HFH-Ireland

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Location: Bremerton, WA, United States

Following nearly 3 decades as a medical professional, I have spent the past seven years exploring and expanding horizons. It has been a journey of faith, hope, and joy, with amazing opportunities to learn and grow. I have stepped out of the box and moved from anchor to kite, soaring to wherever God leads.

Friday, December 22, 2006

Postscript and on to a new chapter...

The one blessing all of us are given is time.

We are equally blessed with the choice, the privilege, and the responsibility of determining how to use it.

We shape our destiny in that determination, in the way we choose to live and relate to one another and our earth.

May we consider peace, hope, faith, and love. May we consider one another.

Working with Habitat for Humanity Ireland has been an amazing gift both in the giving and in the receiving.

It is well with my soul. May it be so for you also.

Love,

Sheila

Final weeks

28nov06

Out to Dublin City for a farewell dinner, with drinks in the country’s smallest pub, Dawson St Lounge…you enter straight onto narrow spiral stairway to this basement setting, the size of a large bedroom and very cozy…ladies loo has pipe from the street above for fresh air, and a large padded cushion mounted to ceiling above toilet to buffer bumps on the head…lost on me, since I wasn’t tall enough for it to be a factor Then out to The Café Bar Deli for dinner and conversation…wonderful!

11-29nov

Full steam ahead at the Ballyfermot site, completing as much as possible before heading home to the states November 30. While there is still work to be done, much has been accomplished, and the recipient family will move in after the new year...

6-10nov

Edge of the World Vagabond tour to the SW quadrant of Ireland

10nov

Foggy start and blustery winds…up to Dingle Cobber Pass Ireland’s highest road overlooking Brandon Bay and some of the longest beaches in Ireland…fogged in while there, clearing as we descended with points of light like giant photographer’s spotlights over the landscape. On to Fonyle Strand and Tralee, home of the largest working windmill in Europe…listened to Billy Connelly (Scottish comedian) on the drive back to Dublin via Limerick.

Terrain changes significantly peninsula to peninsula, from undergrowth and ground cover to fern/gorse/holly/blackberry brambles to rocky as you move north. Lush valleys lay out between low mountains, outlined in the irregular patchwork of stone walls and pasturelands, some straight down 70 degree slope, some up to cliff edges, some with an almost crop circle type look.

Fall colors in muted hues of brown/rust/gold brightened by bright red holy berries…nature’s garlands…Adare for lunch and a look at the abbey there Port Laoise/Rock of Dunamare…Dublin

Multiple shades of green defined, punctuated by opulent manor houses and modest cottages throughout. There is a sameness to home construction in this area, similar to saltbox construction in the states, much with block and concrete sill inserts that look a bit like headers on the wrong end of the window : )

9nov

Portmagee…breakfast croissant w/Brie and bacon (Irish style, more like Canadian bacon)…stopped in the hills for the view (clear day!!)…Killorghin…Currantophill in view, the highest mountain @ 3440 ft. Castlemain/Dingle PeninsulaInchstrand (beach) huge and beautiful…Annagap/Annascaul lake and waterfall for lunch, encountering a herd of sheep coming down as we walked up into the hills to lunch and munch…Sleahead Drive the most westerly point in Europe, at one time known as “the edge of the world” and a spiritual center of sorts as well, with stone “beehives” scattered throughout the countryside…monks lived them as much as 1500-2000 years ago…corbelled construction (like the innermost part of passage tombs), waterproof and virtually indestructible, albeit a bit nippy and quite small…Blasket Islands with one ostensibly like the outstretched figure of Ireland’s Finian McCool sleeping : ) Coumenoole Beach…Dunquin waves crashing 15-20 feet in the air fanning out like Rockettes’ feathered costumes...Brandon Mountain in full view, though normally rarely out of the clouds…a treat given lost views on the first 2 days due to weather…multiple stone walls dividing pasture and farmland are a result of property division by descendency…aside: Irish were “means” tested to determine qualification to vote until the 1970’s...another aside: some believe the Irish were the true discoverers of America (see St Brandon’s book Navigatia (Ireland 638 AD), and Gavin McKenzie’s “1421” (China 1421 AD), and “Key of Hyrum” …circled Dingle Peninsula and back into Dingle for the night, with shopping and live Irish music to cap the trip before heading back

8nov
Bear Island
…7 miles long and hosting several Martello Towers, an early warning system network against the French in years past, both here and on the mainland…the mast of an old refrigeration ship sunk between the island and mainland in one of the world’s largest natural harbors lends a certain nautical mystique (and no doubt a somewhat problematic navigational challenge at low tide)…Healy Pass thru Caha MountainsKenmare for a wee bit o’ shopping…90 minute hike along Kerry Way, an old track from Kerry to Killarney…thru Killarney National ForrestMoll’s Gap…Lady’s View Lakes…Sneem for ice cream…Derrnone Beach...near Daniel O’Connell’s home; a peaceable Ghandi type person who broke new ground in Ireland as the 1st Catholic in Parliament…Portmagee overnight at The Moorings…a superb sunset closed the day

