Archive for November, 2011

Dano

It was dusk on Saint Martin’s* eve in a small village in County Clare, and there was commotion a plenty.  John, the Postmaster, was not sure who made the most noise: The goose abroad in the yard having its neck pulled in readiness for the feast day dinner, or his wife inside in the bed bringing forth her latest child.

The wailing subsided both indoor and out to be replaced by the gentle cry of a newborn son.  Daniel Martin was their ninth child, one of whom was stillborn, and the family was completed a few years later with the addition of two more boys.

Dan, with his four sisters and five brothers, were part of a large family circle that stretched across the county.  He grew up in a busy household.  Besides running the Post office, their father John became:

Registrar of Births, Marriages and Deaths
Travel Agent for all the Trans Atlantic shipping lines
Insurance Agent,
The Inspector of Gunpowder and Gun Licenses.
An Import/Export Agent
He opened a grocery, so stamps and postal orders were sold at one counter and groceries at the one opposite.

Certainly Dan’s father was the man who anyone wishing to emigrate to America or England went to for his or her Identification Papers.

John later extended his portfolio, as we say today, by buying a farm – he had a large family to feed and rear, and the boys took their turn at bringing home the cows for milking and taking them back to the fields before and after school each day.

Dan’s mother worked in the shop as well as keeping hens, geese, a goat and I think the couple of pigs were under her charge too.

After supper, each school day, it was time for homework.  Dan’s father sat at the head of the table and presided over this task. Catechism, spellings, reading, writing and mental arithmetic were all part of this school outside school.  He had a Ready Reckoner, which he used in his Post Office work. This he explained and taught the older children how to use.

After the homework the concertina was taken off the dresser and John played jigs, reels and hornpipes.  Now and again the floor was cleared and the Siege of Ennis, the Walls of limerick or a hornpipe was danced.  On Sundays, fair days or pension days, friends came into the kitchen for a cup of tea.  At night a mug of porter was mulled and the old songs were sung to the accompaniment of the concertina.  The kitchen was certainly the heart of the home.

At the age of eleven Dan’s world changed.  His father died.

Leaving school at the age of fourteen Dan went to serve his time as a Draper’s assistant, first in Ennis, before moving on to the Midlands and eventually landing up in Dublin.  In those carefree early Dublin days, his spare time was spent playing golf, dancing the nights away and travelling the land with his friends while wetting his whistle with a pint and a chaser (or three…)!

Young Dan

Shortly after the outbreak of World War 2, he met and married a Dublin lass and they added to the population four boys and two girls.  He lived to see all but three of his grandchildren and he insisted that he be called Dan and not granddad. He felt that if he were called by the latter name he would be expected to have all the answers!

Dan & Nana

Ill health interrupted his life for over twenty odd years and he died at Christmas in 1981. RIP.

Stories of his childhood travelled down the years to our young ears round our fireside.  We lived the vividly told tales….

Walking to school through the fields in bare feet on an early spring or summer morning with the dew squishing between his toes or carrying turf for the school room fire to battle away the chill of the draughts and howling winter winds.

The annual killing of the pigs.  The hams hung on great big hooks over the fire to cure and the making of the puddings.  The more faces we made, the more embellished the stories of pudding making became. We almost believed we were back in those days holding the scalded intestine and trying hard not to let it slip or fall in case Granny’s wet and bloody hand landed across our ear!  We lived it, I tell you!

There was the art of milking a goat without it kicking over the bucket or adding fresh little nuggets to spoil the flavour! ;)

Days in the bog cutting turf and stacking it to dry. The late afternoon tea brought to the workers by the women folk.  Tea brewed in a billy-can, and buttermilk to drink, griddle bread with home made butter and curranty cake.  All the fresh air and hard work made for good sauce.

Although only three when Dan died, Elly has her own story about Dan’s magic tin.  I will let her add it herself….

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Today on this Saint Martin’s eve, the hundredth anniversary of Dan’s birth, my siblings and I, our children and theirs will spend a few minutes in quiet reflection and perhaps raise a glass to the memory of Dan, our father, their grandfather & great grandfather.

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*St Martin of Tours Feast Day is November 11 (Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Churches, Anglican Communion)

** Thursday Special will return next week

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Do They think I am daft?

Lose 40+ pounds and feel great!

If I lost £40+ in the present financial climate, I certainly would not have a smile on my face or feel like partying, I can tell you.

I weigh 130 pounds.  Take away 40+ pounds from that and we are talking about 90 pounds or LESS.

I was a walking skeleton for years through no fault of my own, forever hungry and I eat like I had hollow legs – it was the way I was made.  Everyone I encountered in life, except my mother, tried to feed me up and increase my weight.

