Any activities that can keep the kids occupied over the Easter holidays are always welcome.
Here are five great Easter craft ideas for kids that only need paper, colours, glue, a stapler and scissors.
Remember: Always supervise your child when using scissors and other art and craft materials.
Learn to Draw the Easter Bunny.
“Art for Kids Hub” is a fantastic YouTube channel that provides step-by-step instructions on how to draw incredible pictures. It gives children a real confidence boost around their drawing and it’s no surprise that kids love it. Hereunder, is a video on how to draw the Easter Bunny, but there are loads more Easter drawing projects from which to choose.
3D Easter Cards.
We are all doing our best to stay apart at the moment in the fight against COVID-19. More than ever, little tokens to show we are thinking of someone mean so much. Why not make and send a card to someone special this Easter? Click HEREand HEREto learn how to make some really easy 3D Easter cards.
Paper Handprint Bunnies.
This is such an easy paper craft idea and results in a very cute Easter bunny. It’s an ideal paper craft for very young children. View the YouTube link HERE.
Make an Easter Basket.
Easter baskets are a traditional staple of Easter time, used to collect eggs during an Easter egg hunt. Click HERE and HERE to learn how to make an Easter basket.
Paper Bunny Hand Puppets.
This is a really easy paper craft that kids will not only enjoy making, but they’ll also enjoy playing with. Click HERE to view a YouTube video on making quick and easy bunny hand puppets.
Do remember to shop local when you can.
For art and craft materials visit HERE to order online from Stakelum Office Supplies, located at Parnell St. and Rossa St. Thurles, Co. Tipperary. [Tel: (0504) 21888].
No well-known current day personalities get spared in this humours song, which comes courtesy of funny man Eamonn Macdonncha and his children, Ciarán aged 10 and Cóilín aged 7, all who shared in the performance of “Roll out the AstraZeneca” posted on YouTube.
Sit back and have a good laugh, sure there is nothing else you can be doing this Tuesday morning, as you pretend to work from home.
“Roll out the AstraZeneca”
Oh, lockdown nearly broke us It’s brought us to our knees, Thank god for Arthur Guinness And for the PUPs.
Oh when will the public houses Ever open the door? At the rate of vaccination, It’ll be 2024.
Well Varadkar got the vaccine Just earlier in the week. He had it only in his arm And the thing began to leak!
Well they gave it to Arlene Foster And it drove her half insane, She claims she’s got some Fenian blood And she wants to join Sinn Féin
There’s no one in the restaurants And there’s no one in the pubs, And there’s not a team in Ireland That can stop the bloody Dubs.
When the Green’s get vaccinated Eamonn Ryan’s boots will quake, The biggest job they’ll have is Trying to keep the whore awake.
When they jabbed the Queen of England It created quite a spark, They gave none to Meghan Markl Saying her skin was way too dark.
Before St. Patrick’s College, Cathedral Street, Thurles was built, [Now MIC St. Patrick’s Campus, Cathedral Street, Thurles.], the area we know today as ‘College Lane’ was called ‘Bohereen Keagh‘.
See lighter area, framed in red, hereunder on the 1841 Ordnance Survey Map.
Bohereen Keagh (Blind Road). Special thanks to the research undertaken by historian, Very Rev. Mgr. Dr. Maurice Dooley, Loughmore, Co. Tipperary.
Note the area framed in blue is where the now 175 year old Great Famine Double Ditch would later be built five years on, in 1846. Same was the beginning of a successful effort by local Thurles business men, led jointly by Thurles Roman Catholic and Protestant Clergy, to protect local families from starvation and death, during a time when the ruling British government was effectively turning its back financially on their most westerly province of the United Kingdom.
In the legal papers transferring property from where St. Patrick’s College was initially to be built, which was then on lands, east of Thurles on the Mill Road; (later to move to its present site through a property agreement, between Protestant and Roman Catholic clergy), the right was reserved to widen ‘Bohereen Keagh’, for the use of the Earl’s tenants renting lands at Monakeeba. That Earl was, of course, Earl Llandaff, the title of the Mathew family who were the freehold owners of the Thurles Estate.
‘Bohereen Keagh’: [Name translated from Irish into English means ‘Blind Road’.] The modern Irish spelling of Bohereen Keagh would be Bóithrín Caoch, the standard Irish for a cul-de-sac, as distinct from a through road.
