A day or two after we arrived back in California, we received a letter that stunned us into laughter and happiness. It heralded from Blarney, and thanked us for our honesty in sending them a check to reimburse the tab we forgot to pay at Christy’s Pub. I had used Matt’s parents California address as a return address, wanting to look more like visitors to the country than forgetful natives (Dublin address) merely there on an interview. Fortunately for us, that’s way we knew that they did indeed receive our tardy payment. I should have enclosed a convention badge :)
We attended the Zealous Proclaimers Convention this past weekend in San Francisco, with Matt’s Parents congregation, and to my surprise, my hometown congregation of south Placerville. It was really nice to see so many faces (and those faces children, which make Matt and I feel older than we are used to feeling) from so long ago, but shocking to find that most of them (many whom I hadn’t talked to since our wedding, nearly 4 years past) knew exactly what we had been doing, and where, namely Ireland. Such is the nature of travel, people talk :) Last weekend, we had the enjoyable opportunity to spend a few days in Santa Cruz with two of our cloese friends, and 6 of their closes buddies at a house sitting local, where we got used to the sun and wide selection of Micro-brews again :)
Matt has received encouraging replies to his plethora of job inquiries, and as for myself, I find out tomorrow if I have landed another restaurateur position. One job in particular that has Matt’s hopes up is located in the charmingly scenic (and happily unburned) Glenwood Springs, Colorado, a half hour from the town he used to call home in that State. Actually, I should rephrase that, as there are really two jobs there. One is working as the head techie for the same company, Aspen Ski Co., that he once operated ski lifts for, the other being a Network Engineer (NOC Monkey, as he affectionately calls it) at an undisclosed company. We’ll let you know how that goes.
We are extremely thankful to be in the situation that we are, having a cheap roof overhead, a full refrigerator and complimentary kitchen to cook in, and a vehicle at our disposal. Both of us are anxious to find out (as though someone other than ourselves will make the choice for us, and maybe He will) where we are slated to end up next. When we do, the saga continues…..
Here's July 15th:
Wake up call 7:30am, a.k.a.: same thing in military time….Khan says goodbye surprisingly, somewhat emotionally, and takes back our apartment key asking that we wake Cherry to lock the door behind us when we go. The racket of taking our bags one by one 8 times out the front door two feet from her bedroom door accomplished the wake up part for us. Yesterday afternoon, I called and scheduled a taxi to pick Matt and I up here at our apartment along with our (hind-sight’s 20/20) excessive baggage. 8:00 am: taxi arrives. Yet again, we almost give a taxi-man a heart attack just with the sight of our mismatched luggage strewn across the front step pavement patiently waiting to see how in the tiny island of Ireland he planned to fit them all into the 5-seater he showed up in. When I scheduled the pick-up, I very very specifically requested a van style taxi, knowing what my bags look like. I told the girl I talked to that two adults were traveling to the airport with 8, count ‘em, 8 bags of good proportions. She called back to confirm and managed to get every last detail right, just didn’t manage to translate it all to the driver. Why don’t they ever believe me? After a stretch of inventive luggage/people positioning contributed to by all of us, we were off to the airport; to drive our last stretch of Dublin road, to pass and leave behind our newly routine haunts to dim slowly in the ever growing and changing memory of our lives. How hack was that line? Matt wants me to try and fit the words “heaving”, “ample”, and “bosom” in there somewhere….
Cherry waved a sleep headed goodbye, as though she thought we would be back in a few days again, just off on another Irish tour. She offered to wake up the baby so we could say goodbye, but we declined, knowing sadly that he won’t remember the two American’s that spent months living in his house, eating at his breakfast table, entertaining him on demand, by the time next week roles around. At least I will get to see my own nephews soon…
It might have been the first day in Ireland that I didn’t snap a single photo, that I purposely packed the camera rather inaccessibly away. I don’t know why exactly, I guess I thought the camera wasn’t going to accurately reproduce the feelings of anxiety to get back to our empty-nest home colliding with sadness at leaving what was to be home on any print. We would probably just look irritably tired, so why bother? The flight time scheduled us for a grueling 24 hours of travel, switching airlines thrice (British Airways caravanning for Virgin Airlines, transferring rather uncouthly to America West, who I have vowed never to travel with again…by the way), stopping over in 3 cities (London, New York, and Las Vegas) before landing in San Francisco in the wee hours of the AM.
The first leg of the flight was smooth and seemed to bode well for the rest of our journey. The Unfortunately, it all went down hill from there. On the Virgin Airlines leg, we were assigned separate seats on a flight overbooked by 100 people. The people we flanked looked at us with uncaring stares stating that they had requested the aisle even though they were traveling together. The couple on the opposite side of me were obviously on their honeymoon and therefore sacrosanct, and the guy on Matt’s other side feel asleep before we had even boarded.
By the time we reached New York, we were dead tired, neither of us being able to sleep on the plane, and had to face the daunting prospect of moving our bags sans hand carts from the International terminal to the Domestic terminal via a bus. The bus driver we had was very kind in a new York “I’m making fun of you but its because I like you kind of way“; we only damaged one bag, and only stepped on one set of other peoples feet while swinging baggage around in an attempt at haste. Having reached America West we were further crushed by the fact that they unbendingly refuse the two carry on items standard on every flight I’ve ever been on, making us check in more delicate bags, and charging us $75.00 per, no matter what the weight. If I’d had an extra manila folder and couldn’t fit it in another bag, they would have tried to charge me $75 big ones for it. Then we both got picked for the random security check (where they make you take off your shoes, empty out your carry-on bags and try to joke with you about confiscating your good stuff, like candy, snacks, or anything else they find interesting. My stab at placing literature from my emptied meeting bag failed.) that made our flight later than the 15 minutes lag time it had already accrued. While waiting for our flight to begin boarding, I noticed a disproportionate amount of children among the flyers. Jokingly, I pointed to them each in turn, and told Matt where they would be seated in relation to us on the flight. Turns out, I was right. We had all 6 rambunctious children under the age of 5, two of which were tiny babies, surrounding us in a spokes wheel pattern. Amazing. Maybe our plane was powered by an improbability drive, combatable only with a someone else’s problem field, thank you Douglas Adam‘s.
Matt says he noticed a closer to California/ large people ratio, and I have to say, just remembering the people I was seated next to, he is correct. There were also far more fast food vendors in the airports closer to home…. By the time we reached Las Vegas, the soothing sweater weather 8º Celsius we departed in had mutated into a bone-cracking dry 95º Fahrenheit with little to no transition time. Thankfully California tends to cool off in the evenings, and our 1:00am arrival time made for a comfortable temperature that we could at least endure until we woke up a week later. Once home, the crash we thought inevitable, became staying up until nearly 4:00am talking and organizing our junk. Shockingly we popped awake at something ridiculous like 7am for the next handful of days, and it took as long for our bodies to catch on that they needed the day long solid sleep which ensued.
Which leaves us here, back I sunny California, back on the right side of the car on the right side of the road thank whoever invented that; where sweet alyssum and jasmine flavor (now I’m sad because my American spell checker is no longer prompting me to spell that with a “u” in fact there are millions of misspellings as I look back over the whole blog, because the American spell checker is bringing down the European one like no bodies bidniz, I can‘t spell cozy with an “s“ anymore, or armored with a “u“. In fact, I just tried to and it won‘t stay. It auto-changes it like I didn‘t do it on purpose-pronounced porpoise-the meanie) the air near every porch, and each street divider once the smog burns off; where flesh is always visible somewhere on bodies, whether or not it should be; where 7-11s replace Spars on every corner dotted in between the Blockbuster’s, Noah’s bagels, Jamba Juices and Starbucks; where the unbroken blue of the pale sky that so many Dubliners told us they dreamed of seeing first person, is in comparison to Ireland, actually a bit dull. Oh, and where the salsa is to die for (Bab’s hand in full effect).
It is good to be back.
Wake up call 7:30am, a.k.a.: same thing in military time….Khan says goodbye surprisingly, somewhat emotionally, and takes back our apartment key asking that we wake Cherry to lock the door behind us when we go. The racket of taking our bags one by one 8 times out the front door two feet from her bedroom door accomplished the wake up part for us. Yesterday afternoon, I called and scheduled a taxi to pick Matt and I up here at our apartment along with our (hind-sight’s 20/20) excessive baggage. 8:00 am: taxi arrives. Yet again, we almost give a taxi-man a heart attack just with the sight of our mismatched luggage strewn across the front step pavement patiently waiting to see how in the tiny island of Ireland he planned to fit them all into the 5-seater he showed up in. When I scheduled the pick-up, I very very specifically requested a van style taxi, knowing what my bags look like. I told the girl I talked to that two adults were traveling to the airport with 8, count ‘em, 8 bags of good proportions. She called back to confirm and managed to get every last detail right, just didn’t manage to translate it all to the driver. Why don’t they ever believe me? After a stretch of inventive luggage/people positioning contributed to by all of us, we were off to the airport; to drive our last stretch of Dublin road, to pass and leave behind our newly routine haunts to dim slowly in the ever growing and changing memory of our lives. How hack was that line? Matt wants me to try and fit the words “heaving”, “ample”, and “bosom” in there somewhere….
Cherry waved a sleep headed goodbye, as though she thought we would be back in a few days again, just off on another Irish tour. She offered to wake up the baby so we could say goodbye, but we declined, knowing sadly that he won’t remember the two American’s that spent months living in his house, eating at his breakfast table, entertaining him on demand, by the time next week roles around. At least I will get to see my own nephews soon…
It might have been the first day in Ireland that I didn’t snap a single photo, that I purposely packed the camera rather inaccessibly away. I don’t know why exactly, I guess I thought the camera wasn’t going to accurately reproduce the feelings of anxiety to get back to our empty-nest home colliding with sadness at leaving what was to be home on any print. We would probably just look irritably tired, so why bother? The flight time scheduled us for a grueling 24 hours of travel, switching airlines thrice (British Airways caravanning for Virgin Airlines, transferring rather uncouthly to America West, who I have vowed never to travel with again…by the way), stopping over in 3 cities (London, New York, and Las Vegas) before landing in San Francisco in the wee hours of the AM.
The first leg of the flight was smooth and seemed to bode well for the rest of our journey. The Unfortunately, it all went down hill from there. On the Virgin Airlines leg, we were assigned separate seats on a flight overbooked by 100 people. The people we flanked looked at us with uncaring stares stating that they had requested the aisle even though they were traveling together. The couple on the opposite side of me were obviously on their honeymoon and therefore sacrosanct, and the guy on Matt’s other side feel asleep before we had even boarded.
By the time we reached New York, we were dead tired, neither of us being able to sleep on the plane, and had to face the daunting prospect of moving our bags sans hand carts from the International terminal to the Domestic terminal via a bus. The bus driver we had was very kind in a new York “I’m making fun of you but its because I like you kind of way“; we only damaged one bag, and only stepped on one set of other peoples feet while swinging baggage around in an attempt at haste. Having reached America West we were further crushed by the fact that they unbendingly refuse the two carry on items standard on every flight I’ve ever been on, making us check in more delicate bags, and charging us $75.00 per, no matter what the weight. If I’d had an extra manila folder and couldn’t fit it in another bag, they would have tried to charge me $75 big ones for it. Then we both got picked for the random security check (where they make you take off your shoes, empty out your carry-on bags and try to joke with you about confiscating your good stuff, like candy, snacks, or anything else they find interesting. My stab at placing literature from my emptied meeting bag failed.) that made our flight later than the 15 minutes lag time it had already accrued. While waiting for our flight to begin boarding, I noticed a disproportionate amount of children among the flyers. Jokingly, I pointed to them each in turn, and told Matt where they would be seated in relation to us on the flight. Turns out, I was right. We had all 6 rambunctious children under the age of 5, two of which were tiny babies, surrounding us in a spokes wheel pattern. Amazing. Maybe our plane was powered by an improbability drive, combatable only with a someone else’s problem field, thank you Douglas Adam‘s.
Matt says he noticed a closer to California/ large people ratio, and I have to say, just remembering the people I was seated next to, he is correct. There were also far more fast food vendors in the airports closer to home…. By the time we reached Las Vegas, the soothing sweater weather 8º Celsius we departed in had mutated into a bone-cracking dry 95º Fahrenheit with little to no transition time. Thankfully California tends to cool off in the evenings, and our 1:00am arrival time made for a comfortable temperature that we could at least endure until we woke up a week later. Once home, the crash we thought inevitable, became staying up until nearly 4:00am talking and organizing our junk. Shockingly we popped awake at something ridiculous like 7am for the next handful of days, and it took as long for our bodies to catch on that they needed the day long solid sleep which ensued.
Which leaves us here, back I sunny California, back on the right side of the car on the right side of the road thank whoever invented that; where sweet alyssum and jasmine flavor (now I’m sad because my American spell checker is no longer prompting me to spell that with a “u” in fact there are millions of misspellings as I look back over the whole blog, because the American spell checker is bringing down the European one like no bodies bidniz, I can‘t spell cozy with an “s“ anymore, or armored with a “u“. In fact, I just tried to and it won‘t stay. It auto-changes it like I didn‘t do it on purpose-pronounced porpoise-the meanie) the air near every porch, and each street divider once the smog burns off; where flesh is always visible somewhere on bodies, whether or not it should be; where 7-11s replace Spars on every corner dotted in between the Blockbuster’s, Noah’s bagels, Jamba Juices and Starbucks; where the unbroken blue of the pale sky that so many Dubliners told us they dreamed of seeing first person, is in comparison to Ireland, actually a bit dull. Oh, and where the salsa is to die for (Bab’s hand in full effect).
It is good to be back.
Blogger is having issues, so consider this posted 7/14/02
Sunday morning late sleeping (affectionately called “having a bit of a lay-in” by the Irish) interrupted by our last day jitters:
Matt and I finished our packing, ate the last of our toast, drank the last of our instant coffee from Avoca to the back ground clamor of parting Pakistani landlord, overlaid with Chinese mothering techniques for Irish baby; studied for our last meeting with our Rathgar family, dressed up, and with heavy hearts and leaden feet, caught our last bus to the Kingdom Hall on Wesley Street....Sniff, sniff...
Upon arriving to the meeting, Matt found that a brother (Geoff Whelan) had tried to contact him this morning about going to a Gaelic Rules football match after the meeting at 4:30...Geoff managed to get a spare ticket for Matt since we had talked about going a few times before. So, of course Matt wanted to go, but had no other clothes to change into. I told him (with Geoff and wife Rebecca shaking heads in agreement) he would be crazy to let that stop him from finally going to a sports match here. So, arrangements were made, all was well.
Before the meeting commenced, I snapped as many pictures of the congregation as I could knowing that I had to relinquish the camera to Matt so I could at least see a game through his eyes via the camera if nothing else. I still haven’t seen the pictures he got, because neither of us managed to finish the roll of film, and no offence Sunnyvale, but there just aren't’t quite as many gorgeously gob-smacking things to use up our remaining film on. After the meeting, I hopped a lonely bus back to our apartment, as the only thing I hadn't’t scheduled time for was the clean-up process. I hadn’t vacuumed in a week, and I knew we had shed enough hair around the not-so-visible parts of our bed to stuff a new mattress. Not to mention cleaning out our shelf in the fridge, and taking out our trash. So, I left Matt to enjoy the sunshine and male companionship he hadn’t really had this whole near 5 months, and set to with my Aunt Jemima-hanky on my head. I thought in my providential minds eye that I would have enough time left over to take a last leisurely stroll up our street, past the Bleeding Horse, past Surma to one of my favorite restaurants,(the vegetarian in me loves this stuff, Matt kindly suffers through it) Havana, for a light lunch and some solitude. No such luck By the time I looked up from my miscellneous tasks it was neigh 6:30, or should I say 18:30 hours. Just as I went for the phone to call Matt and see what the plan was(which had been disconnected any way since somehow our land-lord hadn't managed to pay his phone bill, although we had spent a small fortune on living in his house)He rang the door bell with Geoff looming (6 foot and change) behind him. Have I ever told you that our landlady is scared of tall people? Yeah. She basically said that we got the rental bedroom (previously billed as a one room house, 10 minutes from Stephen's Green park) because we are her size. None of the four of us living in that apartment are incredibly minuscule persons, but being 5'4" instead of 5'8" somehow insured us the extremely mind-boggling and educational experience of living with them. ANYhoo...
That night, I had a vague plan of us going out for a last pub crawl kind of evening possibly with the Brennan's. Instead when Matt appeared like a Calgon representative from my house work day dreams, he told me that the Whelan's had invited us to come to dinner at their apartment, so get dressed, and lets go. Geoff waited in the driveway, somehow sensing the discomfort he pressed on Cherry intuitively, and Matt and I cleaned ourselves up quickly (remember, Matt was sitting in the sun in his meeting attire after an interlude that included running for to get there intime for kick-off). Geoff drove us to their apartment pit stopping for beers, and we had a lovely last evening surrounded by most of the friends we had made over this 5 month hiatus from reality. On the dirve over, I got the scoop on the game seems like it was a great match that could have gone either Kildare, or Dublins's way right up to the end) Matt and Geoff had a great time at the game, Matt learning rules along with lyrics to the "Boys in Blue" (Team Dublin)song so he could sing along. Apparently a lot of good hearted rivalry and slagging went on amongst the 78,000 fans in attendance, so to keep Matt from looking like the opposition, Geoff thoughtfully brought a Dublin blue hat back for Matt when he went for drinks.
For dinner Rebecca made beef enchiladas which she quailed to me about because I mentioned to her a few times how much I missed good Mexican food. she was sure they wouldn't be up to ,uster, but they were fantastic, all except for the beef part... After Rebeca went to some lengths to prepare a vegetarian meal for Lisa, I didn't have the heart to tell her that I don't eat beef, so instead I ate around it...I don't think anyone cared to notice. The Whealan's weren't planning on having us that night, but on short notice of Geoff inviting Matt on the way to the game expanded a dinner party for two couples to a gala for 4 couples. The enchiladas were accompanied by sauseges over mash (which Matt would have stayed in ireland for, job or not, if he could have), and a delicious cabbage salad, I think influenced by our hosts 12 years of living in Germany. The conversation was the kind of lively jovial talk that only occurs with people that have known each other long enough to safely make fun of one another, carry a joke long after it would normally have died, and all listen to the same sorts of music. I've missed that from our friends at home. Each evening that we spend with new friends, at least an hour is spent just getting to know the facts and the backgrounds of the pwople involved, nothing wrong with the icebreakers, but you can dispense with that after a while of knowing someone. Comparing Irish and Silicon Valley economics and dispareging the illogical buisiness practices that brought Matt's former employer to its corporate knees, and thus brought us here to Ireland leaves little mood for comfy friends talk. All in all, our last meal with friends in Ireland was a really enjoyable evening and made me wish even more that we had longer to spend getting to know these people and really getting into a reutine of life here in Dublin. Ah well...such is life. You can't be everywhere at once no matter how hard you try.