We were a family of stick insects, all under weight even at birth, and in those days bonny babies (read chubby) were considered healthier than us.  All through our young lives we had two multi-course dinners a day, we had more food than they did at Downton Abbey!

The few pounds I gained over the years have at least given me a little shape, if not enough to keep me warm, I have no desire for regression.

So, no thank you!  I will gladly hit the delete forever button and not open that email.

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A comment

A comment I made a few days ago, I think it stands alone and worth repeating…

I will admit to being troubled by same sex couples having children but there are plenty of examples where the ‘heterosexual couple’ make a very poor job of parenting.

Another situation that really annoys me are the single women who choose to have a child alone - I see it as pure selfishness….

….and then I remember the fathers or mothers who bring up a family alone (making a good job of it) because their partner had died.

Perhaps we should learn not to judge.

As Fagin would say “…I think I’d better think it out again.”!

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Food Monday ~ Red-Onion Relish

Red-Onion Relish

1 tablespoon olive oil
1 pound of red onions, thinly sliced
3 tablespoons sugar
3 tablespoons cider vinegar
1/4 teaspoon salt
dash of sherry, port or red wine

Heat a non-stick pan over medium heat for 1 minute, then add olive oil.  When oil is hot add sliced onion.  Stir the onion to coat in the oil and reduce the heat slightly.  Place a layer of greaseproof on top of the onion (this prevents the moisture evaporating and reduces the cooking time) and cook 15 minutes or until very soft, stirring occasionally. Stir in sugar, cider vinegar, alcohol and salt. Reduce heat to low and simmer 5 minutes longer. Transfer onion relish to medium bowl; cover and keep warm.
This makes enough for four.

* I like to double the quantity and save any unused relish in a sterilised screw-top jar, for adding to sandwiches, or serving with cheese when I have guests.

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In Dublin’s Fair City

Molly Malone ~ Bronze *
Sculptor ~
Jeanne Rynhart

Jeanne Rynhart was born in Dublin and having spent five years studying painting and sculpture with George Collie, RHA and at the National College of Art in Dublin, Jeanne and husband Derek, settled in England. After further study at Coventry College of Art, she exhibited her work at various galleries throughout the UK. Her paintings and pastels were popular, however, she decided to concentrate on sculpture.  Each piece is well researched to ensure the authenticity of features such as clothing, detail, pose, location and this attention to detail is evident in each and every piece.

This sculpture of Molly Malone in seventeenth-century dress, is a familiar landmark at the corner of Grafton and Suffolk Street, Dublin.  As well as being known and sung internationally, the popular song ‘Cockles and Mussels‘ has become a sort of unofficial anthem of Dublin city.

In Dublin’s fair city, where the girls are so pretty, I first set my eyes on sweet Molly Malone,
As she steered her wheel-barrow,
Through streets broad and narrow,
Crying cockles and mussels, alive, alive-O!

chorus
Alive, alive-O! alive, alive-O! Crying cockles and mussels, alive, alive-O!

She was a fish-monger, but sure ’twas no wonder, For so were her father and mother before,
And they each wheeled their barrow,
Through streets broad and narrow,
Crying cockles and mussels, alive, alive-O!

Alive, alive-O! alive, alive-O! Crying cockles and mussels, alive, alive-O!

She died of a fever, and no one could save her, And that was the end of sweet Molly Malone,
But her ghost wheels her barrow,
Through streets broad and narrow,
Crying cockles and mussels, alive, alive-O!

Alive, alive-O! alive, alive-O! Crying cockles and mussels, alive, alive-O!

Until now I did not know there was such a thing as Molly Malone day!

The Molly Malone statue in Grafton Street was commissioned by Dublin City Council and unveiled by then Lord Mayor of Dublin, Alderman Ben Briscoe during the 1988 Dublin Millennium celebrations, declaring 13 June as Molly Malone Day.  The sculptor sang the song Molly Malone with The Dubliners during the celebrations.

In true Dublin fashion we have a day dedicated to a fictitious fishmonger!  Through the monument we see her with ample cleavage, wheeling a cart, she is loving known in Dublin as “The Tart with the Cart”, “The Dolly with the Trolley”, “The Trollop with the Scallop”, “The Dish with the Fish” or “The Flirt in the Skirt”.

An article in the Irish Times on June 20, 2011, told of the “spare head” for the Molly Malone statue going under the hammer at a value of up to €30,000?

Why?

It has emerged that two identical heads were prepared from the original mould for the bronze sculpture on Grafton Street 23 years ago in order to hedge against problems during casting. In the event both were cast successfully.The “spare head” has been kept ever since in the Bantry, Co Cork, studio of the sculptress Jeanne Rynhart and she had decided to sell it “to free up space in her studio”, and it would go under the hammer with an estimate of €20,000 to €30,000.