7nov
Low mist and cool all day…the most spectacular views of sea and mountains in IE lurking behind a veil of mist all day : (

Clonkilty to Bantry to Glangariff (Gaelic for rocky glade, short walk there) to Bearra Peninsula red limestone/rocky mountain peninsula to Adrigole sea kayaking with swans, heron, huge seals as accompaniment. Sit on top style boats resplendent in wetsuits and booties…calm, overcast, magical…on to Castletownbere for lunch at McCarthy’s Bar (featured on the cover of a book by the same name)…Puxely’s Manor/Dunboy Castle, the former being renovated into Europe’s first 6 star hotel, the latter now ruins, but with a distinct star shaped outer wall still discernible, cutting edge configuration at the time to allow better vantage for cross fire…beautiful location though mountains remained hidden from view in the overcast. O’Sullivanbere… copper mining area at one time… Ballydobegan for “Vaga-ball” (a variation on beach volleyball) and tea on the beach…took the high road back, all views still hidden in clouds and mist…very like a novel or what one might imagine Ireland to be like in some romantic novel ...thru old copper mines (when depleted many went to Butte Montana in the US to mine there!)… abandoned a cable car trip to Dursey Island due to mist…Bear Island by “ferry”, a small boat that can accommodate 4 vehicles and a dozen passengers at a time…islanders have a second freight ferry to transport goods, and often have a car there and one on the mainland…no taxes on the island, and no Garda (police)…stayed at The Admiral’s House once housed British admirals stationed there, now a hostel…remote island, pop 200, held by Britain due to strategic placement until 1939 (despite Ireland’s independence in 1922)…family style meal in the sitting room with a coal fire while watching the movie Michael Collins…had the house entirely to ourselves…

6nov


Dawned crisp and foggy opened the tour….Dublin through Kildaire….public grounds and racetrack; horses are the largest export from Ireland…65% of Braveheart filmed in the fields here (despite the fact that it’s a Scottish story!!)…geography lesson…IE formed 400,000,000 years ago, up from the sea…32,000 sq mi (about the size of WI)…600 mi S of Artic Circle…on the Gulf Stream, with a warm moist nautical climate…connected by land bridge to England until 9000 years ago… originally all oak forest, though now only 3% of the island is treed…much was cut for ship building in Europe to the tune of roughly 100 acres of forest per ship (WOW!). As the Emerald Isle, it is now the least forested island in Europe….Abbeylocks…small market town where barmen still wear white coats (a bit like butchers coats in the US)…

More history…when the land bridge disappeared, that “capped” (i.e. limited) the species on the island…Neolithic (New Stone Age) man was the first here. …pre Celtic…then Celtic 3500 years ago as first invaders…they formed 100’s of kingdoms versus a single united country…the Roman “non-invasion” was next…they came, decided it was not their thing, and left, making it possible for the Celtic population to survive in Ireland despite its demise elsewhere…St Patrick entered the scene with his Welsh/Roman background and birthed the Celtic Catholic (versus Roman Catholic) church (aside…St. Patrick’s Day is a religious day in IE, no green beer or parades…that’s an exclusively American iteration)…when Rome fell IE became a center of education (science/farming/etc.) with multiple monasteries, in large part because IE was not incorporated as part of the Roman empire…Vikings were next in 795AD. They ruled for 200 years, bringing with them (among other things) the concept of cities and towns…Ireland’s Brian Boru united the country against the Vikings (although Viking methods were adopted: 1st monetary system, expanded Gaelic language, red hair!!...Celts were dark)…he was beheaded @ the largest battle in Clonnaught, where lines were drawn between the Irish and pagan Vikings. Boru was the first high king of IE….Aside…the 3 leaf clover represents the trinity=3 entities, all parts of a whole. Very cool.

Lunch in Galtry Mountains of Tipperary….Cork and Blarney Castle and Stone….beautiful grounds and surroundings…Clonkilty, home of Michael Collins, for the night @ MacLiam Lodge… …dinner at Emmet Hotel…traditional Irish music at DeBarra Pub; Jimmy Hendrix’ drummer Noel Redding played there for years…black currant Guinness (the “girly” version, sweet and filling, like a dessert!)


Sunday, November 05, 2006

It's all in the details...catching up


Hiya, how ya keepin’? After two weeks of intermittent access due to a total hard drive crash, back in business with most files recovered, including blog notes and an abundance of pictures waiting in the wings. YAY! (And WHEW!)