Sunday morning late sleeping (affectionately called “having a bit of a lay-in” by the Irish) interrupted by our last day jitters:
Matt and I finished our packing, ate the last of our toast, drank the last of our instant coffee from Avoca to the back ground clamor of parting Pakistani landlord, overlaid with Chinese mothering techniques for Irish baby; studied for our last meeting with our Rathgar family, dressed up, and with heavy hearts and leaden feet, caught our last bus to the Kingdom Hall on Wesley Street....Sniff, sniff...
Upon arriving to the meeting, Matt found that a brother (Geoff Whelan) had tried to contact him this morning about going to a Gaelic Rules football match after the meeting at 4:30...Geoff managed to get a spare ticket for Matt since we had talked about going a few times before. So, of course Matt wanted to go, but had no other clothes to change into. I told him (with Geoff and wife Rebecca shaking heads in agreement) he would be crazy to let that stop him from finally going to a sports match here. So, arrangements were made, all was well.
Before the meeting commenced, I snapped as many pictures of the congregation as I could knowing that I had to relinquish the camera to Matt so I could at least see a game through his eyes via the camera if nothing else. I still haven’t seen the pictures he got, because neither of us managed to finish the roll of film, and no offence Sunnyvale, but there just aren't’t quite as many gorgeously gob-smacking things to use up our remaining film on. After the meeting, I hopped a lonely bus back to our apartment, as the only thing I hadn't’t scheduled time for was the clean-up process. I hadn’t vacuumed in a week, and I knew we had shed enough hair around the not-so-visible parts of our bed to stuff a new mattress. Not to mention cleaning out our shelf in the fridge, and taking out our trash. So, I left Matt to enjoy the sunshine and male companionship he hadn’t really had this whole near 5 months, and set to with my Aunt Jemima-hanky on my head. I thought in my providential minds eye that I would have enough time left over to take a last leisurely stroll up our street, past the Bleeding Horse, past Surma to one of my favorite restaurants,(the vegetarian in me loves this stuff, Matt kindly suffers through it) Havana, for a light lunch and some solitude. No such luck By the time I looked up from my miscellneous tasks it was neigh 6:30, or should I say 18:30 hours. Just as I went for the phone to call Matt and see what the plan was(which had been disconnected any way since somehow our land-lord hadn't managed to pay his phone bill, although we had spent a small fortune on living in his house)He rang the door bell with Geoff looming (6 foot and change) behind him. Have I ever told you that our landlady is scared of tall people? Yeah. She basically said that we got the rental bedroom (previously billed as a one room house, 10 minutes from Stephen's Green park) because we are her size. None of the four of us living in that apartment are incredibly minuscule persons, but being 5'4" instead of 5'8" somehow insured us the extremely mind-boggling and educational experience of living with them. ANYhoo...
That night, I had a vague plan of us going out for a last pub crawl kind of evening possibly with the Brennan's. Instead when Matt appeared like a Calgon representative from my house work day dreams, he told me that the Whelan's had invited us to come to dinner at their apartment, so get dressed, and lets go. Geoff waited in the driveway, somehow sensing the discomfort he pressed on Cherry intuitively, and Matt and I cleaned ourselves up quickly (remember, Matt was sitting in the sun in his meeting attire after an interlude that included running for to get there intime for kick-off). Geoff drove us to their apartment pit stopping for beers, and we had a lovely last evening surrounded by most of the friends we had made over this 5 month hiatus from reality. On the dirve over, I got the scoop on the game seems like it was a great match that could have gone either Kildare, or Dublins's way right up to the end) Matt and Geoff had a great time at the game, Matt learning rules along with lyrics to the "Boys in Blue" (Team Dublin)song so he could sing along. Apparently a lot of good hearted rivalry and slagging went on amongst the 78,000 fans in attendance, so to keep Matt from looking like the opposition, Geoff thoughtfully brought a Dublin blue hat back for Matt when he went for drinks.
For dinner Rebecca made beef enchiladas which she quailed to me about because I mentioned to her a few times how much I missed good Mexican food. she was sure they wouldn't be up to ,uster, but they were fantastic, all except for the beef part... After Rebeca went to some lengths to prepare a vegetarian meal for Lisa, I didn't have the heart to tell her that I don't eat beef, so instead I ate around it...I don't think anyone cared to notice. The Whealan's weren't planning on having us that night, but on short notice of Geoff inviting Matt on the way to the game expanded a dinner party for two couples to a gala for 4 couples. The enchiladas were accompanied by sauseges over mash (which Matt would have stayed in ireland for, job or not, if he could have), and a delicious cabbage salad, I think influenced by our hosts 12 years of living in Germany. The conversation was the kind of lively jovial talk that only occurs with people that have known each other long enough to safely make fun of one another, carry a joke long after it would normally have died, and all listen to the same sorts of music. I've missed that from our friends at home. Each evening that we spend with new friends, at least an hour is spent just getting to know the facts and the backgrounds of the pwople involved, nothing wrong with the icebreakers, but you can dispense with that after a while of knowing someone. Comparing Irish and Silicon Valley economics and dispareging the illogical buisiness practices that brought Matt's former employer to its corporate knees, and thus brought us here to Ireland leaves little mood for comfy friends talk. All in all, our last meal with friends in Ireland was a really enjoyable evening and made me wish even more that we had longer to spend getting to know these people and really getting into a reutine of life here in Dublin. Ah well...such is life. You can't be everywhere at once no matter how hard you try.
Last night after our bookstudy, we were whisked away down the Bova Na Brina (totally the phonetic spelling), the road of hospitality in Irish. It was for a dinner party in honor of our hostess’s (Trish McMahon) old friends after their assembly day. We were privileged to be included, as we are leaving on rather short notice…. No announcement and all. So, our friend’s house is located on the Bova Na Brina, and since she lives (or rather her sister Anne and husband Tony Griffin live there, but are on holiday in Spain currently) in the country, when giving me directions, they were quite simple. No houses there have numbered addresses, just names. The house we were to look for (actually we had been there before when we first arrived, but were driven there by people who knew what they were doing) is called Mount Carmel after the matron of the house, Carmel. We ran across our first piece of good timing in Ireland and hitched a ride with the Whelan’s who happened to also be chauffeuring another sister that direction. We were in time (although drastically late compared to everyone else) for a tasty morsel and a rich desert (chocolate rum mouse…yum) accompanied by a seemingly never empty glass of wine.
I am glad we had a chance to return to that house because their back garden is designed in a way I wanted to remember. Basically, some trees finally growing to their maturity obscured the family’s view of the Wicklow Mountains in the distance. The have no neighbours to the back of the house, and so didn’t need the trees for privacy. Calling in a brother who works with wood, they had him cut down about half of the trees, and create his own brand of garden ornamentation. They have an entryway that echoes Tolkein, a loveseat overlooking a flower entwined trunk lattice, and a swing set for the ten year old daughter. All of which seemed to me like something my brother Justin would love, and could replicate. The long and the short of it being that now I have pictures that explain all of it better than I can ;)
This afternoon, Lisa and Leonard Brennan picked us up and drove us to the town of Eniskerry, to visit the Powerscourt Estate. The Estate was originally a strategically important sight from the Norman times, the Power family erecting a castle here in the 13th century that evolved through repeated attacks into the current impressive Estate, which was built by the Power family in the mid 1700’s, with gardens spreading over 45 acres. Maintained in style, it sadly burned to a husk in 1974, through the accident of a fire rekindling itself in an upstairs fireplace. Over the last few decades they have re-built much of the house, but the only part that now reflects the original glory of an 18th century manner house is the ballroom. We only got to look in from a distance, as a wedding was taking place this afternoon. The grounds are a well-placed mix of Italian, English, Japanese style gardens, complete with terraced slopes, walled gardens, ornamental lakes and ponds, water fountains, and a…. pet cemetery. Yup, there lie good ol’ Kilfane the Irish wolfhound, more loyal than human fidelity, alongside the cow that gave over 100,000 gallons of milk, just above the Shetland pony and his wife, Mrs. Mare. They seemed to have a bad run in involving a lot of chow puppies too… The tale runs that the gardens last designer indulged in the occasional wheelbarrow born (as in, himself being carted around in a wheelbarrow) trek through the grounds whilst nipping and sipping brandy admiring his handy work. Whatever gets you through the day :)
The most spectacular vista presides over the garden, not from the estate side, but from across the valley; the dignified peak of Sugar Loaf Mountain, cloaked in misty greens and velvety shadow. The few times the sun reached up to the mountains heights, the colors were more dazzling than any in the house behind us, although the rose and dahlia gardens gave it close competition. Ireland’s highest water fall also graces the landscape, a mere 5 kilometres from the estate, but we voted against paying the €3.50 each to drive in and see it for ourselves.
Scenes from two movies were filmed here: “The Man in the Iron Mask” (the more recent Di’Caprio version) and this years “The Count of Monte Cristo”. The balcony leading down to the Italian style garden is where the Count lands his hot air balloon in the flick. When we saw the movie, I clearly remember wanting to know where that scrumptious scene played out, and now, I know, and I have seen with my own eyes… I’d have to see the Man in the Iron Mask to recall more of the house than the dresses that flit through it, that we patterned my wedding dress after :)
After a day well spent exploring the Powerscourt grounds, we dinned in Temple Bar, and here we are. Matt is sleepy, and we have only tomorrow ahead of us to spend here. So, we need our sleep.
I am glad we had a chance to return to that house because their back garden is designed in a way I wanted to remember. Basically, some trees finally growing to their maturity obscured the family’s view of the Wicklow Mountains in the distance. The have no neighbours to the back of the house, and so didn’t need the trees for privacy. Calling in a brother who works with wood, they had him cut down about half of the trees, and create his own brand of garden ornamentation. They have an entryway that echoes Tolkein, a loveseat overlooking a flower entwined trunk lattice, and a swing set for the ten year old daughter. All of which seemed to me like something my brother Justin would love, and could replicate. The long and the short of it being that now I have pictures that explain all of it better than I can ;)
This afternoon, Lisa and Leonard Brennan picked us up and drove us to the town of Eniskerry, to visit the Powerscourt Estate. The Estate was originally a strategically important sight from the Norman times, the Power family erecting a castle here in the 13th century that evolved through repeated attacks into the current impressive Estate, which was built by the Power family in the mid 1700’s, with gardens spreading over 45 acres. Maintained in style, it sadly burned to a husk in 1974, through the accident of a fire rekindling itself in an upstairs fireplace. Over the last few decades they have re-built much of the house, but the only part that now reflects the original glory of an 18th century manner house is the ballroom. We only got to look in from a distance, as a wedding was taking place this afternoon. The grounds are a well-placed mix of Italian, English, Japanese style gardens, complete with terraced slopes, walled gardens, ornamental lakes and ponds, water fountains, and a…. pet cemetery. Yup, there lie good ol’ Kilfane the Irish wolfhound, more loyal than human fidelity, alongside the cow that gave over 100,000 gallons of milk, just above the Shetland pony and his wife, Mrs. Mare. They seemed to have a bad run in involving a lot of chow puppies too… The tale runs that the gardens last designer indulged in the occasional wheelbarrow born (as in, himself being carted around in a wheelbarrow) trek through the grounds whilst nipping and sipping brandy admiring his handy work. Whatever gets you through the day :)
The most spectacular vista presides over the garden, not from the estate side, but from across the valley; the dignified peak of Sugar Loaf Mountain, cloaked in misty greens and velvety shadow. The few times the sun reached up to the mountains heights, the colors were more dazzling than any in the house behind us, although the rose and dahlia gardens gave it close competition. Ireland’s highest water fall also graces the landscape, a mere 5 kilometres from the estate, but we voted against paying the €3.50 each to drive in and see it for ourselves.
Scenes from two movies were filmed here: “The Man in the Iron Mask” (the more recent Di’Caprio version) and this years “The Count of Monte Cristo”. The balcony leading down to the Italian style garden is where the Count lands his hot air balloon in the flick. When we saw the movie, I clearly remember wanting to know where that scrumptious scene played out, and now, I know, and I have seen with my own eyes… I’d have to see the Man in the Iron Mask to recall more of the house than the dresses that flit through it, that we patterned my wedding dress after :)
After a day well spent exploring the Powerscourt grounds, we dinned in Temple Bar, and here we are. Matt is sleepy, and we have only tomorrow ahead of us to spend here. So, we need our sleep.
Here's a funny (more like ironic) piece about Belfast in the odd news today:
"Tourists wanting to take in the hot-spots of Belfast now have a fail-safe way to do so. A pair of entrepreneurs from Northern Ireland's capital, famous worldwide for its sectarian troubles, have bought two half-century-old British military armored cars to drive tourists round. "We found them on the Internet," one of the pair, Art Corbett, told Reuters. "Tourists love it, it's pandemonium!"
There you go lads.
"Tourists wanting to take in the hot-spots of Belfast now have a fail-safe way to do so. A pair of entrepreneurs from Northern Ireland's capital, famous worldwide for its sectarian troubles, have bought two half-century-old British military armored cars to drive tourists round. "We found them on the Internet," one of the pair, Art Corbett, told Reuters. "Tourists love it, it's pandemonium!"
There you go lads.
So, Jazz has just presented us with 147 specially selected remind us of Ireland tunes burned onto a CD he has named The Suntoucher. So very nice.
Our dinner last night was a lovely warming bowl of rice immersed in hearty lamb stew, followed by sweet Irish strawberries whipped into a tasty mouse. The couple hosting us, Karen and Rob Scully entertained us with stories of various trips they have taken, for instance, to Russia. They are very active in helping the Russian group take shape, having watched it grow from one Russian speaking sister, two and a half years ago, to the gathering of 44 that regularly now attend together. Their experience that stuck out to me was of a group of sisters staying in a hotel (one of the nicer ones) that had a rat and mouse infestation. When one of them complained to the front desk upon finding a mouse in her room, she was promptly handed a cat. No fooling…. a cat. Sensibly, she took the cat back to her room to do its job, later peacefully returning to find that it had completed its task. Never in a million bazillion years would that go down in the states, although I think they could use a healthy dose of something similar. There are many things about Ireland that seem positively third world to me, but they are nothing in comparison with that. Its so entertaining while riding the public transportation to have the driver stop to chat for a moment with people he knows, just to shoot the breeze. One time, the driver even got an ice cream cone at a red light (showing that it pays to have strategically placed friends), but that sort of fun happens mostly in the countryside. Oh, and bus drivers always answer their cell phones, driving or not…
I keep going on about how we have one “final” Ireland outing, first the Aran Islands, then Belfast, and then Wednesday we took an afternoon trip to the town of Malahide (“on the brow of the sea”) to visit its castle. It’s a fifteen-minute DART ride to the north of Dublin County from here. Matt and I had purchased dual tickets for any two of Dublin’s main attractions while we visited Bernard Shaw’s Birth place (right across the street from our apartment, and it still took us four months to get there). Buying the tickets ahead of time made it that much more likely that we would actually get to Malahide. It has become very easy for us to take for granted all the things we still haven’t seen, and write them off as un-doable in the short time we have left. And that is SOOO not the case. Judging by how much we fit in on that trip to the north because we were being herded from one place to the next tells me that all we need is better organization and motivation and we could have seen the entire city more or less in a day. We just lack wake up skills lately….
The Castle itself rests in a huge parkland, now set up for tennis, cricket, running, and is equipped with a children’s playground as well as plenty of picnic tables to go round. One of the most remarkable tid-bits about Malahide Castle is the length of time that the reigning family remained in residence, nearly 800 years. Henry II granted the lands and harbor of Malahide to one of the knights who arrived in Ireland in 1174, namely Richard Talbot. The family’s habitation started in 1185 and continued all the way to the 20th century with the last Lord Talbot dying unexpectedly and without an heir, in 1976. His unmarried sister Rose Talbot paying something called “death duties” that I assume are taxes of a sort, and giving the castle into the care of the Township council. Much of the furniture is original to the castle, mostly from the mid 1700’s, but extending into the 1900’s. The Great Hall (added to the castle around 1475) uniquely not only retained its original form but also remained in use as a dining room until 1976.
The chronicle of how the family managed to retain ownership through the ups and downs of Irelands many political upheavals is interesting. When the caustic apparition that materialized into Cromwell appeared on the scene (mid 1600’s) The Talbots preserved possession of Malahide for all but a brief period of eleven years (from 1649 to 1660) when they lost it in a Cromwellian grant to one Miles Corbet. Their lands reverted to the Talbots again when it was found that this Corbet had signed the death warrant of Charles I. After the Restoration, his punishment was to be hung, drawn and quartered. Otherwise the Talbots emerged unscathed, and were privileged to retain the lands they held, as most others were not only confiscated, but also remained redistributed to the English nobility.
As we walked from room to room, cued by a voice emanating from speakers hidden about the Gothic to Baroque and Victorian rooms, we heard the history of the castle and its various Talbot owners. One of the family’s more famous stories centers around (yet again) the 1690 Battle of the Boyne. A huge painting depicting the scene of the encounter presides over the great hall’s dining table, a ghostly reminder of the morning of the battle when fourteen members of the Talbot dynasty, mostly cousins and all followers of James II, gathered here for breakfast never to return.
Hopefully, one day, we will return.
The mansion still radiates a gothic feeling, inside and out, faceted with arches and deep colors, creating cosy corners and turreted rooms, you would imagine nurtured mischievousness in the castles various children, with whole rooms still being panelled by carved dark oak. Give me a live-in maid, and I could live there….
Our dinner last night was a lovely warming bowl of rice immersed in hearty lamb stew, followed by sweet Irish strawberries whipped into a tasty mouse. The couple hosting us, Karen and Rob Scully entertained us with stories of various trips they have taken, for instance, to Russia. They are very active in helping the Russian group take shape, having watched it grow from one Russian speaking sister, two and a half years ago, to the gathering of 44 that regularly now attend together. Their experience that stuck out to me was of a group of sisters staying in a hotel (one of the nicer ones) that had a rat and mouse infestation. When one of them complained to the front desk upon finding a mouse in her room, she was promptly handed a cat. No fooling…. a cat. Sensibly, she took the cat back to her room to do its job, later peacefully returning to find that it had completed its task. Never in a million bazillion years would that go down in the states, although I think they could use a healthy dose of something similar. There are many things about Ireland that seem positively third world to me, but they are nothing in comparison with that. Its so entertaining while riding the public transportation to have the driver stop to chat for a moment with people he knows, just to shoot the breeze. One time, the driver even got an ice cream cone at a red light (showing that it pays to have strategically placed friends), but that sort of fun happens mostly in the countryside. Oh, and bus drivers always answer their cell phones, driving or not…
I keep going on about how we have one “final” Ireland outing, first the Aran Islands, then Belfast, and then Wednesday we took an afternoon trip to the town of Malahide (“on the brow of the sea”) to visit its castle. It’s a fifteen-minute DART ride to the north of Dublin County from here. Matt and I had purchased dual tickets for any two of Dublin’s main attractions while we visited Bernard Shaw’s Birth place (right across the street from our apartment, and it still took us four months to get there). Buying the tickets ahead of time made it that much more likely that we would actually get to Malahide. It has become very easy for us to take for granted all the things we still haven’t seen, and write them off as un-doable in the short time we have left. And that is SOOO not the case. Judging by how much we fit in on that trip to the north because we were being herded from one place to the next tells me that all we need is better organization and motivation and we could have seen the entire city more or less in a day. We just lack wake up skills lately….
