Archives

Borrisoleigh Gathering Festival Oct 4th To Oct 6th – Tipperary

All roads will lead to Borrisoleigh here in Co Tipperary for next weekend, as crowds descend on the village for the “Borrisoleigh Annual Gathering Festival,” which takes place from Friday 4th to Sunday 6th of October next. Locals have been busy painting premises around the town and some lovely murals have been skilfully painted to welcome the large crowd expected from near and far, anticipated to be in attendance.

Something For Everyone Over This Coming Weekend In Borrisoleigh

The festival is being officially opened on Friday night at 8:00pm in The Marian Hall and following same, the cast of Borrisoleigh Drama Group will perform the one act play “Spreading the News.”  Entry to the Official Opening and theatre production is totally free. This will be later followed by live music in the village square.

Experience A Walk On The “Roof Of North Tipperary” – The Devils Bit Walk

Saturday’s events are set to exercise both leg and brain power, with a three hour walk over the Devil’s Bit Mountain, a Sean Nós Dancing workshop and an historical walking tour of the town with members of the Historical Society sharing their vast knowledge. The ‘Borris Bothy,’ a new community craft shop and tea rooms, will also be in full swing on the weekend. A craft fair will have a number of local craftspeople and artisans selling their produce. On Saturday night there will be a Variety Concert showcasing local and visiting talent, which in itself, promises to be a most wonderful night’s entertainment.

Sunday 6th will see a Family Fun Day in the Town Park with a host of activities. Ireland’s Strongest Man, Kevin Murray, will put on a display. There will be Tug ‘o War and  Sheaf Tossing contests, together with plenty of sundry activities for kids of all ages to enjoy, not forgetting a BBQ and a Vintage Tractor Drive. Throughout the afternoon a Busking Competition will see talented musicians competing for some great prizes on the streets of the town. (To register to enter the busking competition simply register online at the festival website www.borrisoleighfestival.com.)

The Pink Ribbon Events sponsored by Centra in aid of the Irish Cancer Society will also be a huge attraction. You can try your hand to score a goal past Tipperary Senior Goalkeeper, Brendan Cummins and meet other Tipperary hurlers such as Brendan Maher, Paddy Stapleton, Philip Maher, Pa Bourke, Padraig Maher, Seamus Callanan and Dinny Maher. Fancy a game of soccer with a twist? Then you’ve got to try “Bubble Soccer.”  (Phone Michael Kinane on Tel: 087-2310941 to book your game, entry fee is €25 per team.)  So if that’s not enough for you there is also Sumo Wrestling and a marquee with food tasting and party games.

There will be live music in The Square from 5:00pm onwards, starting off with Social/Old Time Dancing to The Castle Trio. There will also be a celebration honouring the Juvenile Champions of 1963. Later on well known and popular bands Outa Diesel, The Baby Powers and Silver Dollar will entertain the crowds late into the night.

Note: There will be parking restrictions in the town over the course of the weekend so do arrive early, thus avoiding unnecessary traffic congestion.

For further details or to register for events, visit www.borrisoleighfestival.com or email info@borrisoleighfestival.com. You can also follow updates on Facebook and Twitter.

North Tipp No Decision On Lough Derg Water Extraction

Part of Tipperary's Lough Derg shore line.

Part of Tipperary’s Lough Derg shore line.

North Tipperary County Council this week rejected a motion calling on councillors to oppose a plan to extract huge volumes of water from Lough Derg, same intended to supply Co Dublin and other surrounding counties.

Instead a decision was taken, that until North Tipperary Council’s elected members have been given the opportunity to consider findings of independent consultants; latter soon to be appointed by North Tipperary County Council to access the impact that any extraction would have on the lake, no further action should be decided.

It was noted that five elected members of the 21-member North Tipperary council were not present for the final vote.

Dublin City Council have yet to make a formal application on this Lough Derg proposed water extraction plan, which will then to go through the independent planning process. North Tipperary County Council will then and only then form an overall view within this statutory planning process.

It is understood that a planning application to pipe the water from Derg to Dublin is likely be made by Dublin City Council sometime next year, and will take a further two years before any final decision is likely to be made by the Irish independent national planning body An Bord Pleanala.

Some councillors in attendance stated that this proposed plan, if implemented, could have a significant impact on the tourism and economic life of North Tipperary. It could also damage the entire lake, which was already designated as a “Special Area of Conservation and Protection.”

Councillors from counties Clare and Limerick, bordering on Lough Derg, have already rejected any future proposed water extraction plan.

Tips On Reading & Cleaning Your Family Headstone

“And, as an hare whom hounds and horns pursue, Pants to the place from whence at first she flew,
I still had hopes, my long vexations past, Here to return – and die at home at last.”

Lines taken from “The Deserted Village,” by Oliver Goldsmith

Reading the inscriptions on headstones is now fast becoming a great contributor to our Irish tourism sector, both domestic and foreign, as more and more people have begun to trace their family’s history and now seek out the burial places of their long, often lost ancestors.
Most old headstone markers are difficult to read as they have become, through neglect, covered in decades of grime and various other surface lichens.  Examine your grave marker therefore carefully at first to ascertain if it is indeed cleanable or if best left alone. If the stone shows signs of chipping, scaling, flaking or any other forms of obvious deterioration, do not clean. Your actions will do more harm than good and in most cases you will only further accelerate its future demise.

