Showing posts with label Listowel Pitch and Putt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Listowel Pitch and Putt. Show all posts

Friday, 1 May 2020

Lilac studio and Listowel Pitch and Putt Course and Árd Chúram Cares



 Ita Hannon took this photo on Beale

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The Little Lilac Studio


This much missed little studio used to be on Main Street


Coco Kids is in that site now.

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Recruitment Poster for An Garda Síochána in 1923


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Listowel Pitch and Putt Course


Brenda Enright, whose father Tom O'Halloran was a stalwart of Listowel Pitch and Putt Club sent us this photo. The course may be closed but it still looks very beautiful and the members are working constantly on keeping it beautiful. It is important that people not walk on the greens as they are being worked on at the moment and could be easily damaged.

Below are some of the beautiful trees on the course.










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Róisín Meaney has been composing little rhymes to help her through lockdown. Now she has inspired others to join her in this humorous avtivity.  Here's a good one from Mags Hough

From Mags Hough - on keeping to your limit! 
A fella went walking one day.
He said he was saving the hay,
The guard said "Dat's right,
Don't give me dat shite,
Now turn back to your home, it's dat way."

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Árd Chúram Delivers

People over 70 are cocooned from Covid 19. People who live alone,  often in rural locations miss the social interaction of the weekly trip to Árd Chúram Day Centre. Their friends at the centre have not forgotten them and they are preparing a treat. Care packages with food, activity packs and home exercise programmes will be delivered to the service users shortly.


Chef, Sid Sheehan, preparing some sweet treats.


Thursday, 27 February 2020

Kells Bay Gardens, Turf cutting and Awards for dancers and musicians

Beautiful Kells Bay Gardens












Kells Bay Gardens is a beautiful sub tropical forest park on The Ring of Kerry. It is a truly magical place with dinosaur sculptures carved from fallen trees, forest paths, moss laden trees and rippling streams all nestled in a saucer surrounded by hills.

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Well done Balydonogue Dancers and Listowel Pitch and Putt



Cathaoirleach of Listowel Municipal District Cllr Jimmy Moloney, presenting Ballydonoghue CCÉ Dancers, 
Aoibhín Lyons Captain, Órla Mahony, Sarah Murphy, Audrey Ryan, Molly Linnane, Edel Dillane, Shauna Carey, and Grace Heffernan, Cian Horgan, members of Listowel Pitch ’n Putt Club, Grainne Toomey, Sara Allen at the Kerry County Council Annual Awards, at the Great Southern, Killarney on Friday night. Also included is Cllr Mike Kennelly, Joan McCarthy, Manager Listowel Municipal District. Photo: Valerie O’Sullivan

( I took the photo and caption from Facebook. Apologies to the people whose names are missing)


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All Ireland Turf Cutting Competition



The first All Ireland Turf Cutting Championship was held on 21st April 1934 at Allenwood, Co. Kildare. From the late 1600s to the end of the 19th century around 6 to 8,000,000 tons of turf were cut each year for home heating and sale. The industry in the 1800s mainly produced moss peat for animal litter and some briquettes. However by the early 1900s the amount of turf cut each year had fallen to around 3,000,000 tons. 

The turf cutting championships were organised as part of a campaign to increase the amount of turf cut and reduce the imports of coal. Eamon De Valera and other Ministers attended each year. The competitions ran from 1934 until 1939. When the war started everybody went back to the bog so the competitions were no longer needed. This photo shows the wing slean competition in 1934.

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LISTOWEL LIBRARY IS HOSTING AN OPEN DAY 

On Saturday 29th February. there will be a library tour at 11.00 am and 3.00 pm. Each tour will include a presentation on Online Resources so people should feel free to bring along their devices and we can answer any questions.  Also : every Saturday morning at 11.00 am we have Storytime & crafts for Smallies  -  For queries  068-23044

Tuesday, 2 July 2019

Seán McCarthy Weekend, Queen's Old Castle/Dealz, Pitch and Putt, Sand Art and A Dresser


A June Wedding




June is high season for weddings. I attended a lovely wedding in Cork on June 21st. The beautiful bride is a cake maker. Her own was a triumph.


Wedding favours when you are from Midleton

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The Late Great Seán McCarthy


This is Peggy Sweeney's songbook. Peggy is the acknowledged best interpreter of a McCarthy song.


Peggy is on the far right in this photo with her sister and her sister in law.