The Castle itself rests in a huge parkland, now set up for tennis, cricket, running, and is equipped with a children’s playground as well as plenty of picnic tables to go round. One of the most remarkable tid-bits about Malahide Castle is the length of time that the reigning family remained in residence, nearly 800 years. Henry II granted the lands and harbor of Malahide to one of the knights who arrived in Ireland in 1174, namely Richard Talbot. The family’s habitation started in 1185 and continued all the way to the 20th century with the last Lord Talbot dying unexpectedly and without an heir, in 1976. His unmarried sister Rose Talbot paying something called “death duties” that I assume are taxes of a sort, and giving the castle into the care of the Township council. Much of the furniture is original to the castle, mostly from the mid 1700’s, but extending into the 1900’s. The Great Hall (added to the castle around 1475) uniquely not only retained its original form but also remained in use as a dining room until 1976.
The chronicle of how the family managed to retain ownership through the ups and downs of Irelands many political upheavals is interesting. When the caustic apparition that materialized into Cromwell appeared on the scene (mid 1600’s) The Talbots preserved possession of Malahide for all but a brief period of eleven years (from 1649 to 1660) when they lost it in a Cromwellian grant to one Miles Corbet. Their lands reverted to the Talbots again when it was found that this Corbet had signed the death warrant of Charles I. After the Restoration, his punishment was to be hung, drawn and quartered. Otherwise the Talbots emerged unscathed, and were privileged to retain the lands they held, as most others were not only confiscated, but also remained redistributed to the English nobility.
As we walked from room to room, cued by a voice emanating from speakers hidden about the Gothic to Baroque and Victorian rooms, we heard the history of the castle and its various Talbot owners. One of the family’s more famous stories centers around (yet again) the 1690 Battle of the Boyne. A huge painting depicting the scene of the encounter presides over the great hall’s dining table, a ghostly reminder of the morning of the battle when fourteen members of the Talbot dynasty, mostly cousins and all followers of James II, gathered here for breakfast never to return.
Hopefully, one day, we will return.
The mansion still radiates a gothic feeling, inside and out, faceted with arches and deep colors, creating cosy corners and turreted rooms, you would imagine nurtured mischievousness in the castles various children, with whole rooms still being panelled by carved dark oak. Give me a live-in maid, and I could live there….
Mental bubble breaks through to surface:
We also had a few interesting conversations with the friends in the congregation about Belfast.
I’m immensely interested in how the witnesses fare in that local. I know how it is here, but I can’t imagine it being as easy going there. So, one girl recently transferred to our hall from the Belfast branch says its tough, but you get used to it, and then it’s nice enough. Just don't venture out much of anywhere alone after dark. Another tells us about how, walking down the middle of the street is safest because if you walk down one side of the street (this is in the north part of the city) you are automatically lumped in with whatever side they are on. For instance, one side will be staunch Catholics, the opposite side, staring into their perceived enemies homes, will be hard-line unionist Protestants. You walk down either sidewalk, even as an outsider, and you make yourself a target for the opposition. Crazy to hear, but that’s how they say it works. Then there is another couple living at the Dublin Branch who were living for five years in Belfast who tell me that the people are friendly, no matter. If they know you aren’t part of this squabble (and you most definitely aren’t if you come as one of Jehovah’s Witnesses, and politically neutral) they talk to you just as politely as anywhere. And they have an even keener need to find answers for the wreckage they see everywhere. My initial sense of Belfast was as a city torn and broken by this seemingly irreparable rift, struggling vainly for a new face. But, is that just the impression the tourism-pushers want me to leave with since it attracts money frittering day-trippers with a kind of “you can’t look away from a car crash” mentality, or is it real? After all, the driver did tell us that many of the murals went up recently so that the buses have more places to stop at, more propaganda to show off. I dunno.
Façade, or Truth? You decide. I ‘m not objective enough.
We also had a few interesting conversations with the friends in the congregation about Belfast.
I’m immensely interested in how the witnesses fare in that local. I know how it is here, but I can’t imagine it being as easy going there. So, one girl recently transferred to our hall from the Belfast branch says its tough, but you get used to it, and then it’s nice enough. Just don't venture out much of anywhere alone after dark. Another tells us about how, walking down the middle of the street is safest because if you walk down one side of the street (this is in the north part of the city) you are automatically lumped in with whatever side they are on. For instance, one side will be staunch Catholics, the opposite side, staring into their perceived enemies homes, will be hard-line unionist Protestants. You walk down either sidewalk, even as an outsider, and you make yourself a target for the opposition. Crazy to hear, but that’s how they say it works. Then there is another couple living at the Dublin Branch who were living for five years in Belfast who tell me that the people are friendly, no matter. If they know you aren’t part of this squabble (and you most definitely aren’t if you come as one of Jehovah’s Witnesses, and politically neutral) they talk to you just as politely as anywhere. And they have an even keener need to find answers for the wreckage they see everywhere. My initial sense of Belfast was as a city torn and broken by this seemingly irreparable rift, struggling vainly for a new face. But, is that just the impression the tourism-pushers want me to leave with since it attracts money frittering day-trippers with a kind of “you can’t look away from a car crash” mentality, or is it real? After all, the driver did tell us that many of the murals went up recently so that the buses have more places to stop at, more propaganda to show off. I dunno.
Façade, or Truth? You decide. I ‘m not objective enough.
U2’s “ stuck in the middle” playing in the background, Matt and I walked into the netshop we frequent commenting that we need to make a tape of the music we have lived our lives to here. Saying, since it is Ireland it must include at least one U2 song, and may as well be this one. We knew that one of the employees here had been a D.J. in a previous life (a few years back), since we often have commented on the quality of the music played here and were told that he’s the reason it’s not like most internet shops which are stuck in the rut of either cloying bubble-gum pop, or the same five once good but now overplayed endless mantra-like loop. Jazz (ex-D.J. extraordinaire come net-café owner) overheard us, and has kindly offered to burn us a C.D. of his hand picked playlist, or rather, selections of the 850-some songs he has on file. It’s nice to know the owners and be on their good side of people who have musical taste similar to ours. There’s one song that encapsulates this place to me, by Faithless, kinda Opera morphing to dance-ish mellow grooves. Very nice.
This morning we received our hard copy plane tickets flying Virgin Airlines to New York via London Heathrow from Dublin, our path now cut in stone. Extra helpings of gratitude going to the California based Allen team helping us devise and implement a way to by-pass the whole Americans living in foreign lands not allowed to use e-tickets, or have hardcopies delivered to non-U.S. addresses.
Everyone keeps asking us how we feel about leaving, and the answer hasn’t changed. We are glad to be going home to see our friends and family; old haunts with new stories. But, we are leaving with a dragging sense of unfulfillment, goals left to lie at arms length. When we came to the decision to try this, we knew that there was a (pretty hefty) chance that we might not be able to make it work. That is the turn things took, that is the result we have to swallow, bitter though it may be. All the same, we haven’t given up totally. We still have Oxygen looking for contract work for Matt in the U.K. and the prospect of me being able to work off of his permit under U.K. law. So, we are looking at this retreat to California as just that, a temporary reconnoitring, a planning stage from which we can launch ourselves more successfully in the next go round.
Feels like a huge game of chess, only things here are grey instead of black and white.
During the second song (side note: its still so funny to hear the accents around us coming through in the singing here...the "th" expressed as "t", appre-she-ate becoming apre-sea-ate", its grand), just before the announcement part of the meeting last night, the brother giving them bumped us on the shoulder to ask if this was our last meeting. I said no, since that won’t be until Sunday. Too late did I realize that he was asking so the congregation could give us our farewell-clapping, sort of a resonating group hug, since there aren’t typically announcements on Sundays. We went out afterwards for a pint with the “kids” from our hall, mostly 20 to 30-somethings, and single (a few divorcees thrown in for color…). I think there was one other couple sans children. Matt and I talked for almost the whole time, mainly about our living situation (which keeps getting funnier and funnier), effectively monopolizing the conversation. I think we could do a whole book just about the nuances of being an American couple living in a Chinese-Pakistani household, and the hilarities thereof. It has been educational…Matt and I even made up a song…. I’ll save that for when we see you all in person….:) Thursday night we are going to dinner at the one couple’s house (she’s from Buffalo, he’s English), and one of the upcoming weekend nights, we are to have a last foray at an infamous place called Johnny Fox’s (supposedly located on top of the only hill in Dublin), for dinner and a concluding session of Irish dancing and pub crawl music escorted by a group from the Hall.
This morning we received our hard copy plane tickets flying Virgin Airlines to New York via London Heathrow from Dublin, our path now cut in stone. Extra helpings of gratitude going to the California based Allen team helping us devise and implement a way to by-pass the whole Americans living in foreign lands not allowed to use e-tickets, or have hardcopies delivered to non-U.S. addresses.
Everyone keeps asking us how we feel about leaving, and the answer hasn’t changed. We are glad to be going home to see our friends and family; old haunts with new stories. But, we are leaving with a dragging sense of unfulfillment, goals left to lie at arms length. When we came to the decision to try this, we knew that there was a (pretty hefty) chance that we might not be able to make it work. That is the turn things took, that is the result we have to swallow, bitter though it may be. All the same, we haven’t given up totally. We still have Oxygen looking for contract work for Matt in the U.K. and the prospect of me being able to work off of his permit under U.K. law. So, we are looking at this retreat to California as just that, a temporary reconnoitring, a planning stage from which we can launch ourselves more successfully in the next go round.
Feels like a huge game of chess, only things here are grey instead of black and white.
During the second song (side note: its still so funny to hear the accents around us coming through in the singing here...the "th" expressed as "t", appre-she-ate becoming apre-sea-ate", its grand), just before the announcement part of the meeting last night, the brother giving them bumped us on the shoulder to ask if this was our last meeting. I said no, since that won’t be until Sunday. Too late did I realize that he was asking so the congregation could give us our farewell-clapping, sort of a resonating group hug, since there aren’t typically announcements on Sundays. We went out afterwards for a pint with the “kids” from our hall, mostly 20 to 30-somethings, and single (a few divorcees thrown in for color…). I think there was one other couple sans children. Matt and I talked for almost the whole time, mainly about our living situation (which keeps getting funnier and funnier), effectively monopolizing the conversation. I think we could do a whole book just about the nuances of being an American couple living in a Chinese-Pakistani household, and the hilarities thereof. It has been educational…Matt and I even made up a song…. I’ll save that for when we see you all in person….:) Thursday night we are going to dinner at the one couple’s house (she’s from Buffalo, he’s English), and one of the upcoming weekend nights, we are to have a last foray at an infamous place called Johnny Fox’s (supposedly located on top of the only hill in Dublin), for dinner and a concluding session of Irish dancing and pub crawl music escorted by a group from the Hall.
Belfast, a city newer than any other in Ireland, and a city with a bigger and badder reputation than any other in the land, either side of the border. It only received a city charter in 1888 from Queen Victoria, although English and Scottish settlers inhabited it in the 1600’s, succeeding the long line of Beal Feirste’s (sandbank ford) O’Neill clan. Today it is home to nearly one-quarter of Northern Irelands residents, some 300,000 people. Did I tell you about the time, here in Dublin that Matt and I sat next to three kids from Antrim, the North, and had them jot down Gaelic phrases, correctly and phonetically for the visitors?
Well, it was great to hear the language, but the phrase Adrian, our tutor for the evening, liked to have us repeat the most was “Tiocfaidh Ár Lá!” pronounced “chucky are la”. Translation: “our day will come”. Meaning: “one of these days were gonna get Northern Ireland back from British rule, no matter who it hurts, no matter what we have to do, our time is on the horizon, and ain’t no body gonna hold us down.” Or something roughly like that. I think the translation I got from the kid who wrote it out for us had a lot more expletives and a lot more volume. It is hard for me to get a good grasp on exactly what the politics are behind the “Troubles” (beginning in 1969 and continuing to the 1994 short-lived cease fire, which lasted until 1996, and was re-established successfully in 1997), since what I see as an outsider is a lot of people getting along fine (seems like the south and middle north of the city are fairly well integrated, and many schools now strive to have 50-50 integration of religions as well) and a core group (mostly East and West sides, although the highest number of killings occurred in the North of the city) who just won’t let it lie. It dates back to William of Orange and the Battle of the Boyne (1690), bringging arstocratic protestants in to rule the Catholic pesantry, as well as the earlier bloddy conquer by Oliver Cromwell who (in the1640's) could be called the originator of this mess, as the one to first push Protestantism on the Catholic populous, mainly by brute force. Our driver kept saying that most of the killings boil down to tit for tat. Although, now, the city center fairly exudes a palpable forward momentum, a tangible desire to leave the past in the past, willing a new identity for itself.
10:00am Sunday morning, the mini-coach picked us up outside our hotel to sweep us away on the Belfast City Tour. A comparable tour in Dublin would include such sights as the zoo, Phoenix Park, Trinity University, The City Hall, Opera House…etc. In Belfast, the Parks you pass are all Memorial Gardens, the beautiful Grand Opera House has been bombed enough times that the government says if it happens again, they won’t rebuild. Their most famous hotel, the Europa, is famous because it holds the world record for most times bombed: 45. Since 1970, the IRA alone targeted that hotel 11 times. Which brings me to just how many splinter groups there are politically active here. Our tour guide, Rob, couldn’t provide an accurate count because it’s just not possible. After just a few minutes, the emotion of the group was raised to the keen edge of near wailing. It stayed that way the whole tour, and lingered through the day...
Here’s the skeleton sketch of the two sides separated in the hottest areas only by a wall, the peace line, reaching skyward, its height always on the increase to best the petrol bombs children toss over on boring afternoons: mainly it’s just the five (I think…) groups, picked out by their easily distinguishable flags: On one side the Catholic section of town, backed politically by the IRA and Sinn Féin (the oldest political party in Ireland taking its name from the Irish Gaelic expression for ``We Ourselves'') recognizable by houses with the tri-colored Irish flags flying high; the hard-line unionists consist of the Protestant Loyalist Union Jack, the United Freedom Fighters, whose main rival (although presumably on the same side) is the separatist Union Volunteer Force. Then there is the Loyalist flag of a red cross on a field of white. Innumerable versions of the Queen Mother flew high as well. Matt helped my to put it into words: Lets say a group of people are Loyalist, but feel that they aren't being violent enough in their cause. They'll start their OWN group that believes that the Loyalists are on the right side, but separate to take their own actions that the Loyalists don't want to. Hence, we have the U.V.F., the U.F.F., etc. Our driver mentioned a group known as the Shankhill Butchers, but wouldn’t tell us any specifics, since he had “already depressed us enough”. He grew up in the area they ravaged.
The most striking part of the loyalist parts of town is the painted sidewalks. Red, white, and blue dashes along the curbs letting you know exactly where you are. As we slunk through the townships, passing countless murals of peace and of war, Rob told us if there were any children about the mural areas he usually stops at, he would pass on, because these are the worst behaved, usually throwing rocks, and anything at hand at the bus (and tourists if they were outside it, but the bus was his main concern…great sense of humor, these guys). At one mural location, Rob related his own fright story of a day out leading a private tour of American students to this self-same mural, to take pictures. They happened to arrive just in time to watch as a cavalcade of police armoured cars drove into the neighborhood. The teens, acting as though they were merely watching “Cops” mobbed on nosing in closer, all the while snapping away. Suddenly a petrol bomb crashed against one of the armoured vehicles, scattering the teens back to safety, injuring the two policemen inside, but damaging no one but the car seriously. Two students went so hysterical that Rob immediately took them to Saint Anne’s Hospital (standing right on the peace line, inhabiting no-man’s-land as a concrete mediator). The rest, himself included, went for a few pints, as Rob says, a much better cure. At our last stop for mural gawking (many of which went up quite recently for the benefit of tourists like ourselves…funniest one being a Kentucky Fried Chicken’s with a red wall proclaiming the unionist slogan “Simply The Best”), we listened, rapt, to the tale of a recently released Johnny "Mad Dog" Adair, whose “only crime was loyalty” according to the banners, and murals present. As if summoned at the sound of his name, the man himself stepped out onto his porch while we drove away (the bus driver recognized him, and mentioned it as we made our escape). We never heard what exactly his arrest was for, but it was enough to know he was the lead dog in one of these multitudinous groups. Driving out past the dividing peace wall, festooned with police look out towers impenetrable giants gazing over the walls from cover of steal and barbed wire, we moved on into the greener hills and more pleasant thoughts.
Most places we couldn’t go inside of to see for ourselves, as it was a Sunday, and virtually nothing bothers opening on Sunday here. The one place we did get to enter was Belfast Castle, a lovely nook filled bastion nestled under what would be considered the chin below Napoleons Nose, as they affectionately named the bare hill sticking out ostentatiously above. Originally home to the Marquis of Donegal it was constructed in 1865. In 1934 the donated it to the City of Belfast, and it mostly a great spot to rent for weddings, banquets, and also houses a restaurant. Interestingly, the Belfast City Corporation proposed a one time to convert it into a nice hotel, but the people protested, sighting hotels one of the most often targeted (bombed) buildings in terrorist actions. This is because terrorist caused damage is not covered by insurance, so the government has to foot the bill, effectively draining their resources, and hotels being big expensive buildings. Down stairs (of course, being remodelled at the time of our visit) sits the Cave Hill Heritage Centre, keeper of the castle’s history, and the lore of the 8-caved knoll surrounding it. On the drive yesterday, we glimpsed the castle shrouded in its cosy trees just before a Kingdom Hall went speeding past (or rather, we went speeding past). Ensconsed in protective barbed-wire coils, like most other things in the city, one couldn't help but wonder how they manage to get on with the work here. Obviously there is a huge need for comfort to these beaten down people, but there is so much danger there, they must, of necessity, be some of the bravest witnesses on earth.
It was a good, peaceful place to end the tour; to go and meditate on all the things we had just seen and heard about, from a tour guide who had grown up on the north side of the city. Every time he told us another horror in a strongly rehearsed and rehashed voice, I wanted to put a hand on his shoulder, just convey somehow that it would all be a thing of the distant past soon, unable to harm any one further. But you can’t really do that on a tour bus. I settled for thanking him when he dropped us back to our hotel, saying it must be a tough t our to give day after day. He said it’s not so bad since he only does it a few days a week, but that he’s had his fill of it. Sad and sadder still.