The sculpture was controversial and it had attracted some criticism. One group of artists, declared it to be “entirely deficient in artistic point and merit”. There was criticism of the low-cut dress worn by the well-endowed Molly and the sculpture was nicknamed “The Tart With The Cart”.

Rynhart defended her design and said:

“The image was based on the figure and dress of a 17th century woman who was both a fishmonger and part-time prostitute who plied her trade “from the Liberties, along Dame Street, Trinity College, up residential Grafton Street, and on to the newly fashionable houses off St Stephen’s Green”.
In a letter to ‘The Irish Times’ at the time, she explained that “Molly’s healthy diet of fish and strenuous daily exercise routine pushing approximately 3 cwt around would have assisted her development into a fine strong girl”. Rynhart further asserted that “breasts would not have shocked 17th century Dubliners – powdered milk was not in use and women’s appendages were the only means of ensuring the survival of the species past infancy”.

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* I have Alice from My Wintersong to thank for the photo, she took it on the day we met in Dublin’s fair city!  Thank you Alice.

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Openings ~ 12

The Old Priory at the Bangor end of High Street is part of Holywood’s rich ecclesiastical heritage, today it is surrounded by modern developments. This is Holywood, County Down. Northern Ireland and not Hollywood across the pond, otherwise known as Tinseltown.

The site began as a monastery founded by St. Laiseran in the early 7th Century. The present ruins are 12th century Anglo-Norman, built by Thomas Whyte for the Augustinian Order and much of these ruins remain. After the Black death (1348-1350) Niall O’Neill refurbished the church for the Franciscan Order.

The Priory was dissolved on New Years Day, 1541, by Henry VIII with its lands passing into the hands of the O’Neill family and then to Sir James Hamilton, First Viscount Clandeboye.

The tower dates from the 1800’s when this was the site of the town’s Parish Church.  The Church of Ireland maintained the building until the congregation moved to Church Road in 1844.

The graveyard has some interesting “residents” including members of the Praeger family, the Dunvilles of whiskey fame and Sir Joseph Larmor the world famous mathematician.

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Would you believe it..

I wait with great anticipation to see what Gaelikaa has to say on the topic she suggested for today.

My Wildest Fantasy

Way back…. More than half a century ago, I was often asked what I would like to do when I grew up.  Over the years the answers changed as often as Irish weather.

Like most young people I also had the equivalent of a wish list of fantasies.

1. To sing an aria.

Not just any old aria, but O mio babbino caro from Gianni Schicchi composed by Giacomo Puccini, just like Kiri te Kanawa in this short snippet with the London Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Sir John Pritchard.  Alas, my vocal voice never quite came up to scratch.  It was fine in the bath when the house was empty ;) only because there was nobody about to hammer on the door and complain!

2. To build a Kit car.

I felt I could do it.  I may not have had an academic brain, but I did have determination and sticking power.

In earlier years we had an old Barr Lock typewriter in the attic. It had stopped; locked, never to go again…. ‘till I came along!  I took it apart, cleaned and rubbed it down with an oiled cloth and put it back together again.  The ribbon was about the only thing that didn’t need cleaning or renewing.  Once up and running I set to work and typed out a prompter’s copy of the script for Juno and the Paycock, matching page with page to the printed copy.  It allowed me to interleave the numbered pages with a blank sheet for keeping notes of moves, ‘business’ and where props should be.  Success!

One of my brothers bought a tiny second-hand Fiat car.  After about six months of driving it, he decided to do a ‘Barr Lock’ job on it.  He was very methodical in the way he took it apart. Every nut, bolt and screw was placed in rows as they were removed.  The place looked like a hospital theatre!  I often stood and chatted while watching and taking note of how he did it.  I was fascinated and I suppose it was the kernel to this fantasy.

Building a kit car takes a lot of time - hundreds if not thousands of hours of labour are involved, as well as a substantial financial investment. This is not to mention the work space, tools and equipment required.

Chris Humphreys’ NG TF Sports Car

It was back in the days before we had the internet, so research was limited and I did not have the space (a dedicated garage or workshop) needed.   The frame and many of the mechanical parts would be heavy and cumbersome and need to be kept in good condition while working on them.  It is important to have the space/garage dry and properly secured.  Lack of necessary muscle required to complete the task, was another minus quantity, since my muscles were like sparrow’s kneecaps, so my fantasy was abandoned to the barrel of unfulfilled dreams.

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The Loose Blogging Consortium active members at the moment are:  Conrad, Delirious, Maria/Gaelikaa, Magpie 11, Maria SilverFox, Padmum, Paul, Ramana, Rohit, WillKnott, & Little old me.  We try to go live with our topics on Fridays, but life sometimes interferes and prevents posting until later in the weekend.  That way you have an extra excuse to relax with coffee and enjoy the offerings.