Sean McCarthy was born in 1923 in Sandes' Bog outside Listowel. He was one of ten children. His was a poor but happy family. His house was always filled with music and singing. It was in the U.S to where he emigrated, that Sean developed his gift for writing and composing. His early childhood in Listowel and his friendship with Bryan MacMahon, who recognised him from the start as a having a special gift, had sown the seeds of a great writing career. He wrote many ballads, poems, books for children, humorous essays and many articles for The Kerryman. His soft Kerry voice was familiar to listeners to Sunday Miscellany for many years. He contributed to many many TV and radio programmes.

He is commemorated every year in Finuge at the festival that bears his name. Find out details of this year's weekend on their Facebook page



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Spotted in Cork


How the mighty have fallen. I remember it when it was The Queen's Old Castle.

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A Few Photos from the Munster Championship


Listowel Pitch and Putt course looked splendid for the big competition.


The scamp on the right told me he was playing. He wasn't.



This local player was playing alright.


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Fun New Event in Ballybunion

( Photos from Wild Atlantic Way, Ballybunion sand art events on Facebook)



A new record for a new event; the most people doing the same sand art picture at the same time. The record which stands at 207 will, no doubt, be broken before the summer is over.

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An Old Dresser


Do you remember when every kitchen had one of these or one very like it?

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Tarbert's 1916 Memorial


Monday, 17 June 2019

Listowel Pitch and Putt Club host Munster Championships, Opening Night Writers' Week 2019 and a trip to Stillorgan

Listowel Pitch and Putt Course

They had a big day in the Pitch and Putt club at the weekend when they hosted the Muster Championship/ I called by on Friday to see how course preparation was going.



These men were brightening up the course with colourful plants. These pops of colour make a big difference.


I met these lovely people from Riverdale in Nenagh. They were in town for the championship and were taking an opportunity to get to know the course.

Update: There was no Listowel winner but everyone had a good time and the consensus was :The course was in tip top condition.

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Opening Night, Listowel Writers' Week 2019


On Opening Night, May 29 2019 I took up a position at the door of The Listowel Arms like a self appointed meeter and greeter. Camera in hand, I snapped as many attendees as I could. Rachel Guerin took this one of me with some famous guests in the background.


I asked the famous guests to turn round and then I took this photo of Rick O'Shea, Colm Tóibín, John Boyne and Joseph O'Connor. Picture it. Four of the most famous men on the Irish literary scene smiling into the lens of my camera. Sometimes I have to pinch myself.

When I recovered my equilibrium, I snapped a few more people as they approached the hotel for the start of the big week. I also took a few of Writers' Week's hard working committee.



















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Church of St. Laurence O'Toole, Stillorgan, Co. Dublin





I was in Dublin recently for a family event and I was in this church for Saturday evening vigil mass.   The mass was attended mostly by children and older people. The congregation was small. Either side of the altar were 2 big screens displaying the words of the hymns and the responses along with instructions when to stand and kneel. This is  a great idea that other churches could copy.
Many people nowadays only go to church for weddings and funerals and they have forgotten or never knew the responses and when to kneel and rise. Very often these people who dont have a clue of the protocols are seated in the front row so don't have the luxury of following anyone's lead.



This lovely piece of artwork is over the door of St. Laurence O'Toole's church.
Is he the only saint with a surname?




Just beside the entrance to the church was this prayer set in stone.


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A Burial Shroud

Picture and text from National Treasures on Facebook


A Burial Habit. This is a burial habit that was one of many items given to my daughter Sharon Whooley, by Tony McCarthy from Inishannon, Co. Cork. His family had a drapery shop, Murphy's in Mallow, and were in business for over seventy years, from the 1920s to the 1990s. Ellen Murphy was also a milliner and many examples of her exquisite work still remains. Her son, Bertie, started in the shop in the early 1940s when he was just sixteen and eventually took over. The family were careful and never threw out a single item of unsold stock: pure wool coats, corsets, communion dresses, bridal veils, and silk stockings, all 'Déanta in Eirinn'. What remains is a treasure trove; a time capsule, of everyday life in a small town in Ireland, how people lived and how people died."

Up to the 1960s people in Ireland were buried in these shrouds. I remember first it was the men who were allowed wear their best clothes. The women wore these habits unless the lady was a "Child of Mary" and then she was buried in her blue cloak and white short veil. Nuns were buried in a kind of off white shroud.

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I'm presuming it was some sort of statement that we can't take our finery with us. Death is the great leveller. We all leave here with nothing.

"Sceptre and crown must tumble down
And in the dust new equal made
Withe poor crooked scythe and spade."

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My Silver River Feale



When I walked by last week, there seemed to be more vegetation than water in the river.