We opted to take the earlier train back to Dublin, our previous desire to explore City Center squashed by the overwhelming saddness of this place. Kudos in the struggle to move on.
Well, it was great to hear the language, but the phrase Adrian, our tutor for the evening, liked to have us repeat the most was “Tiocfaidh Ár Lá!” pronounced “chucky are la”. Translation: “our day will come”. Meaning: “one of these days were gonna get Northern Ireland back from British rule, no matter who it hurts, no matter what we have to do, our time is on the horizon, and ain’t no body gonna hold us down.” Or something roughly like that. I think the translation I got from the kid who wrote it out for us had a lot more expletives and a lot more volume. It is hard for me to get a good grasp on exactly what the politics are behind the “Troubles” (beginning in 1969 and continuing to the 1994 short-lived cease fire, which lasted until 1996, and was re-established successfully in 1997), since what I see as an outsider is a lot of people getting along fine (seems like the south and middle north of the city are fairly well integrated, and many schools now strive to have 50-50 integration of religions as well) and a core group (mostly East and West sides, although the highest number of killings occurred in the North of the city) who just won’t let it lie. It dates back to William of Orange and the Battle of the Boyne (1690), bringging arstocratic protestants in to rule the Catholic pesantry, as well as the earlier bloddy conquer by Oliver Cromwell who (in the1640's) could be called the originator of this mess, as the one to first push Protestantism on the Catholic populous, mainly by brute force. Our driver kept saying that most of the killings boil down to tit for tat. Although, now, the city center fairly exudes a palpable forward momentum, a tangible desire to leave the past in the past, willing a new identity for itself.
10:00am Sunday morning, the mini-coach picked us up outside our hotel to sweep us away on the Belfast City Tour. A comparable tour in Dublin would include such sights as the zoo, Phoenix Park, Trinity University, The City Hall, Opera House…etc. In Belfast, the Parks you pass are all Memorial Gardens, the beautiful Grand Opera House has been bombed enough times that the government says if it happens again, they won’t rebuild. Their most famous hotel, the Europa, is famous because it holds the world record for most times bombed: 45. Since 1970, the IRA alone targeted that hotel 11 times. Which brings me to just how many splinter groups there are politically active here. Our tour guide, Rob, couldn’t provide an accurate count because it’s just not possible. After just a few minutes, the emotion of the group was raised to the keen edge of near wailing. It stayed that way the whole tour, and lingered through the day...
Here’s the skeleton sketch of the two sides separated in the hottest areas only by a wall, the peace line, reaching skyward, its height always on the increase to best the petrol bombs children toss over on boring afternoons: mainly it’s just the five (I think…) groups, picked out by their easily distinguishable flags: On one side the Catholic section of town, backed politically by the IRA and Sinn Féin (the oldest political party in Ireland taking its name from the Irish Gaelic expression for ``We Ourselves'') recognizable by houses with the tri-colored Irish flags flying high; the hard-line unionists consist of the Protestant Loyalist Union Jack, the United Freedom Fighters, whose main rival (although presumably on the same side) is the separatist Union Volunteer Force. Then there is the Loyalist flag of a red cross on a field of white. Innumerable versions of the Queen Mother flew high as well. Matt helped my to put it into words: Lets say a group of people are Loyalist, but feel that they aren't being violent enough in their cause. They'll start their OWN group that believes that the Loyalists are on the right side, but separate to take their own actions that the Loyalists don't want to. Hence, we have the U.V.F., the U.F.F., etc. Our driver mentioned a group known as the Shankhill Butchers, but wouldn’t tell us any specifics, since he had “already depressed us enough”. He grew up in the area they ravaged.
The most striking part of the loyalist parts of town is the painted sidewalks. Red, white, and blue dashes along the curbs letting you know exactly where you are. As we slunk through the townships, passing countless murals of peace and of war, Rob told us if there were any children about the mural areas he usually stops at, he would pass on, because these are the worst behaved, usually throwing rocks, and anything at hand at the bus (and tourists if they were outside it, but the bus was his main concern…great sense of humor, these guys). At one mural location, Rob related his own fright story of a day out leading a private tour of American students to this self-same mural, to take pictures. They happened to arrive just in time to watch as a cavalcade of police armoured cars drove into the neighborhood. The teens, acting as though they were merely watching “Cops” mobbed on nosing in closer, all the while snapping away. Suddenly a petrol bomb crashed against one of the armoured vehicles, scattering the teens back to safety, injuring the two policemen inside, but damaging no one but the car seriously. Two students went so hysterical that Rob immediately took them to Saint Anne’s Hospital (standing right on the peace line, inhabiting no-man’s-land as a concrete mediator). The rest, himself included, went for a few pints, as Rob says, a much better cure. At our last stop for mural gawking (many of which went up quite recently for the benefit of tourists like ourselves…funniest one being a Kentucky Fried Chicken’s with a red wall proclaiming the unionist slogan “Simply The Best”), we listened, rapt, to the tale of a recently released Johnny "Mad Dog" Adair, whose “only crime was loyalty” according to the banners, and murals present. As if summoned at the sound of his name, the man himself stepped out onto his porch while we drove away (the bus driver recognized him, and mentioned it as we made our escape). We never heard what exactly his arrest was for, but it was enough to know he was the lead dog in one of these multitudinous groups. Driving out past the dividing peace wall, festooned with police look out towers impenetrable giants gazing over the walls from cover of steal and barbed wire, we moved on into the greener hills and more pleasant thoughts.
Most places we couldn’t go inside of to see for ourselves, as it was a Sunday, and virtually nothing bothers opening on Sunday here. The one place we did get to enter was Belfast Castle, a lovely nook filled bastion nestled under what would be considered the chin below Napoleons Nose, as they affectionately named the bare hill sticking out ostentatiously above. Originally home to the Marquis of Donegal it was constructed in 1865. In 1934 the donated it to the City of Belfast, and it mostly a great spot to rent for weddings, banquets, and also houses a restaurant. Interestingly, the Belfast City Corporation proposed a one time to convert it into a nice hotel, but the people protested, sighting hotels one of the most often targeted (bombed) buildings in terrorist actions. This is because terrorist caused damage is not covered by insurance, so the government has to foot the bill, effectively draining their resources, and hotels being big expensive buildings. Down stairs (of course, being remodelled at the time of our visit) sits the Cave Hill Heritage Centre, keeper of the castle’s history, and the lore of the 8-caved knoll surrounding it. On the drive yesterday, we glimpsed the castle shrouded in its cosy trees just before a Kingdom Hall went speeding past (or rather, we went speeding past). Ensconsed in protective barbed-wire coils, like most other things in the city, one couldn't help but wonder how they manage to get on with the work here. Obviously there is a huge need for comfort to these beaten down people, but there is so much danger there, they must, of necessity, be some of the bravest witnesses on earth.
It was a good, peaceful place to end the tour; to go and meditate on all the things we had just seen and heard about, from a tour guide who had grown up on the north side of the city. Every time he told us another horror in a strongly rehearsed and rehashed voice, I wanted to put a hand on his shoulder, just convey somehow that it would all be a thing of the distant past soon, unable to harm any one further. But you can’t really do that on a tour bus. I settled for thanking him when he dropped us back to our hotel, saying it must be a tough t our to give day after day. He said it’s not so bad since he only does it a few days a week, but that he’s had his fill of it. Sad and sadder still.
We opted to take the earlier train back to Dublin, our previous desire to explore City Center squashed by the overwhelming saddness of this place. Kudos in the struggle to move on.
Since Matt and I have decided that we must go home again home again, we have turned nomadic. Second to the Aran Islands the one other thing Matt and I were gonna kick ourselves if we didn’t see was, as mentioned before, the Giant’s Causeway.
Matt managed to find us a tour that would get us there and back in one day, and then he extended it to a night’s stay in Belfast, so we could have one last fancy-shmancy hotel outing. I know what your thinking, Belfast = The Troubles = someplace we shouldn’t venture. But, com'on! We are in Ireland, it is a big part of the country, and I don't think anyones has been shot since 1993.... We aren’t that thick, so we made sure we were on a guided tour the whole entire time. Except for the sleeping part. We came home to the East from the far-flung West on Wednesday night, and left for the North on Saturday morning, at 6:45am. Train left at 7:20 with us, and a group of about 10 others aboard, as well as a mother hen to shelter us from the train crossing to the coach connection. Once we had met up with our bus driver/tour guide, a melodically accented Northener Michael, we set off for one of the most renowned costal locations in Europe (so they tell us), the Glens of Antrim, and the Causeway coast. The Glen Mountain itself sits like a chilly giant with a blanket of patchwork fields, a thousand shades of green, pulled tight around its knees, both neat and unruly hedges making up the stitches. We drove through perfect glades and herd covered pastures, two hours to our first destination on the seaside, a spot called Carrick-a-Rede (alternatively meaning "rock in the road" or "passage of salmon" depending on who's talking). A mile down a foot path with stone steps at intervals leading ever downward, lies its main attraction; curled in the crook of impossibly blue depths, seaweed covered coves and cliffs, and a ledge overflowing with the happy racket of thousands of birds, is a slim rope bridge hoisted 80 feet high over a chasm (where salmon run like mad in season, although we didn’t see any) between the mainland and an isolated punch of rock 60 feet away. Local fisherman errect the rope/cable bridge every year (during salmon season) to make bringing in the haul of fish easier, removing it come winter. I have a feeling our crossing was somewhat less sure comparitively, even coming at one point to all of us pep-talking a member of the tour across (she agreed that it was worth it once she got to the other side). Stunning, pristine and almost unimaginably Mediterranean feeling here in Ireland, this oasis also presents a never-never-land view of Scotland lying a few miles off in the distance.
By the end of this trek, I was ready to sit on a rock overlooking the water, and call it a day. But, the tour guide said no. Instead, he hauled us all to the quaint nearby town of Ballintoy for a reviving pub lunch. Next stop on the expedition: the Giants Causeway. Here’s a brilliant description of it from Fodor’s 2001 Ireland Guide book:
“…strange natural phenomenon consisting of 37,000 mostly hexagonal pillars of volcanic basalt, clustered like a giant honeycomb extending hundreds of yards into the sea. Legend has it that the causeway was created 60 million years ago when boiling lava, erupting from an underground fissure that stretched from Northern Ireland to the Scottish coast, crystallized as it burst into the sea, and formed according to the same natural principles that structures a honeycomb. As all Ulster folk know, though, the scientific truth is that the columns were created as stepping-stones by the giant Finn McCool in a bid to reach a giantess he’d fallen in love with on the Scottish island of Staffa (where the causeway resurfaces). Unfortunately, the giantess’s boyfriend found out, and in the ensuing battle Finn pulled out a huge chunk of earth and flung it toward Scotland. The resulting hole became the Lough Neagh, and the sod landed to create the Isle of Man. Boiling lava, indeed.”
Great stuff, huh?
Matt and I both could have spent hours here sitting amongst the natural (and quite comfy) couches, examining and admiring the beautiful algae, seaweed, and various shell-life thriving there. I can only hope my mass of pictures portrays some of the vibrant textures and colors of this microcosm. But, no the time crunch is on, back to the bus (we hiked the paved mile down to the beach, but hitched a ride back up the ascent in the tourist friendly transportation provided) we go.
Along the drive from the Giant’s Causeway, we stopped for a photo-opp at the local ruins. Dunluce Castle, a gorgeous hull on a cliff edge, looks like the surrounding earth was sheared away, cut to fit. Seems like everything here has a quirkier than usual story to go along with it, and this was no exception. It's a 13th century Norman fortress turned 16th century family seat of the local MacDonnell clan chiefs, eventually called the Lords Antrim. So, Lady Antrim (1639) was a big one for entertaining. They had recently extended the castle so as to have more enjoyable grounds for the guests and owners alike. Unfortunately, the castle designers of the day were a bit too cutting…ugh…edge, and their faulty construction led to the kitchen (complete with cooks and 8 staffers) plummeting into the sea one stormy night. Lady Antrim couldn’t hang, and they vacated the premises toot-sweet, not even waiting for morning (as the story goes). You can tour the inside of the castle’s remaining shell, but we all we had time for was a quick snapshot, and then…..
Can we fit more into this day? Why, yes, I think we can.
Next port of call: The Old Bushmills Distillery.
Thus called because it is officially the oldest licensed distillery of whiskey in the world. In 1608, King James I granted the original license (although historically whiskey has been distilled here since 1276 by those wily monks) to distil uisce beatha, aka acqua vitae, aka water of life. The original pronunciation of the Gaelic word “uisce” was too tough for outsiders who drank it, so, eventually they anglicised it to whiskey, a horrible transmutation over the years. But, the taste is the age-old same :) The part that stuck with me most from the description of how they create their thrice distilled sweet scented ambrosia, is that when it ages (no less than 5 years) in its oak barrels, the small (2% or so) portion that naturally evaporates off from the whole is called "the angel's share". The Irish never lack for imaginative language.
After our tour of the silent (cleaning month, so non-producing) plant, we all received complimentary glasses of the brew. Matt chose 12-year-old malt, while I went with the girly hot –toddy mixture of hot water, whiskey, sugar, and cloves. Kindly, the weather stayed dry until we were safely inside the plant.
All in all it was a fact-packed exquisitely beautiful fun day, and we fell asleep from exhaustion once we got chauffeured to our Hilton hotel.
I don’t have the mood shift capabilities to describe to you the next day’s (today’s) guided, hand-held exploration through the city of Belfast, peace walls, murals and war.
In fact, today just after we left, there was an Orangeman March through the notorious area of Drumcree (Protestants wanting to march through Catholic territory), and as excepted, violence ensued. The authorities anticipated this typical reaction from the rival sides, and so were prepared to an extent. Nothing fatal occurred, just a few injuries by plastic police bullets fired on protesters, but enough to turn the stomach. If you'd like more details, you can read about it at:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/uk/northern_ireland/newsid_2110000/2110173.stm
Until tomorrow, bona sera.
Matt managed to find us a tour that would get us there and back in one day, and then he extended it to a night’s stay in Belfast, so we could have one last fancy-shmancy hotel outing. I know what your thinking, Belfast = The Troubles = someplace we shouldn’t venture. But, com'on! We are in Ireland, it is a big part of the country, and I don't think anyones has been shot since 1993.... We aren’t that thick, so we made sure we were on a guided tour the whole entire time. Except for the sleeping part. We came home to the East from the far-flung West on Wednesday night, and left for the North on Saturday morning, at 6:45am. Train left at 7:20 with us, and a group of about 10 others aboard, as well as a mother hen to shelter us from the train crossing to the coach connection. Once we had met up with our bus driver/tour guide, a melodically accented Northener Michael, we set off for one of the most renowned costal locations in Europe (so they tell us), the Glens of Antrim, and the Causeway coast. The Glen Mountain itself sits like a chilly giant with a blanket of patchwork fields, a thousand shades of green, pulled tight around its knees, both neat and unruly hedges making up the stitches. We drove through perfect glades and herd covered pastures, two hours to our first destination on the seaside, a spot called Carrick-a-Rede (alternatively meaning "rock in the road" or "passage of salmon" depending on who's talking). A mile down a foot path with stone steps at intervals leading ever downward, lies its main attraction; curled in the crook of impossibly blue depths, seaweed covered coves and cliffs, and a ledge overflowing with the happy racket of thousands of birds, is a slim rope bridge hoisted 80 feet high over a chasm (where salmon run like mad in season, although we didn’t see any) between the mainland and an isolated punch of rock 60 feet away. Local fisherman errect the rope/cable bridge every year (during salmon season) to make bringing in the haul of fish easier, removing it come winter. I have a feeling our crossing was somewhat less sure comparitively, even coming at one point to all of us pep-talking a member of the tour across (she agreed that it was worth it once she got to the other side). Stunning, pristine and almost unimaginably Mediterranean feeling here in Ireland, this oasis also presents a never-never-land view of Scotland lying a few miles off in the distance.
By the end of this trek, I was ready to sit on a rock overlooking the water, and call it a day. But, the tour guide said no. Instead, he hauled us all to the quaint nearby town of Ballintoy for a reviving pub lunch. Next stop on the expedition: the Giants Causeway. Here’s a brilliant description of it from Fodor’s 2001 Ireland Guide book:
“…strange natural phenomenon consisting of 37,000 mostly hexagonal pillars of volcanic basalt, clustered like a giant honeycomb extending hundreds of yards into the sea. Legend has it that the causeway was created 60 million years ago when boiling lava, erupting from an underground fissure that stretched from Northern Ireland to the Scottish coast, crystallized as it burst into the sea, and formed according to the same natural principles that structures a honeycomb. As all Ulster folk know, though, the scientific truth is that the columns were created as stepping-stones by the giant Finn McCool in a bid to reach a giantess he’d fallen in love with on the Scottish island of Staffa (where the causeway resurfaces). Unfortunately, the giantess’s boyfriend found out, and in the ensuing battle Finn pulled out a huge chunk of earth and flung it toward Scotland. The resulting hole became the Lough Neagh, and the sod landed to create the Isle of Man. Boiling lava, indeed.”
Great stuff, huh?
Matt and I both could have spent hours here sitting amongst the natural (and quite comfy) couches, examining and admiring the beautiful algae, seaweed, and various shell-life thriving there. I can only hope my mass of pictures portrays some of the vibrant textures and colors of this microcosm. But, no the time crunch is on, back to the bus (we hiked the paved mile down to the beach, but hitched a ride back up the ascent in the tourist friendly transportation provided) we go.
Along the drive from the Giant’s Causeway, we stopped for a photo-opp at the local ruins. Dunluce Castle, a gorgeous hull on a cliff edge, looks like the surrounding earth was sheared away, cut to fit. Seems like everything here has a quirkier than usual story to go along with it, and this was no exception. It's a 13th century Norman fortress turned 16th century family seat of the local MacDonnell clan chiefs, eventually called the Lords Antrim. So, Lady Antrim (1639) was a big one for entertaining. They had recently extended the castle so as to have more enjoyable grounds for the guests and owners alike. Unfortunately, the castle designers of the day were a bit too cutting…ugh…edge, and their faulty construction led to the kitchen (complete with cooks and 8 staffers) plummeting into the sea one stormy night. Lady Antrim couldn’t hang, and they vacated the premises toot-sweet, not even waiting for morning (as the story goes). You can tour the inside of the castle’s remaining shell, but we all we had time for was a quick snapshot, and then…..
Can we fit more into this day? Why, yes, I think we can.
Next port of call: The Old Bushmills Distillery.
Thus called because it is officially the oldest licensed distillery of whiskey in the world. In 1608, King James I granted the original license (although historically whiskey has been distilled here since 1276 by those wily monks) to distil uisce beatha, aka acqua vitae, aka water of life. The original pronunciation of the Gaelic word “uisce” was too tough for outsiders who drank it, so, eventually they anglicised it to whiskey, a horrible transmutation over the years. But, the taste is the age-old same :) The part that stuck with me most from the description of how they create their thrice distilled sweet scented ambrosia, is that when it ages (no less than 5 years) in its oak barrels, the small (2% or so) portion that naturally evaporates off from the whole is called "the angel's share". The Irish never lack for imaginative language.
