in 1891, seven years previously, was not available for public use. Interestingly, the bridge is mentioned in a list of tenders for road maintenance in the Kerry Evening Post of November 16, 1892 where it was referred to as a “new bridge”. The Grand Jury of Kerry had erected the bridge at a cost of £3,496 10s. Gerard Balfour, the Chief Secetary, acknowledged that; “…no proper crossing has been provided by the railway company at this point. The grand jury, …state they have no power to employ a person to look after the gate… I am advised there is no legal provision under which the railway company or the grand jury can be required to provide a crossing, and the Board of Trade inform me they have no power to intervene.” 
Mr Flavin tried to ask why the Grand Jury had used ratepayer’s money to build a bridge without first sorting things with the railway company, but he was ruled out of order.
The railway line existed before both the new road and Duagh Bridge over the Feale, running from Foildarrig to Lacka East, was put in place.  Why the Waterford and Limerick Railway Company did not agree to a level crossing to facilitate the opening of the new connecting road and bridge is not clear. The reasons may have been the high cost of constructing or staffing the crossing or, as Mr Balfour said, there was no legal compulsion on them to do so. 
Interestingly, the Limerick & Waterford Railway Act was passed in 1826. It was the first Act authorising an Irish Railway Company, but it wasn’t until May 1848 that the Company began to build their rail network.  The line from Ballingarrane Junction (two miles north of Rathkeale) to North Kerry was opened in December 1880 so, when it came to the question of a level crossing for a new road, the Railway company had ‘squatters right’ so to speak. 
Two years prior to Mr Flavin’s unsuccessful representations to government the Kerry Evening Post of March 11, 1896 carried a report on the proceedings of the Grand Jury and its efforts to deal with the problem of the ‘bridge-to-nowhere’. A report stated, in the absence of an agreement with the Railway Company on the construction of a level crossing, the cost of a bridge over the railway line would be £700 and it would cost £1,000 to carry the road under the Railway line. 
Moving into the next century the Kerry Evening Post of August 9, 1902 reported that the County Surveyor urged the Council to approve the works regarding the approach road to the ‘railway bridge at Duagh”.  At this stage it seems the Railway Company had agreed to build a bridge over the railway line but the Surveyor “had not yet heard from the company as to when they will proceed with it”.   The work on the approach roads required the taking in of one and quarter acres of land. Lord Listowel claimed compensation at the rate of £22. 10s per Irish acre and two of his tenants, William Stack and Daniel Keane, claimed £90 and £60 respectively for the loss they would sustain. The total claimed by the tenants for the one and a half acres would be around €20,000 when updated to today’s money values! The Council also had the option of compulsory purchase. 
So, it seems Duagh Bridge carried no traffic for the first twelve years of its existence – a possible world record! The nearby railway bridge that was eventually built to allow traffic to proceed no longer spans a railway line - instead it will offer a fantastic view of the North Kerry Greenway which will pass under it.  This railway bridge and the nearby Duagh Bridge makes yet another interesting story for the many visitors who will traverse the Greenway in the future.


<<<<<<<<<
A Kerry Story from The Examiner
Story and photo from The Irish Examiner

Former Kerry hurler John ‘Tweek’ Griffin has topped the poll to find Ireland’s most iconic sporting nickname.
Griffin, who retired in 2017 after 15 years in the Kerry senior jersey, just held off another Kingdom legend Tim ‘Horse’ Kennelly by less than 100 votes.
In a 2018 interview with the Irish Examiner , Griffin said he has no idea where the nickname ‘Tweek’ originated, though he recalls it had already stuck by the time he was in first class in school in Lixnaw. 
Kerry football great Kennelly won five All-Ireland medals, earning the ‘Horse’ tag due to his formidable strength from the centre-back position.
Making up the top five polled were Cork hurling powerhouse Diarmuid ‘The Rock’ O'Sullivan, former Cork City star Liam ‘The Conna Maradona’ Kearney, and ex-Kilkenny hurler Martin ‘Gorta’ Comerford.
Munster rugby duo John ‘Bull’ Hayes and the late Anthony ‘Axel’ Foley also feature in the top 10.
It’s clear the poll particularly captured imaginations in a certain pocket of North Kerry, turning into a head-to-head between local rivals Listowel Emmets and Finuge/Lixnaw.

