Thursday, 25 June 2015

Holiday Time

On The Banks of My Own Lovely Lee


I have just spent a happy week bonding with some of the Cork branch of the family.
It was end of term and I had sports days, end of term drama and gymnastic performances to attend, some of the lovely events one gets to go to as a proud Nana.


The Cork Primary School Sports is an major event in Cork schools calendar. It was a triumph of organization. There were a few traffic glitches but once I got into the sports field, I was amazed at the professionalism of the organizers who saw this huge event run with military precision. I'd say half of Cork were there between athletes and supporters.

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My granddaughters attend Ballincollig Gymnastics Club and their end of year show features European class routines. I got to attend 3 shows, as all of the 400 pupils got to perform and I had an interest in all three shows.



Róisín before her routine

 Gymnasts watch and support their friends.


One routine at the gymnastics display went down a treat, i.e. the Dads and Daughters sequence. Here are Colm and Aisling in the centre doing their bit to the country tune, Cotton Eye Joe.



There is always a Listowel connection.
Brian MacAulliffe was there to support his daughter who is just starting on her gymnastic career.

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Meanwhile in Belgium




In the background is the Tyne Cot memorial on which the names of so many idealistic young people who fought and died in Ypres during WW1are inscribed. This graveyard and all the other memorials in the region are a chilling reminder of that "world's worst wound".  Seán McKenna took the photos on a recent trip to the battlefields.

On Passing the New Menin Gate, by Siegfried Sassoon

Who will remember, passing through this Gate,
The unheroic Dead who fed the guns?
Who shall absolve the foulness of their fate, -
Those doomed, conscripted, unvictorious ones?
Crudely renewed, the Salient holds its own.
Paid are its dim defenders by this pomp;
Paid, with a pile of peace-complacent stone,
The armies who endured that sullen swamp.

Here was the world's worst wound. And here with pride
'Their name liveth for evermore the Gateway claims.
Was ever an immolation so belied
As these intolerably nameless names?
Well might the Dead who struggled in the slime
Rise and deride this sepulchre of crime.


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Meanwhile in France

For the French branch of the family it's all sun, sand, al fresco dining and tennis






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One of the highlights  of Summer 2015 in Listowel was the Willis Clan concert in St. John's on June 19th.
I was privileged to be there to hear Ciarán Sheehan, star of musical theatre in the US (1000 performances in Phantom of the Opera, Les Miserables and many more) make an emotional return to the stage in his father's hometown. He got a rapturous reception from a very appreciative audience.
Ciarán greeted Sheehan, Hennessey and Curtin cousins in the audience and he paid a special tribute to Vincent Carmody, also a cousin, and who has been his guide for his visit to Listowel.
The Willis Clan are a force of Nature. All 12 of them sang, danced and played one or many of a multitude of musical instruments on this night to remember. They gained many fans in Listowel in June 2015.


Jeremiah Willis singing in St. John's June 19 2015

Jessica Willis on stage in St. John's Listowel

Jennifer Willis June 19 2015

Jeanette Willis

The Willis Clan

Ciarán Sheehan signing a cd for a happy punter.

I recorded him from my seat in the audience. It's here

Ciarán Sheehan in St. John's

Wednesday, 24 June 2015

I'm Late, I'm Late,


Small Changes at McKenna's Corner




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Alice in Wonderland Centenary

This year 2015  marks 100 years since the publication of Alice in Wonderland and to mark the anniversary , The National Children's Festival at Writers' Week adopted an Alice theme at its festival this year.

Buí Bolg Mad Hatter's Tea Party installation in the Town Park

Flamingos by Xistance

David Rawle and Will Collins at the tea party

Many of the local shopkeepers came on board with the theme and Listowel's windows featured a March Hare and Mad Hatter theme for a few weeks.













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Listowel Australian wedding in Spain




(photo; Facebook)
Dad and daughter, Paddy and Máire Guiney, formerly of Listowel. Máire now lives in Australia. She was married recently in Spain.

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Always Remember

The first to apologize is the bravest.
The first to forgive is the strongest.
The first to forget is the happiest.

Tuesday, 23 June 2015

Two Years


Three months after his 65th birthday, Jim Cogan passed away on June 23 2013.
 Photo: Jim with his girls.

(Photo: John Stack)
Jim with his only son, Bobby.


A poem for the day that's in it.