After our tour of the silent (cleaning month, so non-producing) plant, we all received complimentary glasses of the brew. Matt chose 12-year-old malt, while I went with the girly hot –toddy mixture of hot water, whiskey, sugar, and cloves. Kindly, the weather stayed dry until we were safely inside the plant.
All in all it was a fact-packed exquisitely beautiful fun day, and we fell asleep from exhaustion once we got chauffeured to our Hilton hotel.
I don’t have the mood shift capabilities to describe to you the next day’s (today’s) guided, hand-held exploration through the city of Belfast, peace walls, murals and war.
In fact, today just after we left, there was an Orangeman March through the notorious area of Drumcree (Protestants wanting to march through Catholic territory), and as excepted, violence ensued. The authorities anticipated this typical reaction from the rival sides, and so were prepared to an extent. Nothing fatal occurred, just a few injuries by plastic police bullets fired on protesters, but enough to turn the stomach. If you'd like more details, you can read about it at:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/uk/northern_ireland/newsid_2110000/2110173.stm
Until tomorrow, bona sera.
So, after much hemming and hawing, on Friday, Matt purchased our tickets back to the States. Apparently buying tickets through an American company as an American, you can't us electronic ticketing, nor can you have hard copy tickets sent to an address outside the States. Matt managed to get around that, but, Buh.
We should be returning to the Sunnyvale area somewhere around the 15th of July. We are sad to leave unfulfilled as far as the job bit goes, but regardless, we are glad to be returning to see family and friends. I am a little afraid about what leaving Dublin and entering California in July is gonna do no our nervous systems though. I’ll have heat stroke, and we’ll have to stay indoors for a week with the air conditioning cranked up high.
Se la vi
We should be returning to the Sunnyvale area somewhere around the 15th of July. We are sad to leave unfulfilled as far as the job bit goes, but regardless, we are glad to be returning to see family and friends. I am a little afraid about what leaving Dublin and entering California in July is gonna do no our nervous systems though. I’ll have heat stroke, and we’ll have to stay indoors for a week with the air conditioning cranked up high.
Se la vi
I meant to post this on Friday, but the blogger wouldn't let me in...maybe it thinks I've grown dull...
So, pretend it says "posted 7/5/02". Thanks.
Tuesday morning, aided by the singsong of water enfolding us into a peaceful nights sleep, we awoke with a tourist’s appetite to see the world laid out before us.
We were granted the perfect weather we needed to do the bicycle thing, which allowed us to go at our own pace, and travel in relative seclusion through a place engorged with other holidaymakers. We chose a trail that would wind up (oh the up on a bicycle, ugh) one side of the ridge cresting the island and return us (less painfully) via the lower coast road. Along the way, the first relic we visited Dun Echola (Dun Oghill), an almost perfect stone ring fort, circa 500BC, that hovers beside a Napoleonic signal tower (1815, and interestingly covered with shiny shingles to minimize the destructive effects of the island weather, most of which were stolen by the inhabitants to cover their own huts) and lighthouse (1818) (funny part about it being that it was built on the wrong island…there is another island of the coast of Donegal called Aranmore that was supposed to receive the pre-emptive defence measure, but no one seemed to care enough to mention it) a prehistoric wedge tomb, a beehive hut (uniquely being oval outside and rectangular inside), uncountable ruins of churches and famine houses (thus called because they were abandoned en mass during the potato famine), and last but not least Dun Angus, the, and I quote, “most gob smacking” stone age fort in all of Europe.
Our number one priority was to see Dun Angus (Dun Aonghasa), originating from approximately 1500BC. Recently a team of archaeologists excavated the location and found that it had been inhabited from 1500BC thru to 1000AD, or about 2500 years all tolled. It is a semi-circular three-ringed enclosure propped right up against the tallest precipice on the island, about 300 feet down to the sea. It seems to have been a ritual, economic, and political center for the people who created it. The full use of the place is still up to debate, ranging from protective and strategicly placed (having a clear view of the whole island and surrounding sea, so no chance of surprise visitors) fort, to sacred ground to merely a gathering place. There is evidence of the more important, aka: richer, people of their society dwelling inside the inner ring, while the other folk inhabited the middle ring. The third, outer ring was mainly for animals, and food, not being as well protected. But, what is causes of much of this debate is a natural rock platform smack in the middle of the inner ring, right up against the cliff edge. Archaeologists found a handful of bronze rings deliberately buried next to this dais, as though placed for sacrificial offering to some god. Some researchers even seem to think the location was theatrical in nature. All is speculative. Another singular sight is the “chevaux de fries” that surrounds the middle enclosure; it stands gaurd as a thick band of close-set pointy pillars, and miscellaneous rocks stuck like crooked teeth aimed to trip any intruders. This long down the time line it still does its job and is difficult to traverse.
Matt and I sat on the raised rock stage in the center of Dun Angus, ten feet from the edge of the world, watching a storm cross the Atlantic at a dizzying pace. Eventually the anthill of tourists had their fill of grandeur, and we were left entirely to ourselves. I haven’t felt such absolute solitude in a long time. Crouched at the outskirts of forever, alone except for the relentless crash of wave against rock, everything else is insubstantial, small.
It was a warm fuzzy feeling riding our bikes into peoples back gardens, having them wave us on; happy to share the historical monument their cows and horses graze around with the rest of humanity. We ended our expedition at the heritage center, not because we thought there might be more we hadn't uncovered, but because upstairs, in the most unreachable of unreachables, they had an internet connection. At €6.50 an hour, we quickly found the train timetable and the last train to Dublin from Galway, since we were hopping to stay a little into the afternoon the following day. After a shower, and some rest, we had dinner at the same restaurant again since the only other one in the village was in our hotel. Later that night, a friendly old gent, the image of the Gordon’s Fisherman, offered to bring us over in his curach to the neighboring island to look at Synge’s Chair (“its EXACTLY where the man sat to write his books, the exact spot!”) from the water below the cliff. We would have loved to ride along, had we not witnessed pint after pint disappear in front of him. Still, it was a lovely offer, regardless. He did manage to walk us out front of the “American bar” to point squinting in the distance at the speck on the horizon that he would have boated us to.
The next morning we dutifully filled our bags at the tourist traps, waved to our guide from day one, and meandered the waterfront to the noon ferry back to Galway. The sunny half hour crossing left us with tan lines, and salty skin. On the boat, Matt texted (the mobile phone is still the best thing we’ve invested in here) Gabriella to see if she could free herself to meet us for coffee since we had a few hours to kill before the train left. After confirming our train departure time at the actual train station in Galway, we met Gabriella in Eyre Square (a big green park with statues and art strewn about it) with beau Simon, and friend Phillip in tow. After a tasty panini, a bracing cup of coffee, and pleasant conversation, we parted company, and boarded our train, leaving the old world ways of Aran behind, its "True Irishness" to slowly degenerate in peace.
So, pretend it says "posted 7/5/02". Thanks.
Tuesday morning, aided by the singsong of water enfolding us into a peaceful nights sleep, we awoke with a tourist’s appetite to see the world laid out before us.
We were granted the perfect weather we needed to do the bicycle thing, which allowed us to go at our own pace, and travel in relative seclusion through a place engorged with other holidaymakers. We chose a trail that would wind up (oh the up on a bicycle, ugh) one side of the ridge cresting the island and return us (less painfully) via the lower coast road. Along the way, the first relic we visited Dun Echola (Dun Oghill), an almost perfect stone ring fort, circa 500BC, that hovers beside a Napoleonic signal tower (1815, and interestingly covered with shiny shingles to minimize the destructive effects of the island weather, most of which were stolen by the inhabitants to cover their own huts) and lighthouse (1818) (funny part about it being that it was built on the wrong island…there is another island of the coast of Donegal called Aranmore that was supposed to receive the pre-emptive defence measure, but no one seemed to care enough to mention it) a prehistoric wedge tomb, a beehive hut (uniquely being oval outside and rectangular inside), uncountable ruins of churches and famine houses (thus called because they were abandoned en mass during the potato famine), and last but not least Dun Angus, the, and I quote, “most gob smacking” stone age fort in all of Europe.
Our number one priority was to see Dun Angus (Dun Aonghasa), originating from approximately 1500BC. Recently a team of archaeologists excavated the location and found that it had been inhabited from 1500BC thru to 1000AD, or about 2500 years all tolled. It is a semi-circular three-ringed enclosure propped right up against the tallest precipice on the island, about 300 feet down to the sea. It seems to have been a ritual, economic, and political center for the people who created it. The full use of the place is still up to debate, ranging from protective and strategicly placed (having a clear view of the whole island and surrounding sea, so no chance of surprise visitors) fort, to sacred ground to merely a gathering place. There is evidence of the more important, aka: richer, people of their society dwelling inside the inner ring, while the other folk inhabited the middle ring. The third, outer ring was mainly for animals, and food, not being as well protected. But, what is causes of much of this debate is a natural rock platform smack in the middle of the inner ring, right up against the cliff edge. Archaeologists found a handful of bronze rings deliberately buried next to this dais, as though placed for sacrificial offering to some god. Some researchers even seem to think the location was theatrical in nature. All is speculative. Another singular sight is the “chevaux de fries” that surrounds the middle enclosure; it stands gaurd as a thick band of close-set pointy pillars, and miscellaneous rocks stuck like crooked teeth aimed to trip any intruders. This long down the time line it still does its job and is difficult to traverse.
Matt and I sat on the raised rock stage in the center of Dun Angus, ten feet from the edge of the world, watching a storm cross the Atlantic at a dizzying pace. Eventually the anthill of tourists had their fill of grandeur, and we were left entirely to ourselves. I haven’t felt such absolute solitude in a long time. Crouched at the outskirts of forever, alone except for the relentless crash of wave against rock, everything else is insubstantial, small.
It was a warm fuzzy feeling riding our bikes into peoples back gardens, having them wave us on; happy to share the historical monument their cows and horses graze around with the rest of humanity. We ended our expedition at the heritage center, not because we thought there might be more we hadn't uncovered, but because upstairs, in the most unreachable of unreachables, they had an internet connection. At €6.50 an hour, we quickly found the train timetable and the last train to Dublin from Galway, since we were hopping to stay a little into the afternoon the following day. After a shower, and some rest, we had dinner at the same restaurant again since the only other one in the village was in our hotel. Later that night, a friendly old gent, the image of the Gordon’s Fisherman, offered to bring us over in his curach to the neighboring island to look at Synge’s Chair (“its EXACTLY where the man sat to write his books, the exact spot!”) from the water below the cliff. We would have loved to ride along, had we not witnessed pint after pint disappear in front of him. Still, it was a lovely offer, regardless. He did manage to walk us out front of the “American bar” to point squinting in the distance at the speck on the horizon that he would have boated us to.
The next morning we dutifully filled our bags at the tourist traps, waved to our guide from day one, and meandered the waterfront to the noon ferry back to Galway. The sunny half hour crossing left us with tan lines, and salty skin. On the boat, Matt texted (the mobile phone is still the best thing we’ve invested in here) Gabriella to see if she could free herself to meet us for coffee since we had a few hours to kill before the train left. After confirming our train departure time at the actual train station in Galway, we met Gabriella in Eyre Square (a big green park with statues and art strewn about it) with beau Simon, and friend Phillip in tow. After a tasty panini, a bracing cup of coffee, and pleasant conversation, we parted company, and boarded our train, leaving the old world ways of Aran behind, its "True Irishness" to slowly degenerate in peace.
Resuming:
On Monday afternoon we took the coach for Rossaveal where we caught the “Island Ferry” to Kilronan (Cill Ronain), Inishmor.
Upon arrivin, around 1:30pm we were immediately bombarded by men of all ages trying to get us into bus/car/horse and trap to take the tour of the island. I haven’t experienced that sort of in-your-face hard selling here before. But, the Aran Islands main income is now from tourism so, sadly, everyone has to make a buck. We walked past them all to a chorus of enjoy your stays, because our B&B was visible from the boat (big “Pier House” painted on the front of it in red), about a two-minute walk away. When we entered to check in, the girl at the counter was on the phone, speaking a different language. After listening for a second, I guessed it was Irish, since this is supposed to be the last refuge of the dying idiom. Matt says, “Was that Spanish? I thought I heard an uno momento”. The girl laughed, as she confirmed it was Gaelic. That was only the first of the many times we were to hear it spoken beautifully here. When we found our room, we sat and watched the waves role in from the bay outside our window before walking into town to see what there was to see. We went to the tourist info place because they are always the most reliable for maps and general recommendations. Matt and I found ourselves looking at each other quizzically when we heard the shop girls mixing and matching English to Irish like the were D.J.s mixing the groove. I swear I heard one of them end a string of Irish with “girl”, as in “you go”.
We got our map and figured out what we could see of the island that afternoon. As we exited the Tourist Info center, we passed more tour guides, waiting to be engaged. I have wanted to do the horse and trap thing since we got to Dublin, so we jumped, gracelessly, into one. It was only after the first 15 minutes or so that we realized we hadn’t a clue as to the cost of this jaunty ride. Matt was in shock since we is usually very warry of things like this, so before going on we figured out if we could afford the current outing (we could). All we wanted to see that afternoon was the eastern portion of the place, as we decided to bike the rest the next day. We meandered (the horse was prone to stopping to admire the views along with us) along the coast road, slowly ascending to a ridge, passing along the way Arkin’s Castle, built in 1587, and later occupied by Cromwell who added on to the dilapidated hull by taking rocks from other buildings nearby, like a round tower and a holy well up the hill. They don’t call him a conqueror for nothing.
The main thing we aimed to see is called the Black Fort (Dun Ducathair, said doocaher), a promontory fort dated to the Iron Age. We discovered that our guide (whose name we discourteously neglected to get) had never lived off the island; although it has become the custom for many to grow up on the island, go explore the world (or at least the mainland) before returning to their birthplace (and birthright, as it is close to impossible for outsiders to buy property here). The island accent is curiously like the east cast of the USA, also. More Maine than New York, but definitely easterly. The horses hooves couldn’t take the weight of the cart on the trail to Black Fort, so our driver dropped us at the foot of a road (generously called so) and gave us the following directions:
“Walk until you come to the end (it ends at the cliff), turn left and walk along the cliff. There will be a rock wall with a hole in it, go through, jog to the right, continue along the cliff and you can’t miss it. Should take you about an hour.”
With that encouraging start, we began. It wasn’t long before I realized I was wearing a skirt and VERY unsuitable shoes. Strewn with two to three inch rocks shaped like axe heads, the road was inhospitable to say the least. My shoes were in tatters by the time we returned. At the cliff edge, Matt and I began to feel very alone in an unfamiliar and hard place. I had read about a “work hole” near the fort that basically is a big hole in the cliff caused by the pressure of the water in an underground cave, and didn’t want to stumble into it. After a while we sighted the outline of the fort, and decided that we were close enough to sate curiosity, and turned back. Plus I really had to go to the bathroom by then.
As we reached houses again, we gathered a canine following and a hunger in our aching bodies. We are NOT fit people. We found a restaurant called the Aran Fisherman and fed on fresh fish caught locally and recently. Ordering crab claws meant that I received about 14 claws and couldn’t help being the messiest person in the establishment. We then stepped next door to catch the 9pm showing of Ragus; the islands twist on Irish dancing and music. We even bought the album, but what can I say, we are tourists after all. For taking place in what felt like a high school gym, it was an excellent, and energetic show.
Tomorrow, I’ll tell you about the following days adventure.
Cheers
On Monday afternoon we took the coach for Rossaveal where we caught the “Island Ferry” to Kilronan (Cill Ronain), Inishmor.
Upon arrivin, around 1:30pm we were immediately bombarded by men of all ages trying to get us into bus/car/horse and trap to take the tour of the island. I haven’t experienced that sort of in-your-face hard selling here before. But, the Aran Islands main income is now from tourism so, sadly, everyone has to make a buck. We walked past them all to a chorus of enjoy your stays, because our B&B was visible from the boat (big “Pier House” painted on the front of it in red), about a two-minute walk away. When we entered to check in, the girl at the counter was on the phone, speaking a different language. After listening for a second, I guessed it was Irish, since this is supposed to be the last refuge of the dying idiom. Matt says, “Was that Spanish? I thought I heard an uno momento”. The girl laughed, as she confirmed it was Gaelic. That was only the first of the many times we were to hear it spoken beautifully here. When we found our room, we sat and watched the waves role in from the bay outside our window before walking into town to see what there was to see. We went to the tourist info place because they are always the most reliable for maps and general recommendations. Matt and I found ourselves looking at each other quizzically when we heard the shop girls mixing and matching English to Irish like the were D.J.s mixing the groove. I swear I heard one of them end a string of Irish with “girl”, as in “you go”.
We got our map and figured out what we could see of the island that afternoon. As we exited the Tourist Info center, we passed more tour guides, waiting to be engaged. I have wanted to do the horse and trap thing since we got to Dublin, so we jumped, gracelessly, into one. It was only after the first 15 minutes or so that we realized we hadn’t a clue as to the cost of this jaunty ride. Matt was in shock since we is usually very warry of things like this, so before going on we figured out if we could afford the current outing (we could). All we wanted to see that afternoon was the eastern portion of the place, as we decided to bike the rest the next day. We meandered (the horse was prone to stopping to admire the views along with us) along the coast road, slowly ascending to a ridge, passing along the way Arkin’s Castle, built in 1587, and later occupied by Cromwell who added on to the dilapidated hull by taking rocks from other buildings nearby, like a round tower and a holy well up the hill. They don’t call him a conqueror for nothing.
The main thing we aimed to see is called the Black Fort (Dun Ducathair, said doocaher), a promontory fort dated to the Iron Age. We discovered that our guide (whose name we discourteously neglected to get) had never lived off the island; although it has become the custom for many to grow up on the island, go explore the world (or at least the mainland) before returning to their birthplace (and birthright, as it is close to impossible for outsiders to buy property here). The island accent is curiously like the east cast of the USA, also. More Maine than New York, but definitely easterly. The horses hooves couldn’t take the weight of the cart on the trail to Black Fort, so our driver dropped us at the foot of a road (generously called so) and gave us the following directions:
“Walk until you come to the end (it ends at the cliff), turn left and walk along the cliff. There will be a rock wall with a hole in it, go through, jog to the right, continue along the cliff and you can’t miss it. Should take you about an hour.”