<<<<<<<<<<<

A Poem from Noel Roche

Noel is a recovering alcoholic. His road to recovery had many painful twists and turns. He acknowledged some of them in poetry.
This is a  sad poem of relationship breakdown


<<<<<<<<

Listowel Primary Care Centre

John Kelliher photographed this facility from start to finish.

Tuesday, 14 April 2020

Ballinruddery, Beggars, Covid 19 and a Noel Roche poem

Ballinruddery at Evening




Marie Moriarty took these photos on her evening walk.


<<<<<<<<<<<<


A Róisín Meaney Covid poem

We sit in our houses and miss
The freedom to hug and to kiss 
Our oldies cocooned,
Our friends all marooned,
The return of the touch will be bliss.                   



<<<<<<<<


BEGGARS CAN BE CHOOSERS

                           By Mattie Lennon        

      "Les bons pauvres ne savent pas que leur office est d'exercer Notre generosite." (The poor don't know that their function in life is to Exercise our generosity.) Jean-Paul Sarte.

 I was delighted when  that the stupid law (The Vagrancy (Ireland) Act 1847) had been found to be unconstitutional.

   It reminds me of the first time I met the late John B.Keane in Grafton Street, in Dublin. He was being ushered Brown-Thomas-ward by his spouse. And cooperating fully: unusual for a husband. I accosted him to say thanks for his prompt reply when I had written to him shortly before requesting information for an article I was writing. 

     We were about thirty seconds into the conversation when an adult male with a lacerated face and looking very much the worse for wear approached me. The polystyrene cup in his outstretched hand proclaimed that he would not be offended by a donation. 

    I contributed 20p (I think). Ireland's best-known playwright turned his back, (I'm sure he picked up the gesture in the Stacks Mountains as a young fellow) extracted a substantial amount and gave to the needy. I then thought that a man who had written about everything from cornerboys to the aphrodisiac properties of goat's milk could enlighten me on an enigma, which I had been pondering for decades. 

     You see, dear reader, if I were talking to you on a public thoroughfare anywhere in the world and a beggar was in the vicinity he would ignore you as if he was a politician and you were a voter after an election. But he would home in on me. I don't know why. Maybe, contrary to popular opinion, I have a kind face. Come to think of it that's not the reason. Because I have, on many occasions, been approached from the rear. Many a time in a foreign city my wife thought I was being mugged. When in fact it was just a local with broken, or no English who had decided to ask Mattie Lennon for a small amount of whatever the prevailing currency was. Maybe those people have knowledge of Phrenology and the shape of my weather-beaten head, even when viewed from behind, reveals the fact that I am a soft touch. 

    However, a foreman gave a more practical explanation to the boss, on a building site where I was employed many years ago. The site was contiguous to a leafy street in what is now fashionable Dublin 4 and those from the less affluent section of society used to ferret me out there. Pointing a toil-worn, knarled, forefinger at me the straight-talking foreman, Matt Fagen, explained the situation to the builder, Peter Ewing, a mild mannered, pipe-smoking, kindly Scot. "Every tinker an' tramp in Dublin is coming to this house, an' all because o' dat hoor......because dat hoor is here...an' they know he's one o' themselves." 

I was relating this to John B. adding, " I seem to attract them." to which he promptly replied;" (calling on the founder of his religion). You do."

      The reason for his rapid expression of agreement was standing at my elbow in the person of yet another of our marginalized brethren with outstretched hand. 

 So the best-known Kerryman since Kitchener left me none the wiser as to why complete strangers mistake me for Saint Francis of Assisi. 

 And salutations such as "hello" or "Good morning" are replaced by "How are ye fixed?", "Are you carrying" and, in the old days, "Have you a pound you wouldn't be usin' "? 

      I do not begrudge the odd contribution to the less well off and I am not complaining that I am often singled out as if I was the only alms-giver. Come to think of it, it is, I suppose, a kind of a compliment. 