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Thursday Special ~ Selling Bibles!!

A pastor discovered that his church was getting into very serious financial trouble.  While checking the church storeroom, he discovered several unopened cartons of new bibles. So that Sunday, he asked the congregation for three parishioners to sell the bibles door-to-door for $10 each to raise the desperately needed money for the church.

Jack, Paul and Louie raised their hands.  The minister knew that Jack and Paul earned their living as salesmen and were likely capable of selling bibles. But he had serious doubts about Louie, a farmer who always kept to himself because of his speech impediment. Poor Louie stuttered badly. But, not wanting to discourage Louie, the minister decided to let him try anyway.

He sent the three away with the back seat of their cars stacked with bibles. He asked them to report the results of their door-to-door selling efforts the following Sunday.

The minister asked Jack, ‘Well, how did you make out selling our bibles last week?’

Proudly handing the reverend an envelope, Jack replied, ‘Using my sales prowess, I was able to sell 20 bibles, and here’s the $200 I collected for the church.’

‘Fine job, Jack!’ The minister said, vigorously shaking his hand. ‘You are indeed a fine salesman and the Church is indebted to you.’

Turning to Paul, ‘And how many bibles did you sell for the Church last week?’

Paul, smiling and strutting, replied, ‘I am a professional salesman. I sold 28 bibles on behalf of the church, and here’s the $280 I collected.’

The minister replied, ‘That’s absolutely splendid, Paul. You are truly a professional salesman and the church is indebted to you.’

Apprehensively, the minister turned to Louie and said, ‘And did you manage to sell any bibles last week?’

Louie silently handed the minister a large envelope.

The minister opened it and counted the contents. ‘What on earth?’ the minister exclaimed. ‘Louie, there’s $3,200 in here! Are you suggesting that you sold 320 bibles for the church, door to door, in just one week?’

Louie just nodded.

‘That’s impossible!’ Jack and Paul said in unison. ‘We are professional salesmen, yet you claim to have sold 10 times as many bibles as we did!’

‘Yes, this does seem unlikely,’ the minister agreed. ‘I think you better explain how you managed to accomplish this, Louie.’

Louie shrugged. ‘I-I-I re-re-really do-do-don’t kn-kn-know f-f-f-for sh-sh-sh-sure,’ he stammered.

Impatiently, Peter interrupted. ‘For crying out loud, Louie, just tell us what you said when they answered the door!’

‘A-a-a-all I-I-I s-s-said wa-wa-was,’ Louis replied, ‘W-w-w-would y-y-y-you l-l-l-l-like t-t-to b-b-b-buy th-th-th-this b-b-b-b-bible f-f-for t-t-ten b-b-b-bucks — o-o-o-or — wo-wo-would yo-you j-j-j-just l-like m-m-me t-t-to st-st-stand h-h-here and r-r-r-r-read it t-to y-y-you?’

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Who but the old salesman, Ramana, would have sent this to me.

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Shooting & Clicking

Yesterday, my post Sky writing was about my attempt to capture fireworks in the night sky.  The display was very small town, and certainly no match for many an International event that we see these days via TV or internet.

Baino commented about speed, settings and a tripod to help produce better results.

My camera is not much bigger than my mobile phone, it fits neatly in the palm of my hand or in my pocket. If I had to worry about settings, tripods or a heavy weight, I would never take it out of the box.

The pictures I enjoy most in any photo album are usually family members or friends caught “unaware”.  While attending weddings in recent years, I would move about the space capturing groups of family and guests as they chatted informally.  I would try to capture everyone present.  Once the photos were sorted and tidied up, I would burn them to a DVD and send to the Bride and Groom.  These spontaneous shots are a great lasting memory and living history of a family’s growth and a great reminder of events and time spent together.

My camera is for fun and good for my heart.

I am still laughing at my siblings looking for babies under a gooseberry bush!

I don’t have a pram to push or dog to walk, so I take my camera with me for company.  I do not need an exercise machine, so many times my camera has encouraged me on round a corner or the next bend in the road to find my ‘special’ capture of the day.

Peace and quiet

People stop to see (perhaps for the first time) what I am clicking away at, we chat and I learn about the object or sometimes they learn about it from me.  The chat might lead to a back story of the person I am chatting to.  Sometimes they will direct me to something else of interest that I was unaware of.  So I will keep plodding along as I am.  If I see someone with a fancy big camera I watch, learn and then chat to them.

Some are really nice.

I just realised that Toyboy camera has no name. :sad:

How about Carlo Camera?  I think it has a ring to it!

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Sky writing

I have never managed to capture fireworks before

I am not a fan of standing around in the cold night air, so these were captured from my back doorstep.

Five minutes was about my limit

About twenty of my shots went to the bin

The last is my favourite.

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