Showing posts with label Little Lilac Studio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Little Lilac Studio. Show all posts

Friday, 12 April 2019

Ballybunion. Little Lilac Studio, April 2019 Horse Fair, the public loo in 2019


Ballybunion in March 2019 photographed by Bridget O'Connor

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The Last Project




I have sadly delivered the last Little Lilac Studio project to my grandchildren

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Listowel's Public Convenience


Listowel's public toilet on Market Street has some state of the art features that are meant to make it attractive to patrons.





It is wheelchair friendly. It costs 25cents to spend a penny. It has instructions in several languages including Braille. For hearing impaired people there are audio instructions.

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Wells and Place Names from Dúchas School Folklore Collection

There is a well situated in Mrs. David Dillon's farm. At this day the well goes by the name of Tobair na Giolláin. The people say the English of it is the well of the flies. At first the well was situated near a hedge in the field but one morning a woman rinsed clothes in it and when the people came to the well it was dried up but it sprang up about four perches from the place. The people are still taking water out of it but the old people always said it was a blessed well.
Collector- Martin Connelly,Address, Kilteean, Co. Kerry. From Drom Muirinn School
Informant, Mrs K. Quilter


GLEANN na BRÓN
The name is still used by the local inhabitants and probably means the Glen of the Quern. It is beside this glen the “brittlen” woman used to be heard.

In the farm of Pat Trant Jnr, Behins, there was a blessed well. This was known to the older people as Tobar Uí Leidhin. There was an old midwife living in Behins named Moll Barry. One May morning she went to the well for a can of water. She had hardly reached the well when she was lifted off the ground and the next place she found herself was below at the monument in Lixnaw, spirited away by the good people.

Beside the well there was a graveyard. A glen beside it is still known as Gleann Dóighte.
Beside our house is a place called Pike, on the main road between Listowel and Castleisland. Old Ned Prendiville use to say that there were two gates here and everybody who passed the way with cattle or cars had to pay a toll of a halfpenny. There was also a pound there. There is a Dispensary at Pike. In this building was the old National school whose first teacher was John O’Connor. O’Connor was not long there when he had to flee the country owing to his connection with the Fenians. Then came my Grandfather old Master Lynch who taught there for six years and who opened the school at Rathea in 1875.

My Grandfather was a native of Knockanure. He used to tell stories about a woman name Joan Grogan of Knockanure. This woman used to be “out” with the good people. One night they were on their way to Castleisland to decide whether a girl there name Brosnan was to be taken away or not. On their way they called in to my grandfather’s aunt the wife of Michéal Ruadh Kirby of Behins and took her snuff box as a joke. Micéal Ruad’s wife met her a few days after at the big fair in Listowel (13th May). Joan asked her did she miss her snuff box on such a morning and she said she did. Micheal Ruadh’s wife told her she heard them laughing in the kitchen that night.
Maureen Lynch
M’athair Muiris Ó Loingsig O.S a d’innis an méid sin dom. Rathea Listowel.

Tuesday, 22 August 2017

Little Lilac Studio, The Lartigue, Tarbert,Beale long ago


Darkness falls over Ballybunion playground in July 2017

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Being a Tourist

When you live in Kerry people like to visit you in summer. I find it frees me up to be a tourist. I drop everything and take to the tourist trail; with my guests. Regular readers will be familiar with the places I love. One of these is Listowel's Lilac Studio.




My little ones love to indulge their creative impulses. They have many useful and decorative creations at home, souvenirs of happy days in this lovely little studio.

On this visit we ran into some really artistic little girls who were making memories with their very artistic granddad.



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We're on the Train

Another favourite spot to take my visitors is the Lartigue.



All aboard! Tony Behan was the volunteer guard on the afternoon of our visit.


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Tarbert Bridewell





The girls struck the same pose as the prisoner in the yard.


They briefly shared a cell with Mary McCarthy and they felt her pain as she and her infant were condemned to deportation for the crime of stealing cabbage to feed her starving children.



The children were horrified by the punishments doled out in the bridewell in years gone by.


These are my three little visitors as we set out down the ferry road in a mission to visit of fairies.

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Blessing of the Boats in Beale

Once upon a time the blessing of the boats in Beale was an important ceremony in the lives of the boatmen. Liam O'Hainnín and his family photographed this blessing and he shared these photos recently on Facebook








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A Change at Jerome Murphy's Corner

Regions I.T. and computer shop has relocated here from Church Street.


Thursday, 11 May 2017

Little Lilac Studio, Mountcollins and boys from O'Connell's Avenue

Bill Power, Cork Camera Club for The Rebel Cup competition.

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Little Lilac Studio


My girls love a trip to The Little Lilac Studio. This visit they decided to paint some unicorns.


Aisling did a foam creation, which is very different from painting. She loved working with the foam and she was thrilled to hear that it didn't have to be fired in the kiln so she was able to take it home.




Little Cora at work on her work of art.

 Róisín decided to paint in the eyes first.

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Mountcollins

If you ever travel to Cork on the Rockchapel road you will notice this church just off the road on your left. It is the chapel at Mouncollins. One day recently I decided to take a slight detour and have a look inside.




This headstone was very unusual and very sad.















The church is small and very well kept. As with many rural churches some of the money for construction and furnishing came from the U.S. The windows are simple with just a smattering of stained glass.

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Robert Halkett of Listowel


This picture has appeared on the internet of Robert Halkett, looking every inch the rock star.

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O'Connell's Avenue Boys


Noel Roche posted this old one on Facebook.  Sorry, no names