With that encouraging start, we began. It wasn’t long before I realized I was wearing a skirt and VERY unsuitable shoes. Strewn with two to three inch rocks shaped like axe heads, the road was inhospitable to say the least. My shoes were in tatters by the time we returned. At the cliff edge, Matt and I began to feel very alone in an unfamiliar and hard place. I had read about a “work hole” near the fort that basically is a big hole in the cliff caused by the pressure of the water in an underground cave, and didn’t want to stumble into it. After a while we sighted the outline of the fort, and decided that we were close enough to sate curiosity, and turned back. Plus I really had to go to the bathroom by then.
As we reached houses again, we gathered a canine following and a hunger in our aching bodies. We are NOT fit people. We found a restaurant called the Aran Fisherman and fed on fresh fish caught locally and recently. Ordering crab claws meant that I received about 14 claws and couldn’t help being the messiest person in the establishment. We then stepped next door to catch the 9pm showing of Ragus; the islands twist on Irish dancing and music. We even bought the album, but what can I say, we are tourists after all. For taking place in what felt like a high school gym, it was an excellent, and energetic show.
Tomorrow, I’ll tell you about the following days adventure.
Cheers
The Aran Islands:
“48 Kilometres out into the Atlantic from Galway City are the Aran Islands, consisting of Inishmore (Inis Mor), Inishmaan (Inis Meain), and Inisheer (Inis Oirr). Many islanders are Gaelic-speaking and large numbers of students of the language visit these rugged barren islands every year.”
That is how the postcards describe this place, and it’s as good a start as any. Truly, the place defies description. I was wrong about the “many people are not in residence year round” part, that is the Blaskets (the islands that hold the westernmost point title). Actually the Aran Islands have a population of roughly 1200 annually, of which 900 live on Inishmore, the Island we stayed on.
Let me tell ya a little about the tourist industry that has replaced fishing as the livelihood of the islanders…. there are 3000 bicycles on the islands, rented out daily to tourists (Matt and I each got one) at €10 (I just figured out how to get the € sign…) a pop. You do the math. Okay, I will: 30, 000 a day incoming, nothing but profit. And that’s not including the extra €10 deposit they retain if, say, you forget to lock up your bike and someone (usually a local) happens to pick it up and use it to get from point A to point B (no threat of the bikes actually leaving the island since the guy who owns all of them also owns the ferries). They will lay it down on the side of the path when done “borrowing” it, and businessman Martin (pronounced Marchen) drives around at the end of the day recovering his bikes that lay about dotting the island. Then he keeps your deposit…. your fault for not locking the thing up. We were forewarned, and so asked for a lock (they are free anyhow).
More later….
“48 Kilometres out into the Atlantic from Galway City are the Aran Islands, consisting of Inishmore (Inis Mor), Inishmaan (Inis Meain), and Inisheer (Inis Oirr). Many islanders are Gaelic-speaking and large numbers of students of the language visit these rugged barren islands every year.”
That is how the postcards describe this place, and it’s as good a start as any. Truly, the place defies description. I was wrong about the “many people are not in residence year round” part, that is the Blaskets (the islands that hold the westernmost point title). Actually the Aran Islands have a population of roughly 1200 annually, of which 900 live on Inishmore, the Island we stayed on.
Let me tell ya a little about the tourist industry that has replaced fishing as the livelihood of the islanders…. there are 3000 bicycles on the islands, rented out daily to tourists (Matt and I each got one) at €10 (I just figured out how to get the € sign…) a pop. You do the math. Okay, I will: 30, 000 a day incoming, nothing but profit. And that’s not including the extra €10 deposit they retain if, say, you forget to lock up your bike and someone (usually a local) happens to pick it up and use it to get from point A to point B (no threat of the bikes actually leaving the island since the guy who owns all of them also owns the ferries). They will lay it down on the side of the path when done “borrowing” it, and businessman Martin (pronounced Marchen) drives around at the end of the day recovering his bikes that lay about dotting the island. Then he keeps your deposit…. your fault for not locking the thing up. We were forewarned, and so asked for a lock (they are free anyhow).
More later….
The Salmon were indeed running….
Matt and I wandered up to the Galway Fishery on the far end of the River Corrib where we spotted several large salmon running upstream, leaping out of the water in a struggle towards their spawning grounds, seeming to fly up the weir. We stood transfixed watching for a while until one of the fisherman on the nearby bank (about ten feet away from our lookout) hooked a “big ‘un” and signalled for the fishery man to come with the net. When he came out from behind the large glass wall where he monitors the river (and fishermen), and shuffled down long and slippery stone steps to stand where he could more easily snag the steadily incoming (and belligerent) fish.
Then he thwacked it on the head with a big stick. I cringed a little, but enough for the fisherman to notice:
“Aw, get used to it!”
I told him that its not like I don’t eat fish, I think they’re quite tasty…. It’s just that sound. I don’t relish watching anything die, even if I am going to get sustenance from consuming it. Call me crazy.
Anyhow, it was fascinating to watch the whole process unfold before us.
1. Fish struggling towards procreation upstream
2. Fisherman struggling with hooks caught in the flotsam and jetsam
3. Fish avoiding the dangers of the weir only to be snagged by the fisherman
4. Fish hauled out still kicking, certain in its struggle against the Man
5. Dinner bagged
We eventually found Gabriella (Netzer, Eric from Colorado’s sister, who is still living in Galway) and met up for a pint. We had a great time meeting and chatting with some of the Friends from the local congregations, not to mention seeing her again after 3 ½ years. We actually met up with her again today, when we returned from The Aran Islands, but that is another story….
And one best told on a full stomach, Yup, dinner time again :)
From ferry to coach to train to taxi, to internet café...home awaits us. Dublin, that is….
Matt and I wandered up to the Galway Fishery on the far end of the River Corrib where we spotted several large salmon running upstream, leaping out of the water in a struggle towards their spawning grounds, seeming to fly up the weir. We stood transfixed watching for a while until one of the fisherman on the nearby bank (about ten feet away from our lookout) hooked a “big ‘un” and signalled for the fishery man to come with the net. When he came out from behind the large glass wall where he monitors the river (and fishermen), and shuffled down long and slippery stone steps to stand where he could more easily snag the steadily incoming (and belligerent) fish.
Then he thwacked it on the head with a big stick. I cringed a little, but enough for the fisherman to notice:
“Aw, get used to it!”
I told him that its not like I don’t eat fish, I think they’re quite tasty…. It’s just that sound. I don’t relish watching anything die, even if I am going to get sustenance from consuming it. Call me crazy.
Anyhow, it was fascinating to watch the whole process unfold before us.
1. Fish struggling towards procreation upstream
2. Fisherman struggling with hooks caught in the flotsam and jetsam
3. Fish avoiding the dangers of the weir only to be snagged by the fisherman
4. Fish hauled out still kicking, certain in its struggle against the Man
5. Dinner bagged
We eventually found Gabriella (Netzer, Eric from Colorado’s sister, who is still living in Galway) and met up for a pint. We had a great time meeting and chatting with some of the Friends from the local congregations, not to mention seeing her again after 3 ½ years. We actually met up with her again today, when we returned from The Aran Islands, but that is another story….
And one best told on a full stomach, Yup, dinner time again :)
From ferry to coach to train to taxi, to internet café...home awaits us. Dublin, that is….
Matt and I arrived safe and sound in Galway (again by lovely rhythmically rocking train) yesterday morning. We found our BB only to be told that the daughter of the house had scheduled us for the following weekend. So, they had a room left for us, but it’s cramped, and PINK. Oh well, its cosy and has all we need. I can tell you I’m gonna miss the morning fry at B&B’s when we got home….
We strolled around the cobbled pedestrian only shopping streets (aptly named “Shop Street”) and through the medieval feeling narrow paths, eventually (took us about three yards) finding a pub to watch the match in. Turkey v Korea, for third place in the World Cup (Turkey won). We spent most of our afternoon in this relaxed patter of wandering and watching. Today’s Match had Brazil beating Germany for their 5th World Cup title.
Today, much the same, we found the other interesting historical sights in the town of Galway, such as the Lynch memorial window. This little ivy shrouded crumble of wall is a monument to the “stern and unbending” justice of Galway’s former Mayor James Lynch, who in 1493 carried out his sentence against his own son by hanging him from this window (since no one else would do it, for fear of retribution from the family in charge of the city) as penalty for the murder of a young Spanish man who absconded with Walter Lynch’s (the son) girlfriend. I guess he seriously didn’t want to come across as partial or nepotistic. The Lynch Castle is now an AIB Bank in a really cool façade.
Before coming here, I hadn’t realized that the popular pub name “The Kings Head” referred to the act of cutting off the King’s actual Head. The one located here in Galway, was presented to the Axe-man executioner who beheaded King Charles the First by an appreciative parliament. Crazy.
Now, we are off to see the Salmon Weir Bridge, to find out if indeed the salmon are running. You’re supposed to be able to see huge shoals of salmon making there way upstream to the spawning grounds from April to early July (now). The weather has been pretty turbulent today, and I don’t know how that affects there habits, but we’ll still try to see them. And later, probably eat them :)
Tomorrow afternoon we take the ferry to the Aran Islands.
We strolled around the cobbled pedestrian only shopping streets (aptly named “Shop Street”) and through the medieval feeling narrow paths, eventually (took us about three yards) finding a pub to watch the match in. Turkey v Korea, for third place in the World Cup (Turkey won). We spent most of our afternoon in this relaxed patter of wandering and watching. Today’s Match had Brazil beating Germany for their 5th World Cup title.
Today, much the same, we found the other interesting historical sights in the town of Galway, such as the Lynch memorial window. This little ivy shrouded crumble of wall is a monument to the “stern and unbending” justice of Galway’s former Mayor James Lynch, who in 1493 carried out his sentence against his own son by hanging him from this window (since no one else would do it, for fear of retribution from the family in charge of the city) as penalty for the murder of a young Spanish man who absconded with Walter Lynch’s (the son) girlfriend. I guess he seriously didn’t want to come across as partial or nepotistic. The Lynch Castle is now an AIB Bank in a really cool façade.
Before coming here, I hadn’t realized that the popular pub name “The Kings Head” referred to the act of cutting off the King’s actual Head. The one located here in Galway, was presented to the Axe-man executioner who beheaded King Charles the First by an appreciative parliament. Crazy.
Now, we are off to see the Salmon Weir Bridge, to find out if indeed the salmon are running. You’re supposed to be able to see huge shoals of salmon making there way upstream to the spawning grounds from April to early July (now). The weather has been pretty turbulent today, and I don’t know how that affects there habits, but we’ll still try to see them. And later, probably eat them :)
Tomorrow afternoon we take the ferry to the Aran Islands.
Nothing much new to say, except that we told our bookstudy (and half the congregation since the Russian group meets right after us) that we are leaving in a few weeks, unsuccessful. Paddy asked Matt (before he knew we were departing) to read for the bookstudy again, probably for the last time (sniff sniff). They are such a supportive group. There were hugs all around, and everyone asking when we are going to try and come back, because they want us to keep trying. It’s nice to feel like they really are going to miss us, even though we spent such a short time with them, comparatively. One sister, who has been in the hall for a few weeks now from Maryland, is on her seventh trip to Ireland (Dublin specifically) trying to find work so she can stay and pioneer, so I don’t feel quite so conquered, retrospectively.
The dinner/musical evening we had planned for tomorrow night at the Moriarty’s got cancelled (moved to next weekend, actually) because the Sister organizing it is under the weather. So, we may just leave in the morning for the Galway/Aran Islands trip. It is amazingly liberating to be have the lack of restrictions so that we can just pick up and go like that. It makes me miss my carefree early days in Seattle, golly gee. Matt wanted to anyways, and now he his excuse has been hand delivered :) We are also trying to tack on a three-day tour that includes the Giant’s Causeway. We’ll see….
Right now, Matt is sitting at the next computer over trying to find a cheap shipping rate so that we don’t have to lug our ridiculously gratuitous (in hindsight…. ah, what am I saying, I knew it then!) quantity of gear in all its glory to the airport with us again. We were almost the death of our poor taxi man. Apparently the first time really took it out of Matt, although I have conveniently forgotten if I myself was that torqued by the first run-in with the baggage fairy. I have a lovely memory that way :) I recall fondly now the words of our first B&B lady, Mary, when she saw that all we had left at home was the kitchen sink: “well, you can’t blame a girl for being optimistic, can you?” How did she know I packed it? Her husband, Daryl, as he heaved the (“white elephants” shall we call them?) mass of clothing, music, and books, yes, books, up the three flights of stairs, sounded decidedly less cordial. Something about us paying his chiropodist’s bill…. then he remembered they are called chiropractors (not a popular medical group here yet; still a little to mystical). I guess both then, are apt.
The dinner bell ringeth.
The dinner/musical evening we had planned for tomorrow night at the Moriarty’s got cancelled (moved to next weekend, actually) because the Sister organizing it is under the weather. So, we may just leave in the morning for the Galway/Aran Islands trip. It is amazingly liberating to be have the lack of restrictions so that we can just pick up and go like that. It makes me miss my carefree early days in Seattle, golly gee. Matt wanted to anyways, and now he his excuse has been hand delivered :) We are also trying to tack on a three-day tour that includes the Giant’s Causeway. We’ll see….
Right now, Matt is sitting at the next computer over trying to find a cheap shipping rate so that we don’t have to lug our ridiculously gratuitous (in hindsight…. ah, what am I saying, I knew it then!) quantity of gear in all its glory to the airport with us again. We were almost the death of our poor taxi man. Apparently the first time really took it out of Matt, although I have conveniently forgotten if I myself was that torqued by the first run-in with the baggage fairy. I have a lovely memory that way :) I recall fondly now the words of our first B&B lady, Mary, when she saw that all we had left at home was the kitchen sink: “well, you can’t blame a girl for being optimistic, can you?” How did she know I packed it? Her husband, Daryl, as he heaved the (“white elephants” shall we call them?) mass of clothing, music, and books, yes, books, up the three flights of stairs, sounded decidedly less cordial. Something about us paying his chiropodist’s bill…. then he remembered they are called chiropractors (not a popular medical group here yet; still a little to mystical). I guess both then, are apt.
The dinner bell ringeth.
Matt just scared me by turning on the web cam that’s on top of my computer….Why didn’t he tell me my hair looked like that!?! I’m not comfortable with technology that looks back at me….
Here we are, almost four months into this escapade, and it looks like Matt and I are coming back to the States a bit early.
Matt just found out this morning that he isn't going to get the job in Cork, and we just can't spend any more time or money in this fruitless position, although it has been an experience I can't regret. Matt is getting the rejection blues. We are trying not to let our despondency at having to vacate prematurely color the little time we have left in melancholy (although it’s a shade this brightly painted yet naturally grey Island does will in…).
We are going to take one more sight seeing venture to some of the Islands off the west coast, and come home. We will stay a few days in Galway (we’ve seen it once before in 1998, but it was nice enough to see twice), and then move on to the Aran Islands for a few days. It is another place rich in, fortresses and monastic ruins, as well as home to fascinating people, historically. Matt and I both just read a book called The Aran Islands by J.M. Synge (also author of more renowned plays such as “Playboy of the Western World”, much of which was gleaned from these adventures). We figured we should at least make an effort to read something written by the man whose namesake street we inhabit. The book basically chronicles Synge’s (pronounced “sing” for those of you who are moronic like ourselves who insisted on pronouncing his name as though he could burn us) life staying on the islands and his experiences learning Irish from the locals, at intervals from 1898 to 1902. He also endeavoured to capture a dying way of life, as the Aran’s had always existed rather separate form the rest of the world. Alas, the old ways have mostly died out (there death being the mourned since the mid-1930’s), and a haven of fairy-lore, and brawn driven fishing industry are fading fast. The big island, Inishmore, has motorized vehicles, alongside motorized curraghs (the little hide covered boats used to be man-powered, and the only transport aside from your feet and a donkey or two). Irish is still spoken most widely in that quadrant of Ireland, but English is always as well known. At one point the Islands were home to over 3000 people. Now that number has been halved, and many people don’t spend the year round (due to the islands harsh winter weather) in residence. From the descriptions we have read, the Islands (second only to the Blaskets in westerly-ness) sound like a place of devastating beauty and a lesson in unforgiving living conditions. These hardy people even had to create dirt for their gardens when there was none to be had (done by mixing sand, dried kelp, and what little earth could be found, and spreading it over a section of land enclosed by stone walls to keep the winds from harvesting your work), since the island is almost solid rock, being an extension of the Burren (which can be described as naturally paved) in the west of the Mainland. Even thier fuel to keep warm was boated over in the form of peat turf from Connemara. If ever that ran out, it was back to the dried manure patties of yore. That couldn't have smelled good.
I’ll let you know if the book was fact or fiction :)
Then, at an as yet unspecified date, we are coming home.
Home, what a funny word. I don't know what exactly it means anymore.
Here we are, almost four months into this escapade, and it looks like Matt and I are coming back to the States a bit early.
Matt just found out this morning that he isn't going to get the job in Cork, and we just can't spend any more time or money in this fruitless position, although it has been an experience I can't regret. Matt is getting the rejection blues. We are trying not to let our despondency at having to vacate prematurely color the little time we have left in melancholy (although it’s a shade this brightly painted yet naturally grey Island does will in…).
We are going to take one more sight seeing venture to some of the Islands off the west coast, and come home. We will stay a few days in Galway (we’ve seen it once before in 1998, but it was nice enough to see twice), and then move on to the Aran Islands for a few days. It is another place rich in, fortresses and monastic ruins, as well as home to fascinating people, historically. Matt and I both just read a book called The Aran Islands by J.M. Synge (also author of more renowned plays such as “Playboy of the Western World”, much of which was gleaned from these adventures). We figured we should at least make an effort to read something written by the man whose namesake street we inhabit. The book basically chronicles Synge’s (pronounced “sing” for those of you who are moronic like ourselves who insisted on pronouncing his name as though he could burn us) life staying on the islands and his experiences learning Irish from the locals, at intervals from 1898 to 1902. He also endeavoured to capture a dying way of life, as the Aran’s had always existed rather separate form the rest of the world. Alas, the old ways have mostly died out (there death being the mourned since the mid-1930’s), and a haven of fairy-lore, and brawn driven fishing industry are fading fast. The big island, Inishmore, has motorized vehicles, alongside motorized curraghs (the little hide covered boats used to be man-powered, and the only transport aside from your feet and a donkey or two). Irish is still spoken most widely in that quadrant of Ireland, but English is always as well known. At one point the Islands were home to over 3000 people. Now that number has been halved, and many people don’t spend the year round (due to the islands harsh winter weather) in residence. From the descriptions we have read, the Islands (second only to the Blaskets in westerly-ness) sound like a place of devastating beauty and a lesson in unforgiving living conditions. These hardy people even had to create dirt for their gardens when there was none to be had (done by mixing sand, dried kelp, and what little earth could be found, and spreading it over a section of land enclosed by stone walls to keep the winds from harvesting your work), since the island is almost solid rock, being an extension of the Burren (which can be described as naturally paved) in the west of the Mainland. Even thier fuel to keep warm was boated over in the form of peat turf from Connemara. If ever that ran out, it was back to the dried manure patties of yore. That couldn't have smelled good.