How Best To Read That Old Neglected Family Headstone

Before cleaning the discovered headstone, best to confirm that you have uncovered a marker that genuinely belongs to your family tree. Many grave markers turn out to be the long lost property of another family, so do try to decipher names and recorded death dates shown on the surface, before interfering.

headstones

To help clarify ownership to your satisfaction, for reading and later cleaning you will need in your possession a stiff bristled brush, (Either natural or nylon but never a wire brush), a supply of water, a spray can of well shaken shaving foam, (Gillette Regular shaving foam is best) and a stiff straight edged piece of cardboard or rubber edged window cleaning wiper. Spray the foam over the words inscribed on the headstones, making sure to press into the counter-relief or sunken script, before removing the excess shaving foam from the headstone with the edge of the stiff cardboard or rubber wiper. Some of the foam should now sit into the carved script, enabling you to read most of the written epitaph. [See picture above.]

In past times a product known as ‘Heelball,’ latter a wax, coloured with lampblack, latter once used to stain and polish the edges of the soles and heels of repaired shoes, was most often used to take rubbings of stone inscriptions successfully, but alas like many such products it has now become difficult to locate. A rub from green grass or dock leaves can also assist to highlight some worn lettering less successfully.

Cleaning Your Family Headstone

First remember that old headstones can never be made to appear totally brand new.
Up to the early 1970 all Roman Catholic graveyards throughout Ireland, usually before the end of July, held “Pattern Days.” These were days when people come together to perform a kind of pilgrimage, to the burial place of their dead relatives or simply to honour their local saint, latter who had often founded their local church. This is now somewhat of a fading tradition in many graveyards, but perhaps should again be resurrected. Relatives of deceased persons worked well to spruce up their cemetery for weeks beforehand, decorating many graves with fresh flowers and wreaths, scrubbing headstones and weeding burial plots.

Continue reading Tips On Reading & Cleaning Your Family Headstone

Unusual Phenomenon In Tipperary

All through the wintertime he hid himself away
Ashamed to show his face, afraid of what others might say.”
(Lines taken from “The Ugly Duckling,” by Danish poet and author Hans Christian Andersen (1805 – 1875).

white-robin

Picture Supplied Courtesy of Tipperary’s Award Winning Wildlife Photographer Eamon Brennan (L.I.P.F.)

Dingle / Daingean Uí Chúis, or whatever they are calling it these days, may have Fungie, a wild Bottlenose Dolphin, taking up residence in their harbour, but meet North Tipperary’s Dicky (Richard) Robin, who has taken over territory and currently resides a mere 15 minutes driving distance from Thurles, in the townsland of Raheen, Ballycahill.

Dickie, possibly the only existing albino Robin in Ireland presently, has suddenly become a tourist attraction in the area, particularly for weekend walkers all anxious to get a glimpse of this unusual cheeky member of our feathered friends. While some robins often do appear paler than others, local Ornithologists are calling Dicky’s present prerequisite simply Leucism or Dilution, latter being a genetic condition where a bird produces less-than-normal amounts of pigments, necessary to colouring its feathers in the normal way.

Since Robins don’t migrate and use mating rituals through bird song and bird behaviour, rather than using plumage colour, this albino robin could have a better chance of reproducing than other albino bird species. So could we have a family of white Robins next year? Time will tell.

In the meanwhile the word has spread and those in the Bed & Breakfast business here in Thurles are reporting an upsurge in enquiries from those anxious to get a glimpse or indeed photograph this rarest of phenomenon and newest of Tipperary celebrities “Dicky Robin.”

Bullying On Facebook

I cannot help but think of course that perhaps this rarest of phenomenon could be a gentle reminder from our great Creator, encouraging us to raise up our heads from our modern day gutter and put a stop, once and for all, to those of us who use social media to intimidate the less fortunate or those who display difference within our varied communities.

Above video is perhaps one of the best stimulating and morale-boosting of songs for young people, sung here by American actor, singer, dancer, and comedian the late Danny Kaye (David Daniel Kaminsky). In the past our youth were more subjected to this type of storytelling and with it emerged in our youth perhaps a greater confidence, greater courage and social enlightenment, demonstrating in a most effective way on how to encourage those intimidated by social media, how to stand up and lead rather than be simply sheepishly led.

Time perhaps to take a look again and borrow from past wisdom and experience, instead of providing so called governments with distracting footballs to kick around.

Calling All Musicians From Tipperary & Beyond

BuskingBorrisoleigh Gathering Festival 2013, latter which takes place on October 4th, 5th & 6th, are calling on all Tipperary Musicians and Street Entertainers to register for their “Busking Competition,” which will take place on Sunday October 6th next.

As part of the Borrisoleigh Gathering Festival 2013 a Busking Competition is being held on Sunday October 6th from 12:00pm 4:00pm. Musicians and entertainers from all over Tipperary and beyond are invited to now register and take part.

The top prize for musicians is a half day professional recording session in Middlewalk Recording Studios in Cloughjordan, Co. Tipperary. A range of other prizes for different categories include vouchers from “McQuaids” Traditional Music Shop Nenagh and “Bookworm” here in Thurles. More major prizes will be announced closer to the date, to take into account the number of entrants and categories who have entered into this competition.

So grab your Comb & Paper, your Juggling Apparatus, your One Wheeled Bicycle, your Fender Stratocaster Guitar, Flute, Lute, Jacob Stainer Violin, Mouth Organ, Metallophone or Teponaztli – whatever, and demonstrate your, dare I say, X Factor ability.

Note: Closing date for registration is Monday 30th September. Entrants can register online at the festival website www.borrisoleighfestival.com.

As already stated the Borrisoleigh Gathering Festival will run from Friday October 4th to Sunday October 6th, so “come rain or shine” we will see you all there, at what promises to be a magical three day event.