I Have Your Name    by Mary Dorcey

I have your name
And no use for it.
It will never call you home again.

I have all your names still;
Every one of them
On the tip of my tongue
I have to bite my lip
To keep from spilling them.
Useless now-
Nobody comes.
I have your name and no use for it.

I have said it
Times without number,
Without thinking,
Not needing to think.
I have called it through the years
Winter and summer
Early and late.
First thing in the morning
And last thing at night.

………………
I have said it in rapture,
In anger,
In grief.
I have called it across fields
Bellowed into the wind,
Like a farmer calling home the dogs
And had it blown back on my lips
I have murmured it so softly
No one heard but you.

I have your name and no use for it
No matter where
I say it now:
How loudly
Or how often-
It will never

Call you home.


"The day Thou gavest, Lord, has ended,
The darkness falls at Thy behest."

Monday, 22 June 2015

Ballybunion Sea and Cliff Rescue and Healyracing's tribute to A.P. McCoy


in Listowel Square


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Signs Old and New on Courthouse Road






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Look who I met in Changes



Jean Quille of Kerry Businesswomen's Network with Norah Casey who was in town for Listowel Food Fair and Danny Russell of Changes who had just styled Norah's hair.

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Healyracing tribute to A.P. McCoy

One of the really nice local events on this year's Writers' Week programme was Healyracing's photographic tribute to A.P. McCoy. I was lucky to be there. Here are a few photos I took at the launch.


Three generations of the Kelliher family

John Maguire, Kevin Sheehy, Maurice Hannon, Aiden O'Connor and John McAulliffe

Liam Healy with his granddaughters

Junior Griffin, Cathy Healy and Danny Hannon

John McGuire, Maurice Sheehy, John Keane, Kevin Sheehy and Junior Griffin

Old stock: Junior Griffin and Liam Healy

Liam with Mr. Carey

Sally O'Neill and Michael Lynch

Lisa Healy and son

Marion Relihan

Pat Healy

Liam with Owen and Maura MacMahon

Seán Lyons and Christy Walsh

Christine Dwyer Hickey and Máire O'Connor

Sean Lyons, Máire Logue and Joe Stack



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Heroes All



Ballybunion Sea & Cliff Rescue was founded in 1986 to provide a rescue service to the locality of North Kerry and West Limerick.

The unit, manned by 35 volunteers, is situated on the Ladies Beach in Ballybunion and operates as a declared resource to the Irish Coast Guard. BSCR operate on 7 minute readiness for the D Class and 12 minutes for the Atlantic 75, always available on 24 hour pager alert. As a declared resource we form part of a group of voluntary rescue boats collectively called Community Rescue Boats Ireland. This is made up of 13 units around the country (listed below)

Although maintaining the name Sea & Cliff Rescue, cliff rescue was taken over by the Ballybunion Unit of the Irish Coast Guard in 1991 (then the Coast and Cliff Rescue Service). The Irish Coast Guard unit based in Ballybunion is a separate organization and should not be mixed up with BSCR.

Equipped with a D class inflatable boat, & a new Atlantic 75 RIB, BSCR covers the coast and Shannon Estuary from Ballyheigue, Co Kerry to Foynes, Co. Limerick, and inland to Abbeyfeale, Co Limerick. Having a declared night time capability also means we overlap with neighboring services to cover that area in the hours of darkness.

As well as providing 24x7 Sea & Cliff Rescue, the volunteers also provide First Aid and Ambulance assistance at a handful of horse races and other events around the Ballybunion area.

We rely on public donations and all year round fund raising to raise the €45,000 needed to keep the service afloat each year. None of our members are paid and all give their time freely.

The crest of Ballybunion Sea & Cliff Rescue Service is made up of an anchor in the centre, a ring buoy around a figure of 8 (for climbing) and a plan view of a D Class boat, all of which is outlined by a gold rope.


The words "Watch for ye know not the hour" is the units motto and comes from Matthew 24:42. It reminds people to always be careful.......because you never know when you may need us.


Photo and text from Ballybunion Sea and Cliff Rescue 

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An Gleann 2015 Scoil Realt na Maidine champions



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Billy Keane's great article about Limerick Tipperary rivalry on the field of play and a heartache closer to home is
Here

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We have a Winner


Maria Stack of Listowel (on left) was declared the best dressed lady at Cork Summer Show at the weekend.