I’ll let you know if the book was fact or fiction :)
Then, at an as yet unspecified date, we are coming home.
Home, what a funny word. I don't know what exactly it means anymore.
So, the Mediterranean Cruise I alluded to earlier is indefinitely postponed. We had hoped to visit as much of Europe as possible before we had to come home, but they way things are headed, it seem like even if we do have to come home, we should keep the bank account as far above red as possible, and hope that in the future, we will probably come back to Europe (UK) when this one place finds Matt contract work, if the Cork things a no-go. So, we’ll see. It would have been so nice to cruse the Med for two weeks and see the sights, but hopefully we will get a chance again if/when we return. So, we are trying to be providential I guess is what I’m trying to say :)
At meeting on Tuesday, I walked in to the auditorium at our Kingdom Hall with Matt at my side, only to turn around and find He had disappeared on me. I sat down where I found our books, chatted to some friends, and the song began sans Matty. When he did come back it was to whisper that he was to be in a demonstration that evening…too late to talk about it, during the meeting and all.
Later on, he popped up to the stage for about 10 seconds to be the stand-in American in a re-enactment of witnessing at work :) He said, “All I know is that in America, you have J.W.’s and Mormons, and they were pretty much the same”, to which the brother replied that, there were many major differences, and being a witness, he could tell him what those were. Matt looks at his watch, says, “gotta get back to work, maybe later” and high-tails it back to our seats, accompanied by the giggles of the audience at such a token part played. This congregation is a lot of fun. They are serious in all the right places, but genuinely jovial. There have been more verbal foibles (one of my favorites being that every time someone mentioned Jehovah’s “purposes” for the first month, I sincerely got lost, trying to figure out what “porpoises” aka: dolphins, have to do with anything. Pronunciation and accents are a wonderful anomaly) than I can share on a blog, but it keeps things very lively, and automatically makes everyone feel like they fit in here somehow :)
At meeting on Tuesday, I walked in to the auditorium at our Kingdom Hall with Matt at my side, only to turn around and find He had disappeared on me. I sat down where I found our books, chatted to some friends, and the song began sans Matty. When he did come back it was to whisper that he was to be in a demonstration that evening…too late to talk about it, during the meeting and all.
Later on, he popped up to the stage for about 10 seconds to be the stand-in American in a re-enactment of witnessing at work :) He said, “All I know is that in America, you have J.W.’s and Mormons, and they were pretty much the same”, to which the brother replied that, there were many major differences, and being a witness, he could tell him what those were. Matt looks at his watch, says, “gotta get back to work, maybe later” and high-tails it back to our seats, accompanied by the giggles of the audience at such a token part played. This congregation is a lot of fun. They are serious in all the right places, but genuinely jovial. There have been more verbal foibles (one of my favorites being that every time someone mentioned Jehovah’s “purposes” for the first month, I sincerely got lost, trying to figure out what “porpoises” aka: dolphins, have to do with anything. Pronunciation and accents are a wonderful anomaly) than I can share on a blog, but it keeps things very lively, and automatically makes everyone feel like they fit in here somehow :)
Greetings
Matt and I are back in Dublin, in case I didn’t express that last blog :)
We had a lovely dinner last night at a Sister’s (the Jameson’s) house in a town called Walkinstown, outside city center, but still in Dublin County. She had a few other families over (all of whom had children), and us. We played around in her backyard while waiting for a few stragglers (although Matt and I were sure that we were the last to show, because we got off the bus too early, and had to walk a ways before we found the right house).
The simple dinner and warm conversation made us feel at home with people we barely know, as always. It’s been a while since we have been able to associate with the families in our congregation. The last few things we were invited to took place while we were in Kilkenny and Cork respectively. So, we sorely needed this :)
After eating, we sat around sipping wine (Matt and I brought a bottle from Sonoma, to hint at our California-ness silently) and coffees, and were blessed by the musicality of our hosts and other guests, we ourselves sadly lacking the rich history of Irish ballads that they all seem to have been born with. Matt picked up the guitar (after two other people tried fruitlessly to tune it amid the prodding fingers of the three little girls present), and played a bit. One of the mothers (of three teenage boys, poor thing) there strummed and sang a song about freedom that seems to have a long history. Her husband (this is the Moriarty family) picked up a tin whistle and gave us a few other tunes. One of their sons seems to be a violin prodigy, and translated some of that to the guitar, in the course of jeering at his parents, as he embarrassed easily (which is always fun). Another sister there sang a few more contemporary songs, the only one of which I could join in on was Billy Holiday’s “Summertime”. Eventually we turned to Kingdom Melodies, and when enough songbooks were turned out, we all joined in (Matt accompanying us with the guitar, and once in a while Declan jumped in on the tin whistle) singing our favorites.
Everyone had such a good time, that the Moriarty’s decided to have us all over to their place on Saturday evening for a repeat show, for which we are to learn some song we can add to the repertoire. We’ll see how that goes, since I can only seem to come up with half the words to anyone line in any given song before I go blank, and start laughing. Hopefully Matt can come up with something….
As far as the job in Cork goes, we have to wait until the end of this week to see how the other interview-ees got on. Then, barring Matt getting the position in Cork, or something else miraculously happening, we get to decide when we are going to come home; we really are at the end of the line here. We will have given it four months by then. We don’t want to leave by any means, but there’s only so much we can do before we admit defeat. If we do go home, we will still have feelers out here, and in the UK, that we may come back to at some point, after having made some money in the States again. The redline approaches….
And even if we do get the Cork placement, we will have to leave this congregation that has been so hospitable and caring towards us these last few months, knowing we may stay or go. It will be a sad parting.
Matt and I are back in Dublin, in case I didn’t express that last blog :)
We had a lovely dinner last night at a Sister’s (the Jameson’s) house in a town called Walkinstown, outside city center, but still in Dublin County. She had a few other families over (all of whom had children), and us. We played around in her backyard while waiting for a few stragglers (although Matt and I were sure that we were the last to show, because we got off the bus too early, and had to walk a ways before we found the right house).
The simple dinner and warm conversation made us feel at home with people we barely know, as always. It’s been a while since we have been able to associate with the families in our congregation. The last few things we were invited to took place while we were in Kilkenny and Cork respectively. So, we sorely needed this :)
After eating, we sat around sipping wine (Matt and I brought a bottle from Sonoma, to hint at our California-ness silently) and coffees, and were blessed by the musicality of our hosts and other guests, we ourselves sadly lacking the rich history of Irish ballads that they all seem to have been born with. Matt picked up the guitar (after two other people tried fruitlessly to tune it amid the prodding fingers of the three little girls present), and played a bit. One of the mothers (of three teenage boys, poor thing) there strummed and sang a song about freedom that seems to have a long history. Her husband (this is the Moriarty family) picked up a tin whistle and gave us a few other tunes. One of their sons seems to be a violin prodigy, and translated some of that to the guitar, in the course of jeering at his parents, as he embarrassed easily (which is always fun). Another sister there sang a few more contemporary songs, the only one of which I could join in on was Billy Holiday’s “Summertime”. Eventually we turned to Kingdom Melodies, and when enough songbooks were turned out, we all joined in (Matt accompanying us with the guitar, and once in a while Declan jumped in on the tin whistle) singing our favorites.
Everyone had such a good time, that the Moriarty’s decided to have us all over to their place on Saturday evening for a repeat show, for which we are to learn some song we can add to the repertoire. We’ll see how that goes, since I can only seem to come up with half the words to anyone line in any given song before I go blank, and start laughing. Hopefully Matt can come up with something….
As far as the job in Cork goes, we have to wait until the end of this week to see how the other interview-ees got on. Then, barring Matt getting the position in Cork, or something else miraculously happening, we get to decide when we are going to come home; we really are at the end of the line here. We will have given it four months by then. We don’t want to leave by any means, but there’s only so much we can do before we admit defeat. If we do go home, we will still have feelers out here, and in the UK, that we may come back to at some point, after having made some money in the States again. The redline approaches….
And even if we do get the Cork placement, we will have to leave this congregation that has been so hospitable and caring towards us these last few months, knowing we may stay or go. It will be a sad parting.
First off, I have to appologize to anyone who managed to read yesterday's blog. I wrote it in a hurry, and didn't have a chance to go back and edit at all. Hence, mounds and mounds of typos, mis-spellings and errors in general :)
So, sorry....try it again, it's much better now :)
I’ve been trying to express how I personally feel about all that is ancient and historical, and I have come across an excerpt (from the Blarney Castle guide-book we bought, written by Dr. Sean Pettit) that I think sums it up concisely:
“All of us are touched in our imaginations by the sight of an ancient ruin, be it castle or abbey or great house…We have an instinct to explore it and to catch some glimpse of the people whose voices were heard there as they built it and lived in it.”
Simply and succinctly phrased, as I have been striving unsatisfactorily to articulate myself.
So, sorry....try it again, it's much better now :)
I’ve been trying to express how I personally feel about all that is ancient and historical, and I have come across an excerpt (from the Blarney Castle guide-book we bought, written by Dr. Sean Pettit) that I think sums it up concisely:
“All of us are touched in our imaginations by the sight of an ancient ruin, be it castle or abbey or great house…We have an instinct to explore it and to catch some glimpse of the people whose voices were heard there as they built it and lived in it.”
Simply and succinctly phrased, as I have been striving unsatisfactorily to articulate myself.
Here we are in Cork, and Matt has walked off up the block to his interview with Siemens SG leaving me to blog away in the nearest internet cafe with a coffee maker :)
Matt and I are both very nervous about this interview.... because we've both fallen in love with Cork. The city appears much less modernized than Dublin, much more Irish feeling. I guess you could call it character. Not that Dublin doesn't have character, its just that here, you feel much more like you are walking around in Ireland. Much of Dublin makes you feel as if you could be walking in any westernised city.
Anyhow, it’s been a great trip. Like I mentioned before, Matt chose the hotel, and did all the dirty work to get us here, leaving me in the same state I was for our honeymoon; knowing roughly where we were going, but knowing nothing else until we arrived. We even walked up to a nice hotel, and while I admired it (situated facing one of the two quays that encircle the city), and after pausing I kept walking, he stopped and said, "this is it." Everyone loves a surprise :)
So, we had a really nice hotel (a Clarion partner) in which the staff immediately tried to help us with everything from our baggage and what restaurants are good, yet reasonably priced, to who to talk to about our work situation. And of course, warned us about talking to loudly on dark streets in our American accents, because in any big city (and Cork is Ireland’s second largest) tourists are targets for pick-pockets and worse.... although we haven't had any trouble worse than people in Dublin thinking we were Spanish so far.
We wandered around the town for a bit, our baggage stowed at the registration desk, while our rooms were made ready (we got in long before check in time). The City center is comprised of two major quays (the place used to subsist of 13 separate islands until they joined them all buy quays) that shelter the three main streets. All the waterways serve as readily identifiable landmarks, making the city very easy for non-residents to traverse. So we haven't gotten lost :) I have to admit that there is a lot less to see in Cork compared to Dublin, as far as historically important sights, and touristy things to do. Most of those types of things lay a few kilometres outside the city (i.e.: Cobh (pronounced "cove") Harbour, where many Irish fled death by potato famine for the USA, and where the Titanic sailed from; Blarney Castle, Fota Island). But, Dublin also has the advantage of being the place that Vikings first landed in the 600's ---I think---, whereas Cork was first chartered in the 1100's; thus, less history to re-count.
The best things in town that we saw were the English Market, and a place called St. Ann's Shandon.
The English Market has my heart. Its set up with stalls lining intertwining pathways winding through the center of one block in town. It's as though Pike Market, Seattle melded with the family butchers (Matt's favorite), all the homey coffee shops, bakeries, cheesemongers and best of all, the olive stall. Olives from Spain, Greece, France.... the best I've ever tasted. The olive stall also sells handmade olive oil and olive soaps, flavored with home-grown lavender, almond, honey...and bags of dried lavender from Provencal French towns.... sundried tomatoes by the garland, feta, and goat cheese topped with edible flowers. It was one of the most visually pleasing things I've ever seen. I'm strange that way :) Then there was the stall selling tea, dried fruits and nuts. The tea is brought in by a lady who lives in Cork county (in the country part of it, I assume) and grows all her own herbs, then dries and blends them to create her own brand of teas. Sooo tasty. I got one with cloves.....
St. Ann's Shandon (sean: Old dun: Fort) is a clock tower built in 1722 attached to a church (raise your hand if you knew that was coming). It has four sides, with four clock faces. The tower now standing was erected over the 1100’s sight that was once held Shandon Castle, and its chapel, both of which were destroyed in the 1690 Siege of Cork. The clock tower was constructed out of remaining red sandstone from the castle and the grey and white limestone from the Franciscan friary, on alternating sides. For eons it was called the "four-faced liar" because all the clocks showed a slightly different time dye to the thickness of the numbers differing enough to affect how the hands clicked by. That has since been remedied. Anyways, here's the cool part: You can ring the bells!
Matt and I went in, after having our lunch of ham and cheese stuffed croissants, olives and coffee (all from the English market) sitting on the front steps looking down a steep alley lined with pubs, over the River Lee to one side, and green sheep covered hills to another. When we entered, the man behind the counter (mid-crossword puzzle) treated us to a story or two (and a post card and a pen!) for having a sense of humor. He made me think of the phrase we keep hearing here, that “the Irish still have time to talk”; it seems to be rubbing off on us too :) We told him that most people we met tell us straight out that they don't like Americans, but we're alright :) He laughed his head off at our stories of people in Dublin thinking we were Spanish and then telling us when asked what they would have done if we were that there was no ill-will (Side-story: There was a man in Dublin who, while climbing a statue on O’Connell street trying to pin a Spanish flag on top, was pulled down and beaten by 20-some Irish people in green team-jerseys. Garda stood nearby, and instead of trying to stop the mob, merely called in an ambulance. In their defence, they were only two against 20. No ill will, my big toe.) Our host introduced himself as Declan Brady, and told Matt the first thing he should do here is not tell people he's living in Dublin (some animosity including the name "jakeens"?) and change his name to Tomas McAllen/O'Allen. Maybe Matthew is too much of an English name? He also kindly offered to assist us in finding accommodation should Matt land the job, so that we don't end up in the wrong parts of town. All in all we left him with our love of humanity well intact, and feeling happy about our whole adventure, for meeting people with a story makes our own story so much more memorable.
And I got to play "Don't cry for me Argentina" rigging out across Cork, as my statement that I think Brazil will win the world-cup. I know Argentina is nowhere near Brazil, but they didn't have the sheet music for Girl from Ipanema. And it’s safe to say team names other than Ireland and England now, since they have both been eliminated.... USA plays Germany later today...
After retiring to our hotel for a break, Matt and I walked to the opposite side of town, crossing both quays, and hopped a bus to Blarney. We had bought tickets to this tour from the Tourist Info center near our hotel in the morning on our way to visit the Bishop Lucy Park (which was supposed to be neato, because while building it, they uncovered the original 13th century walls that used to surround the town. In my liking of old stuff, I wanted to see the remains, and was saddened to see that this seems to be where most of the local itinerants have chosen to set up camp, and the wall, a few feet down, and lovingly enclosed by a guard rail and enhanced by a pond at the bottom, is where they have chosen to deposit their collective garbage.). The girl behind the counter seemed new, and I didn't question her about the tour to the extent that I should have, because upon reaching the bus depot, no one seemed to know much of anything about tours. They just pointed us to a bus with its sign flashing Blarney in yellow letters. So Matt and I got on, and showing the bus driver our tickets, asked if we were on the right bus. He asked where we were going, and said we were good to go when we replied Blarney. Thinking we were just a little early (the tourist info lady told us to be early to be sure of getting a seat on the time we chose), Matt and I were both a little worried when the bus left the station 15 minutes before we were even supposed to be there to catch our ride.... So, we figured we were going to the right place, and arriving before the tour, would just wait for them to show up. I was irked.... Matt didn't seem concerned, so I tried to let go the fact that the bus driver didn't seem to know what he was about. Anyhow, we waited and waited for a tour bus to show. We shopped, and walked, and walked and shopped. Matt bought me a beautiful necklace by a local craftsman, made from silver and brass. Gorgeous swirls hanging from a thick circlet of silver. We got tired of waiting, (and shopping :) so we decided to go in after all. Turns out that the tour IS exactly what we did. What we paid for was just a bus ride to the town and back. So, oh well.
Blarney Castle floored me. I expected it to be a good deal like Bunratty, that is to say, tourist packed, and rather uninteresting in a historical sense. I was very wrong. Although it is a tourist destination, we had much of it to ourselves entirely, being the middle of the week, and a little pre-rush season. So, the castle is mostly a hull, but the stairs are all in tact, so you can clamber through the remains of rooms (marked to tell you what they were, like “young lady’s room” “great hall” “kitchen” “garderobe” aka: potty) and up through the storeys all the way to the top, wherein lies the Stone. The famous Blarney Stone which got its name (although not its mystique) from Queen Elizabeth the first who, desiring all Irish property to be held under legal tenure to the crown of England, ordered Lord Blarney to donate the Castle to the Crown. Lord Blarney was so good at refusing graciously, and in a manner that left the Queen so unsure of what he had actually promised (sounds like a lawyer to me), that after years of this going on, and finally realizing that he had absolutely no intentions of ever giving up the castle, she coined the phrase "that’s a bunch of blarney", denoting exaggerated babble, that by all means should be recognized as insulting, yet is not. Basically, prevaricating politely…
The grounds of the castle are what impress most about the place. I guess so far we have been visiting places, castles and cathedrals alike, that were the life-center of town for its history, and have continued to be physically located in the center of a living vibrant community. Blarney is a small sleepy hamlet, and the castle is not visible from it. Hence the town is not visible from anywhere inside the castle grounds, outside of the top of the battlements. It is entirely secluded from modern life. Included in the grounds lies a place called the Rock Close, in which the rock formations stand much as they have for over two thousand years. It is an ages old garden that is thought to have held some relevance to Druidic worship. That aside, it's one of the most perfectly unspoilt places I've ever been. It reminded me of the overgrown woods that my roomies and I used to drive to and sleep in once in a blue moon in Washington State. You can imagine with little effort how people would have lived there long before the castle was built. It’s home to a pre-historic dolmen, a tiny cave with windows, and steps down to a river; a place mysteriously named the witches kitchen (thought to be at lest 1000 years old), which is a manmade cave built with stones stacked in an upward and inward pattern, creating a chimney over a rock hearth, and built in shelves. From the backside, you don't even notice that it’s not natural. Then, there is an otherworldly stairwell, in the middle of this perfect glade, going from the base of one slope to its crest. It is enclosed, like the kitchen, by huge stones capped with more large stones. The steps are dressed slate and limestone, and look like they could have come from the inside of the castle, not this bizarre outdoors leading to nowhere that they are. They've been named the Wishing Steps, keeping alive a myth that whoever walks them, from top to bottom with eyes closed while making a wish, will have it granted. And Matt and I were left entirely to ourselves, making us both quite glad that we had missed whatever kind of tour we may have embarked on, that inevitably would have had us elbow to elbow with strangers the whole session.