31oct-4nov

Continued progress at the Ballyfermot unit, with crews scheduled Wednesday and Saturday this week and 4 days a week for the remainder of my stay (sans next week, when I’ll be out exploring the SW of Ireland., and gathering another load of pictures to share!).

28-30 oct

One less staff person, as Regis made his way to Paris enroute to home this weekend. No work on site, as this is not only a three day weekend/bank holiday in Ireland, but Halloween weekend as well, complete with illegal fireworks (quite spectacular, actually) and unauthorized bonfires (HUGE!!!) everywhere.

As the Ballyfermot authorities where I work put it, it’s an “active” weekend in the neighborhood(s). We opted to defer work and observe the “activities” from afar

03-27oct06
Steady progress at Ballyfermot despite regular challenges with the local kids. Front and rear gardens “revealed”, unearthed from the throes of jungle like growth (some 4 feet high!) and monumental debris hidden within in the rear, and mowed and “debrided” in the front as well. Each took a full day’s work with multiple volunteers to complete!

Annnnnnnnnnnnnnnnd, we have a family assigned to this unit now, Joe and Yvonne and their two children Ross and Karla. Very cool, and delightful to work with.

Interior work is nearing “deconstruction completion”, with several walls relieved of their coverings, 50% all the way to bare block to allow for insulation and replastering, the remainder down to plasterboard after years of hiding under a plethora of wallpaper and paint layers. Volunteer concerns about not being able to play with power tools or “build” in the ways associated with new construction have been effectively waylaid during the process, so volunteer teams and this diminutive site supervisor are all happy with the tasks at hand, and the rapid results….many hands make light work, “fer sure”!

02-06oct06
Working Ballyfermot with two young semi-regular volunteers, so both sites now up and running. Big crew expected on each site Saturday, so things are beginning to move…goal is to be close to done before my time is up… extending my stay through November to support that plan. The second volunteer supervisor is leaving early, and car/apartment are available through then, so will continue to contribute here until then. Though it’s been suggested that I extend even longer, am looking forward to at least a temporary return to the states for a portion of the holidays, and then will see what God has in store for the New Year….lots of possibilities showing up…looking forward to continuing the adventure!

29sept-01oct06
A three day “Into the West” tour with Vagabond Tours, with just four of us and our guide in a Land Rover. A weekend filled with stories, Irish history, and “off the beaten path” exploring…
Day 1: Dublin to Killebogan and the Locke Distillery, on to Galway and the Irish whores (Small open dinghies used for fishing), Connemara, the Maumturk Mountains and St. Patrick’s Bed, Roundstone and Eldon’s Hotel with a visit to the only fulltime maker of the Bodrain or traditional Irish drum (perhaps most familiar to most as the drum sound experienced in Riverdance (Malachy’s drums were used for that production).
Day 2: Roundstone to Clifden…Letterfrack…Crough Patrick and riding on the beach….Westport…Castlebor…Inishcrone and a beachfront B&B….Ireland’s coats boast some beautiful white sand beaches whose waters rival warmer climes…who knew?...hiking a portion of the Famine Walk trail between Doolough and Louisburg (see
http://www.indymedia.ie/newswire.php?story_id=60048®ion=mayo) and absorbing the countryside…horseback riding on the beach…a peek at Kylemore Abbey, a beautiful mansion turned convent (http://www.irelandseye.com/aarticles/travel/attractions/houses/kylemore.shtm,... Killary Harbour, Ireland’s only fjord (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killary_Harbour)….
Day 3: Strandhill…Sligo…Queen Maeve’s Cairn…seaweed baths (a bit Neptunish, a bit slimy, and every bit as relaxing and therapeutic as a good massage…who knew)…and a missed opportunity to learn a bit of surfing Ireland style (though I know where they are for a future trip…wind, rain, sun, and a rainbow to cap the trip. Awesome!

27-28sept06
Reconnoitering at the office, finishing reorganization there, and planning possible volunteer days (at last…YAY) for the second of the two sites here. Quiet but productive.

25-26 sept06
Two spectacular days with HFH NI! Two 2-bedroom homes framed, sheathed, squared, shimmed, and blocked in two days by a team of 11…yee haw! Would have loved to have stayed for trusses….down with a boom and 350 scaffolding around the house, again, all by volunteers. Alas, had to return to Dublin, and took the coastal route around the ------------- mountains….misty, rainy, very otherworldly feeling. A beautiful close to my four day weekend away.


24sept06
Opened my 52nd year on Giant’s Causeway, a small but surprising geological oddity on the Coast. Hiking in for about 20 minutes, the sudden change from “normal” terrain to hexagon columns of varying heights and colors is truly amazing, and feels very much out of the blue when you come upon it.