In the nationalist fervour, following Irish independence in the 1920s, many Thurles streets were renamed to honour Irish heroes or patriots, hence Parnell Street, Croke Street, Kickham Street, O’Donovan Rossa Street, Mitchel Street, Cuchulainn Road, etc. College Lane was officially renamed Eliogarty Road, but the name didn’t take off, with not many people using the name, whereas some older people still used the older name, pronouncing it ‘Boreenkay’ or ‘Bosheenkay’, just as other boreens were also called ‘bosheens’.
Incidentally the original proposed site for the College was in what was then called Killahilla, on the Mill Road on the opposite side, to the Great Famine Double Ditch, and with a now reversal of former nationalistic fervour is now today called ‘Windsor Grove’.
It is a pity that so many of the older names have now fallen out of use. Who now knows the whereabouts of ‘The Boggagh’, ‘The Orchard’, ‘Cloverfield’, ‘Turner’s Holding’, ‘Moanroe’, ‘Obin’s Holding’, ‘The Watery Mall’, ‘The College Leat’, [‘Leat‘ pronounced ‘Late’], and ‘Bolton’s Holding’, which are all within a few hundred yards of ‘Bohereen Keagh’?
Very soon, if Tipperary Co. Council officials and our elected representatives, all demonstrating a lack of experience, wisdom, and judgement, get their way, so too will the 175 year old Great Famine Double Ditch vanish into a similar state of unimportance, unknown and sadly inconspicuous to our resident towns folk.
If you are looking for some great books to read with children this Easter, here are some suggestions we are sure all children will enjoy.
Note: These books can be purchased in Easons, Thurles Shopping Centre, Thurles [Tel: (0504) 24588] and in Bookworm, Liberty Square, Thurles, [Tel: (0504) 22257], so do remember to shop local when you can.
The Easter Story by Russell Punter. Given Easter’s religious significance, it is only fitting that the first book on our list is a retelling of the Easter Story for children.
Russell Punter’s retelling combines simple language with vibrant artwork in this beautiful picture book.
The Rabbit, the Dark and the Biscuit Tinby Nicola O’Byrne.
Easter is a time when we think of bunnies and this is a story about a bunny rabbit who is very reluctant to go to bed. Winner of the Oldhum’s Brilliant Book Awards 2014 and the Waterstones Children’s Book Prize 2014, this hilarious story will be treasured by young and old and might even help get little ones to bed on time despite the bright evenings.
Peter Rabbit: A Fluffy Easter Taleby Beatrix Potter. This gorgeous board book is the ideal gift for little ones and introduces children to Beatrix Potter’s classic character Peter Rabbit. With touch and feel elements on every page, this simple story is sure to delight your tiny tots this Easter.
The Guns of Easter by Gerard Whelan. For older children, Gerard Whelan’s award winning novel tells the story of twelve year old Jimmy Conway who finds himself torn between the British army and rebels of the Easter Rising in the Dublin slums of 1916. First published in 1996, Whelan’s master storytelling continues to capture young readers interest in historical fiction.
Ten Women of the Easter Risingby Ann Carroll. Another title suitable for older readers, “Ten Women of the Easter Rising” introduces children to the struggles and influences that shaped some of the 1916 Easter Rising’s leading female figures. It is one of sixteen titles that form part of the Poolbeg “In a Nutshell Heroes” series for children, which includes other titles relating to the Easter Rising and is well worth investing in for young historians (Click HERE).
Movie night has become a family favourite in Co. Tipperary homes throughout lockdown and thanks to online streaming services we can now access thousands of movies in seconds.
It wasn’t always like that. Those of us that remember the 1980s will recall having to rent a VHS player from the old “Movie Club” video rental shop on Kickham Street , here in Thurles, to watch a movie on a big black VHS cassette. Not only that, but many’s the time you had to wait weeks for your turn to rent your favourite movie because the shop only had a limited number of copies.
How times have changed? As of August 2020, it was estimated that 550,000 Irish people were subscribed to Netflix alone, with thousands also subscribed to Disney+ and Amazon Prime.
There’s no doubt, but watching your favourite movie has never been so easy. Given the time of year it is; here are 5 family movie favourites perfect for the Easter holidays. Some are around so long a few of our readers might even have rented them from that old “Movie Club” video shop back in the day!
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, (1971, rated U) available to stream on Netflix.
Peter Rabbit, (2012, rated U) available to stream on Netflix.
Alice in Wonderland, (1951, rated 0+) available to stream on Disney+.
Ice Age: The Great Egg-Scapade, (2016, rated 0+) available to stream on Disney+.
Hop, (2011, rated All) available to stream on Amazon Prime
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