    Sometimes I say ; "I was just going to ask you", but I always give something and I don't agree with Jack Nicholson who says; " The only way to avoid people who come up to you wanting stuff all the time is to ask first. It freaks them out." Those unfortunate people are bad enough without freaking them out.  Of course there are times when it is permissible not to meet each request with a contribution. I recall an occasion in the distant, pre-decimal days when a man who believed that, at all times, even the most meager of funds should be shared, approached my late father for five pounds. When asked ; " Would fifty shillings be any use to you?" he conceded that yes, half a loaf would be better than no bread.    Lennon Senior replied; "Right. The next fiver I find I'll give you half of it." 

     Of course none of us know the day or the hour we'll be reduced to begging. In the meantime I often thought of begging as an experiment. But I wouldn't have what it takes. Not even the most high powered advertising by Building Societies and other financial establishments can restore my confidence, to ask for money in any shape or form, which was irreparably damaged when I asked a Blessington shopkeeper for a loan of a pound nearly fifty years ago.  He said; I'd give you anything, son....but it's agin the rule o' the house." 

       I wonder was he a pessimist. It has been said that you should always borrow from a pessimist; he doesn't expect it back. Well recently I was in a restaurant when a work colleague texted me asking to borrow a small amount of money......he was seated two tables away. 

       As JFK said in his inaugural speech: " If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich." 

I don't know about the rich but I have learned one thing about the poor; 

            BEGGARS CAN BE CHOOSERS.

                        
<<<<<<<<<<<<<
                         
Some Mike O'Donnell Covid Cartoons
           



<<<<<<<<<<

Brotherly Love

The Roche family of O'Connell's Avenue, Listowel had footballers and poets in their number. In the following poem, Noel remembers a brother he looked up to and sadly lost.




Brother Mike
In Loving Memory

Noel Roche 2017

My thoughts I put on paper
For all the world to see
I want to share with everyone what my brother meant to me.

Childhood memories come to me 
In O’Connell’s Avenue.
Hero is the word that comes to mind
That’s how I looked at you.

All Ireland Boxing Champion
Bonfires lit up to the sky.
Everyone came out to celebrate
You were the golden boy.

London called. Off you went,
And there you would remain.
Romance came into your life.
Carmel was her name.

One by one, the children came
Until five kids you had.
Came as no surprise to me
You were a brilliant dad.

Hey, even as a granddad
You were a best in every way
Everyone that knew you
Would agree with what I say

The last two years of your life
Were your happiest, I’d say
With the love your family showed you
Every single day.

Surrounded by your family
The love filled up the place
I saw love and happiness
Written all over your face.

I know I’m gonna miss you.
When I’m feeling blue
I can call on the memories
Of times I spent with you

We could search the whole world over
And we would never find
Another like my brother Mike,
That man with an angel’s mind.

<<<<<<<<

Don't trust everything you see on the internet


I saw this poem on the internet with the story that it was originally written after the great influenza pandemic of 1918 and I shared it on the blog.


This poem was written in 1869 by Kathleen O’Mara:

And people stayed at home 
And read books
And listened
And they rested
And did exercises
And made art and played
And learned new ways of being
And stopped and listened
More deeply
Someone meditated, someone prayed
Someone met their shadow
And people began to think differently
And people healed.
And in the absence of people who
Lived in ignorant ways
Dangerous, meaningless and heartless,
The earth also began to heal
And when the danger ended and
People found themselves
They grieved for the dead
And made new choices
And dreamed of new visions
And created new ways of living
And completely healed the earth
Just as they were healed.

Reprinted during Spanish flu pandemic, 1919 and again during the Covid 19 pandemic, 2020
Photo taken during Spanish flu


Well!

Mattie Lennon did a bit of research on the poem and its author and here is what he found;

Viral posts on social media are circulating a poem that begins with the line “And the people stayed home”. (  here ). 
Some posts make the claim that the poem was written in 1869 after the Irish potato famine of the mid-19th century. Others say it was re-printed “during 1919 pandemic”, (  here ) - a reference to the Spanish flu outbreak that began in 1918. 
Some posts attribute the poem to Grace Ramsey (  here ), pen name of Kathleen O’Meara, a 19th century French-Irish biographer and novelist (  here ). 
The poem has attracted attention for its timely reflections on social distancing during the current coronavirus pandemic. It describes people adapting to isolation through reading, art, exercise, meditation and other activities. 
The claim circulating on social media is false. The poem was not written in 1869 but in March 2020, by Catherine (Kitty) O’Meara, a retired teacher from Madison, Wisconsin.