And the Blarney Stone itself. SCAREY. I wasn't going to kiss it just because it seems so very unsanitary. But, once all the way at t he top, I didn't think I could help myself. Matt took off his coat, and glasses, lay down on his back and leaned his upper torso over the nothingness that was below, arching back to kiss the stone. As he did the wind came up, caressing his bare neck, making him acutely aware of just where he was dangling. When he got up and told me that, I just couldn't bring myself to do it too. I had already scared myself while waiting in line, by stepping up to a stone higher than the pathway on the top of the castle cat-walk (I still had a few feet of stone parapet to lean on, I'm not that dumb or that much of a risk taker), to take a picture of the edifice known as the Blarney House in the distance across the fields, behind a line of trees. As I snapped away, Matt told me to look down at my feet, not over the wall. Nice of him, huh? I'm not usually what you would call scared of heights, but I sure was at that moment. Every few feet, on the battlements, there is a two-foot by one-foot wide hole opening to the ground, meant to supplement the castles defences, leaving the defenders able to drop missiles on any attackers with ease. These have long since been slatted with the protection against falling of two horizontal 2" wide iron bars inserted into the stone of the wall, at, maybe a ten-inch interval. Does that make you feel safer? 'Cause it did nothing for me. I could still see, on either side of the square foot of stone outcropping that I was rooted to, the deathly drop down the height of the fort. So, I stepped back down, wondering at how I didn't even think twice to prop myself up there in the first place, and felt the jitters creeping through my bones. It didn't help that I was already feeling clumsy because earlier that morning at St. Ann's Shandon, I had effectively knocked over a postcard rack (which Matt deftly caught, even though he hadn't been looking at the time) by stepping back from a closet that closed in the trash can, twisting my ankle on a cantankerous stone (I think it was out to get me) jutting out of the ancient flagstones, and me, forgetting that I was wearing a backpack. So, I was in no hurry to further test my agility by back flexing my Blarney-kisser.
Adding further to the un-forgetableness of the whole experience of castle and stone, rock close and grounds, banded by lady-of-Shallot streams, as we left we passed an ancient yew tree that was singing. Halting, I retraced my steps back up a hill to the spot I heard the whispery sounds, and figured out that a tiny bird nest was hidden away from the hordes of tourists, and the dangerous wild life of the environment. The tree had little pockets, not so much knots, as elongated shelters, up and down its height. When I put my ear up to one of them, a tiny little singer serenaded me. I'm sure it was a baby nestling expecting its mother, because when it realized it was being watched (although I never could see it clearly) the warbling ceased, as though the miniature soloist took fright. I moved on down the path arm in arm with Matt, thankful for all the wonders Jehovah saw fit to bless us with. The views from the various levels of the castle steps were breathtaking in every sense of the word. I will not quickly forget how moved I was by visiting that place. I finished off a whole role of film in the process, so I hope I was able to capture some of the magical feeling of that time-forgotten era, and garden.
Here's a corker (I don't know about the offensiveness of using that term in the city of Cork, but oh well):
Matt and I went to a the Blarney Woollen Mills pub (called “Christy's” after the guy who worked in the mills as a young boy (c. 1930's), bought the old site after the trade had closed and the building was abandoned (c. 1975), and lovingly restored it, adding a hotel, shops, and restaurant) after we did the whole Blarney castle exploration, and get this.....
WE FORGOT TO PAY OUR TAB!
I myself, not being much of a dine-and-dasher previously, hadn't a clue until Matt realized it much later back in Cork and we were paying for dinner there. I guess I have grown too accustomed to Matt paying for things, so when we rushed out the door running to catch the bus up the street back to Cork city which was due in 5 minutes, it never crossed my mind to think about the bill. Fortunately all we had had was a pint of Guinness and an Irish coffee, so the barman won't be held accountable for a huge amount. The worst part is that the gent behind the bar had already started getting fuddled about cash with the two guys sitting next to Matt and I at the bar. They obviously live nearby, and new the staff. He had poured a pint for the guy, turned around, and back, been handed a twenty, and already forgot what he was being paid for. In all fairness, we were distracting him, unintentionally through conversation. But, he was ready for a break, and it was scarcely 6PM.
So, I wrote a note on our Clarion provided letterhead, and will send him recompense. I just can’t believe we did that. I've never dined and dashed before, and hope never to again :)
Matt should be back any minute from his interview, and I think I'm more nervous than him. I'm a little surprised that I've been writing for this long (two hours) and he's still gone.... I take that back, he's just walked in....I'll let you know how it went when I find out :)
Matt and I are both very nervous about this interview.... because we've both fallen in love with Cork. The city appears much less modernized than Dublin, much more Irish feeling. I guess you could call it character. Not that Dublin doesn't have character, its just that here, you feel much more like you are walking around in Ireland. Much of Dublin makes you feel as if you could be walking in any westernised city.
Anyhow, it’s been a great trip. Like I mentioned before, Matt chose the hotel, and did all the dirty work to get us here, leaving me in the same state I was for our honeymoon; knowing roughly where we were going, but knowing nothing else until we arrived. We even walked up to a nice hotel, and while I admired it (situated facing one of the two quays that encircle the city), and after pausing I kept walking, he stopped and said, "this is it." Everyone loves a surprise :)
So, we had a really nice hotel (a Clarion partner) in which the staff immediately tried to help us with everything from our baggage and what restaurants are good, yet reasonably priced, to who to talk to about our work situation. And of course, warned us about talking to loudly on dark streets in our American accents, because in any big city (and Cork is Ireland’s second largest) tourists are targets for pick-pockets and worse.... although we haven't had any trouble worse than people in Dublin thinking we were Spanish so far.
We wandered around the town for a bit, our baggage stowed at the registration desk, while our rooms were made ready (we got in long before check in time). The City center is comprised of two major quays (the place used to subsist of 13 separate islands until they joined them all buy quays) that shelter the three main streets. All the waterways serve as readily identifiable landmarks, making the city very easy for non-residents to traverse. So we haven't gotten lost :) I have to admit that there is a lot less to see in Cork compared to Dublin, as far as historically important sights, and touristy things to do. Most of those types of things lay a few kilometres outside the city (i.e.: Cobh (pronounced "cove") Harbour, where many Irish fled death by potato famine for the USA, and where the Titanic sailed from; Blarney Castle, Fota Island). But, Dublin also has the advantage of being the place that Vikings first landed in the 600's ---I think---, whereas Cork was first chartered in the 1100's; thus, less history to re-count.
The best things in town that we saw were the English Market, and a place called St. Ann's Shandon.
The English Market has my heart. Its set up with stalls lining intertwining pathways winding through the center of one block in town. It's as though Pike Market, Seattle melded with the family butchers (Matt's favorite), all the homey coffee shops, bakeries, cheesemongers and best of all, the olive stall. Olives from Spain, Greece, France.... the best I've ever tasted. The olive stall also sells handmade olive oil and olive soaps, flavored with home-grown lavender, almond, honey...and bags of dried lavender from Provencal French towns.... sundried tomatoes by the garland, feta, and goat cheese topped with edible flowers. It was one of the most visually pleasing things I've ever seen. I'm strange that way :) Then there was the stall selling tea, dried fruits and nuts. The tea is brought in by a lady who lives in Cork county (in the country part of it, I assume) and grows all her own herbs, then dries and blends them to create her own brand of teas. Sooo tasty. I got one with cloves.....
St. Ann's Shandon (sean: Old dun: Fort) is a clock tower built in 1722 attached to a church (raise your hand if you knew that was coming). It has four sides, with four clock faces. The tower now standing was erected over the 1100’s sight that was once held Shandon Castle, and its chapel, both of which were destroyed in the 1690 Siege of Cork. The clock tower was constructed out of remaining red sandstone from the castle and the grey and white limestone from the Franciscan friary, on alternating sides. For eons it was called the "four-faced liar" because all the clocks showed a slightly different time dye to the thickness of the numbers differing enough to affect how the hands clicked by. That has since been remedied. Anyways, here's the cool part: You can ring the bells!
Matt and I went in, after having our lunch of ham and cheese stuffed croissants, olives and coffee (all from the English market) sitting on the front steps looking down a steep alley lined with pubs, over the River Lee to one side, and green sheep covered hills to another. When we entered, the man behind the counter (mid-crossword puzzle) treated us to a story or two (and a post card and a pen!) for having a sense of humor. He made me think of the phrase we keep hearing here, that “the Irish still have time to talk”; it seems to be rubbing off on us too :) We told him that most people we met tell us straight out that they don't like Americans, but we're alright :) He laughed his head off at our stories of people in Dublin thinking we were Spanish and then telling us when asked what they would have done if we were that there was no ill-will (Side-story: There was a man in Dublin who, while climbing a statue on O’Connell street trying to pin a Spanish flag on top, was pulled down and beaten by 20-some Irish people in green team-jerseys. Garda stood nearby, and instead of trying to stop the mob, merely called in an ambulance. In their defence, they were only two against 20. No ill will, my big toe.) Our host introduced himself as Declan Brady, and told Matt the first thing he should do here is not tell people he's living in Dublin (some animosity including the name "jakeens"?) and change his name to Tomas McAllen/O'Allen. Maybe Matthew is too much of an English name? He also kindly offered to assist us in finding accommodation should Matt land the job, so that we don't end up in the wrong parts of town. All in all we left him with our love of humanity well intact, and feeling happy about our whole adventure, for meeting people with a story makes our own story so much more memorable.
And I got to play "Don't cry for me Argentina" rigging out across Cork, as my statement that I think Brazil will win the world-cup. I know Argentina is nowhere near Brazil, but they didn't have the sheet music for Girl from Ipanema. And it’s safe to say team names other than Ireland and England now, since they have both been eliminated.... USA plays Germany later today...
After retiring to our hotel for a break, Matt and I walked to the opposite side of town, crossing both quays, and hopped a bus to Blarney. We had bought tickets to this tour from the Tourist Info center near our hotel in the morning on our way to visit the Bishop Lucy Park (which was supposed to be neato, because while building it, they uncovered the original 13th century walls that used to surround the town. In my liking of old stuff, I wanted to see the remains, and was saddened to see that this seems to be where most of the local itinerants have chosen to set up camp, and the wall, a few feet down, and lovingly enclosed by a guard rail and enhanced by a pond at the bottom, is where they have chosen to deposit their collective garbage.). The girl behind the counter seemed new, and I didn't question her about the tour to the extent that I should have, because upon reaching the bus depot, no one seemed to know much of anything about tours. They just pointed us to a bus with its sign flashing Blarney in yellow letters. So Matt and I got on, and showing the bus driver our tickets, asked if we were on the right bus. He asked where we were going, and said we were good to go when we replied Blarney. Thinking we were just a little early (the tourist info lady told us to be early to be sure of getting a seat on the time we chose), Matt and I were both a little worried when the bus left the station 15 minutes before we were even supposed to be there to catch our ride.... So, we figured we were going to the right place, and arriving before the tour, would just wait for them to show up. I was irked.... Matt didn't seem concerned, so I tried to let go the fact that the bus driver didn't seem to know what he was about. Anyhow, we waited and waited for a tour bus to show. We shopped, and walked, and walked and shopped. Matt bought me a beautiful necklace by a local craftsman, made from silver and brass. Gorgeous swirls hanging from a thick circlet of silver. We got tired of waiting, (and shopping :) so we decided to go in after all. Turns out that the tour IS exactly what we did. What we paid for was just a bus ride to the town and back. So, oh well.
Blarney Castle floored me. I expected it to be a good deal like Bunratty, that is to say, tourist packed, and rather uninteresting in a historical sense. I was very wrong. Although it is a tourist destination, we had much of it to ourselves entirely, being the middle of the week, and a little pre-rush season. So, the castle is mostly a hull, but the stairs are all in tact, so you can clamber through the remains of rooms (marked to tell you what they were, like “young lady’s room” “great hall” “kitchen” “garderobe” aka: potty) and up through the storeys all the way to the top, wherein lies the Stone. The famous Blarney Stone which got its name (although not its mystique) from Queen Elizabeth the first who, desiring all Irish property to be held under legal tenure to the crown of England, ordered Lord Blarney to donate the Castle to the Crown. Lord Blarney was so good at refusing graciously, and in a manner that left the Queen so unsure of what he had actually promised (sounds like a lawyer to me), that after years of this going on, and finally realizing that he had absolutely no intentions of ever giving up the castle, she coined the phrase "that’s a bunch of blarney", denoting exaggerated babble, that by all means should be recognized as insulting, yet is not. Basically, prevaricating politely…
The grounds of the castle are what impress most about the place. I guess so far we have been visiting places, castles and cathedrals alike, that were the life-center of town for its history, and have continued to be physically located in the center of a living vibrant community. Blarney is a small sleepy hamlet, and the castle is not visible from it. Hence the town is not visible from anywhere inside the castle grounds, outside of the top of the battlements. It is entirely secluded from modern life. Included in the grounds lies a place called the Rock Close, in which the rock formations stand much as they have for over two thousand years. It is an ages old garden that is thought to have held some relevance to Druidic worship. That aside, it's one of the most perfectly unspoilt places I've ever been. It reminded me of the overgrown woods that my roomies and I used to drive to and sleep in once in a blue moon in Washington State. You can imagine with little effort how people would have lived there long before the castle was built. It’s home to a pre-historic dolmen, a tiny cave with windows, and steps down to a river; a place mysteriously named the witches kitchen (thought to be at lest 1000 years old), which is a manmade cave built with stones stacked in an upward and inward pattern, creating a chimney over a rock hearth, and built in shelves. From the backside, you don't even notice that it’s not natural. Then, there is an otherworldly stairwell, in the middle of this perfect glade, going from the base of one slope to its crest. It is enclosed, like the kitchen, by huge stones capped with more large stones. The steps are dressed slate and limestone, and look like they could have come from the inside of the castle, not this bizarre outdoors leading to nowhere that they are. They've been named the Wishing Steps, keeping alive a myth that whoever walks them, from top to bottom with eyes closed while making a wish, will have it granted. And Matt and I were left entirely to ourselves, making us both quite glad that we had missed whatever kind of tour we may have embarked on, that inevitably would have had us elbow to elbow with strangers the whole session.
And the Blarney Stone itself. SCAREY. I wasn't going to kiss it just because it seems so very unsanitary. But, once all the way at t he top, I didn't think I could help myself. Matt took off his coat, and glasses, lay down on his back and leaned his upper torso over the nothingness that was below, arching back to kiss the stone. As he did the wind came up, caressing his bare neck, making him acutely aware of just where he was dangling. When he got up and told me that, I just couldn't bring myself to do it too. I had already scared myself while waiting in line, by stepping up to a stone higher than the pathway on the top of the castle cat-walk (I still had a few feet of stone parapet to lean on, I'm not that dumb or that much of a risk taker), to take a picture of the edifice known as the Blarney House in the distance across the fields, behind a line of trees. As I snapped away, Matt told me to look down at my feet, not over the wall. Nice of him, huh? I'm not usually what you would call scared of heights, but I sure was at that moment. Every few feet, on the battlements, there is a two-foot by one-foot wide hole opening to the ground, meant to supplement the castles defences, leaving the defenders able to drop missiles on any attackers with ease. These have long since been slatted with the protection against falling of two horizontal 2" wide iron bars inserted into the stone of the wall, at, maybe a ten-inch interval. Does that make you feel safer? 'Cause it did nothing for me. I could still see, on either side of the square foot of stone outcropping that I was rooted to, the deathly drop down the height of the fort. So, I stepped back down, wondering at how I didn't even think twice to prop myself up there in the first place, and felt the jitters creeping through my bones. It didn't help that I was already feeling clumsy because earlier that morning at St. Ann's Shandon, I had effectively knocked over a postcard rack (which Matt deftly caught, even though he hadn't been looking at the time) by stepping back from a closet that closed in the trash can, twisting my ankle on a cantankerous stone (I think it was out to get me) jutting out of the ancient flagstones, and me, forgetting that I was wearing a backpack. So, I was in no hurry to further test my agility by back flexing my Blarney-kisser.
Adding further to the un-forgetableness of the whole experience of castle and stone, rock close and grounds, banded by lady-of-Shallot streams, as we left we passed an ancient yew tree that was singing. Halting, I retraced my steps back up a hill to the spot I heard the whispery sounds, and figured out that a tiny bird nest was hidden away from the hordes of tourists, and the dangerous wild life of the environment. The tree had little pockets, not so much knots, as elongated shelters, up and down its height. When I put my ear up to one of them, a tiny little singer serenaded me. I'm sure it was a baby nestling expecting its mother, because when it realized it was being watched (although I never could see it clearly) the warbling ceased, as though the miniature soloist took fright. I moved on down the path arm in arm with Matt, thankful for all the wonders Jehovah saw fit to bless us with. The views from the various levels of the castle steps were breathtaking in every sense of the word. I will not quickly forget how moved I was by visiting that place. I finished off a whole role of film in the process, so I hope I was able to capture some of the magical feeling of that time-forgotten era, and garden.
Here's a corker (I don't know about the offensiveness of using that term in the city of Cork, but oh well):
Matt and I went to a the Blarney Woollen Mills pub (called “Christy's” after the guy who worked in the mills as a young boy (c. 1930's), bought the old site after the trade had closed and the building was abandoned (c. 1975), and lovingly restored it, adding a hotel, shops, and restaurant) after we did the whole Blarney castle exploration, and get this.....
WE FORGOT TO PAY OUR TAB!
I myself, not being much of a dine-and-dasher previously, hadn't a clue until Matt realized it much later back in Cork and we were paying for dinner there. I guess I have grown too accustomed to Matt paying for things, so when we rushed out the door running to catch the bus up the street back to Cork city which was due in 5 minutes, it never crossed my mind to think about the bill. Fortunately all we had had was a pint of Guinness and an Irish coffee, so the barman won't be held accountable for a huge amount. The worst part is that the gent behind the bar had already started getting fuddled about cash with the two guys sitting next to Matt and I at the bar. They obviously live nearby, and new the staff. He had poured a pint for the guy, turned around, and back, been handed a twenty, and already forgot what he was being paid for. In all fairness, we were distracting him, unintentionally through conversation. But, he was ready for a break, and it was scarcely 6PM.
So, I wrote a note on our Clarion provided letterhead, and will send him recompense. I just can’t believe we did that. I've never dined and dashed before, and hope never to again :)
Matt should be back any minute from his interview, and I think I'm more nervous than him. I'm a little surprised that I've been writing for this long (two hours) and he's still gone.... I take that back, he's just walked in....I'll let you know how it went when I find out :)
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