Showing posts with label Kanturk Arts Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kanturk Arts Festival. Show all posts

Wednesday, 25 March 2015

Agricultural Show in 1953 and other old stuff


June 29 1953



Margaret Ward gave me this photo from 1953. The occasion is the annual agricultural show and the place is the sports field. If you recognize yourself or your family, do tell us. The two girls in the middle of the picture with big bows in their hair and eating ice creams are daughters of the local garda, Barney Scanlon. Mrs. O'Flaherty, formerly Walshe is there and so is Gene Moriarty. Mrs Kennelly and Ned Browne are in the photo as well.

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Kanturk Arts Festival 2015

They had a great arts festival in my home town in the weekend before St. Patrick's Day. I took part in a  photographic event. We went on a little tour of the town snapping away. Then we compared our snaps and shared them with the group. The Mallow Camera Club facilitated it all. We had a reading of some hilarious one act plays. Hazel Gaynor gave a great author reading and talk and I'm told that the poetry slam was brilliant but I had left by then. It's a lovely event. I'd advise local people to take a trip there next year. It's only down the road.

During the arts festival a local man displayed his old record collection in a shop window. Do you remember these?







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No Mail Today



I took this photo of a deserted mail box in a wall beside the castle in Kanturk. I think it used to be an An Post postbox but its an unusual one.

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 Reminder; Daffodil Day 2015, March 27



(photo; Listowel Daffodil Day)

Wednesday, 11 March 2015

Cashen sunrise and preparing for St. Patrick's Day

Sunrise at the Cashen, March 2015

(photo: Mike Enright)

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More Green Shoots



Refurbishment going on here too

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Getting Set for St. Patricks' Day





If you need a hat in the national colours, drop in to Craftshop na Méar .






Easter chicks and daffodils, it must be spring.





Affordable ceramics and signs proclaiming your love for Listowel make lovely gifts for those visitors coming home for the national holiday.

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Counting our blessings

Fr. Pat Moore as he faces into cancer treatment is supported by the love and good wishes of his many friends.  In his blog, he shares this poem by Moya Canon. It is called Introductions.

Some of what we love we stumble upon

A purse of gold thrown on the road

A poem, a friend, a great song.


And more discloses itself to us- 

A well among green hazels,

A nut thicket-

When we are worn out searching for something quite different.


And more comes to us,

Carried as carefully as a bright

Cup of water,

As new bread.'

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Great Idea for next weekend

I'm going to  Kanturk Arts Festival 2015 next weekend. It promises to be another great event for this very hard working committee.

Most of their events are free.

I'm reading a great novel by Hazel Gaynor called A Memory of Violets. Hazel is the invited author at the Kanturk festival. I'm hoping she will tell us all about the research she did for this book. She is an expert on child flower sellers in Victorian London and the great philanthropist who rescued them and built a home for them.

There is also yoga, an animation class, a photography workshop and a poetry slam.

Friday, 6 February 2015

Old Listowel photos, the Oscars, a Listowel Connection and sport in Tralee


Listowel in Bygone Days from Denis Carroll's photos


At Convent Cross


The Dandy Lodge in its original location in Bridge Road


The foundation for the Community Centre being dug.


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A Successful young man with a (very tenuous) Listowel Connection



This young man is Will Collins of Kanturk.  He is in the news because he wrote the script for the Oscar nominated film, The Song of the Sea.

Now the Listowel connection; Will is the son of my old Kanturk neighbours, Peggy and Willie Collins.

People my age and older will remember Bill and Pat Kearney of this parish. Bill was very involved with the Listowel Drama Group. After Bill's death, Pat lived on in Listowel on her own. One evening she was driving home from Cork when she got a puncture. In the days before mobile phones, the done thing in this instance was to call to the nearest house. Pat did. This house was the home of Willie and Peggy Collins, my lovely neighbours. Being the kind people they are, they brought her in and gave her a cup of tea and some of Peggy's legendary delicious baking. They changed her wheel and ascertained that it would have to stay in Kanturk overnight for repair. Peggy and Willie would not hear of Pat driving home alone with no spare wheel so they drove to Listowel with her. Pat never forgot their extraordinary kindness to her and she mentioned it often to me. There would be none more delighted than Pat Kearney to hear  that the son of her Kanturk friends is now a famous scriptwriter and if she has any influence above, that Oscar is in the bag for The Cartoon Saloon gang.



This photograph of Will with his family was taken (not by me) at Kanturk Arts Festival two years ago. Peggy and Willie Senior are on the right.


I saw the film, in French, during my recent visit to Ciboure. It is a lovely film suitable for all the family. I laughed and cried and was charmed by the story. I won't spoil it for you by telling you the story but, believe me, it's a good one.

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A Proposal to bring joy to the hearts of many of our diaspora

A report recently in the Irish Times outlined a proposal that was presented to Jimmy Deenihan, Minister for the Diaspora. Jimmy is looking into it before bringing it to government as part of a package that includes voting rights for emigrants in presidential elections.

It is proposed that American Irish young people between the ages of 18 and 26 be offered an opportunity to spend 10 days in Ireland immersing themselves in the culture, language,  history and modern day living conditions of the country to which they claim ancestral allegiance. The trip, which would be free to the participants, would be paid for out of a combination of philantropy and government funding. 
A similar "Birthright" scheme is in place for young adults of the Jewish faith. This scheme is in place for 15 years and is very successful, creating a strong bond between the diaspora and the homeland.

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All is forgiven



I took this unlikely picture fro Joe Brolly's Twitter feed. He is pictured here among some of the greats of Kerry sport at a recent fundraiser for Austin Stack's GAA club.
He was brought onto the stage for a "surprise" confrontation with Kieran Donaghy. The whole country knows that Joe, in his role as a football pundit, had famously written off Donaghy in a season when he went on to win an All Ireland and an All Star.
When asked if he would apologise for the article, Brolly laughed it off saying that it was, in fact, a motivational exercise and it worked. "Didn't I win him an All Star?" says he. No one could argue with that.

Friday, 21 March 2014

Images of the 2014 parade in Listowel and a few snaps from my recent trip home



Some more photos I took on March 17 2014 at The Parade


Listowel Tidy Towns proudly paraded their 6 hard won gold medals.


Johnny Ryan was walking with the turf cutters.

More turfcutters



















Jer. Kennelly was out with the camera too. His photos are here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wbnziJXU3zM&feature=youtu.be

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While I was in Kanturk last weekend I spent some happy time revisiting the family and friends of my youth.


This is my brother with one of his beloved horses.


My niece looks a bit dischevelled as she nurses her horse  who was feeling a bit poorly. Note the drip in the background. She had to sit and hold him steady while the drip went in.


The same horse gamboling about, thankfully restored to full health.


In The Trade Union Hall I met Anne Goggin, who remembered me as a teacher in Kanturk.


Mary Lynch, now Crowley remembered me as a pupil and recalled the one most significant event that dominated all our schooldays; the death at age 15 of my older sister. Mary told me that it was her first experience of the death of someone she knew.
( Lisa Egan took the photos)

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An image of war from the Limerick 1914 website



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What on earth is that?



It is a bug hotel in Ballincollig, part of their Tidy Town's ecology drive.
(photo from Listowel Tidy Town page)