The same is true of the terrain in general as you drive from east to west….the country opens up to rough and seemingly never ending, then to a bit of forest…then mountain “”remains” ….through Derry to Letter Kenney, out R251 to BulBon, a small fishing village with a very inviting little harbor…then up to Doulough and the Horn Head, a tiny peninsula with fabulous views and walking paths to entice any level of fitness….on my next trip to Ireland, would/will rent a van or camper and walk my way through the country…beautiful! Back in the day, the entire Ireland was forest…must have been awesome to see…all but a very small percentage has been logged away over the centuries…

Back through the center of Northern Ireland to Belfast to join a Global Village team from Atlanta, GA Monday and Tuesday as they begin a two week build in Downpatrick. Work for some, for me, a welcome infusion of hands on building from the ground (or in this case, slab) up!

23sept06
Rented a car (feeling very empowered ) and went north to Belfast and beyond to usher in another year….around the northeast Ireland Antrium coastline with a stop to hike and view the waterfalls at Glenariff, then on to Carrick-a-Rede, traversing the rope bridge there to where salmon fisherman still splay their nets, in the gusty tail winds from Hurricane Gordon (an elderly gent from Ireland commented that it was “a bit breezy”….supreme understatement, that!)…exhilarating, to be sure, with spectacular views.

Overnight at the Bushfoot B&B in Portballintrae, quiet, lovely, and slept “under the stars” in a manner of speaking, nestled in a twin bed below a skylight. Restful….

18-22sept06
Monday through Wednesday working the office as a “work site” of sorts, asked to clear old equipment, organize contents/files etc. to give new executive director Kevin McGarry a head start at finding his way through the maze of information and kick start a new era for the local program here. A kind of “extreme makeover”, and fun to do. Still a work in progress and a solid use of time while volunteer schedules and family selection for the refurbs are in process.

Thursday….another productive on site day, with considerable clearing out and cleaning up done. Much to do here as well. Planning, tools and supplies in place….the ingredients yet to be added to create a successful recipe are plumbing/electrical contractors, as well as volunteers and a recipient family. Wheels move slowly, and give a sense of what a start up affiliate faces in getting the word out, establishing a presence, and keeping momentum going after a successful first push. Always and ever learning!

Also took in Dublin’s first cultural night, with several museums and other locales open until 2100 or later. Went to the “Bog Body” exhibit, literally bodies found in the bogs, most several hundred years old and in many cases perfectly preserved, including teeth, nails, and hair…think Egyptian mummies without the wrappings. Amazing, and each with a story to tell.

County Wicklow….Avondale…beaches on the east coast…Johnny Fox’s pub

Terms/languaging:
Bridging versus blocking (for mounting cabinets in home construction)
Skills-education versus counseling
Drink driving versus drunk driving….by law you may not drink anything here if you plan to drive

As regards….versus
Your man…
How ya keeping….terrible thank God

Monday, October 16, 2006

Temporary entry....quick review

Temporary entry....It's been nearly a month since the last entry, so much catching up to do!

A quick review:

2-16oct...major advances in Ballyfermot, currently in the deconstruction stage inside, and resurrection outside, with no less than 2 standard skip (dumpsters) filled to overflowing with yard waste and debris...and we've only just begun! 60 bags just from the yards (or gardens, as they're referred to here) alone. Definitely go home each day knowing you've made an impact!

Site volunteers hail from as far away as the states and Canada, France and of course, Ireland. Fun!

30sept-1oct....Into the west with Vagabond Tours to Galway, Crough Patrick and much more, off road, hiking, and taking it in....some pix already up on phanfare, more to come....laptop computer did a complete crash, so files and software are in the process of being recovered (I hope!) with the help of friends from the states (a large part of my falling offline for so long!).

27-29sept... Working steadily wiht 1-2 volunteers each day on the Ballyfermot site to prep it for larger groups and begin to establish a presence in the neighborhood.

22-26 sept....ushered in another year with a trip to Northern Ireland and two days on a new build site there before returning "home" to Dublin. Beautiful country, great time building with a global village team from Atlanta, Georgia for a couple of days...would've loved to have stayed for the full two weeks!

18-22 sept...working towards opening trhe second refurbishment site officially, and organizing things administratively on the office side. Amazing time to be here for the local program, as it's had a sound start followed by a lull that has led to the opportunity to play an integral part in its renewal. Very cool!

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Officially...

Note: All accompanying pictures now on http://smarie.phanfare.com : )

17sept06
Went out to the Wicklow mountains for what became a one on one tour of off road and tourist sites through the eyes of “a friend of a friend” who was born and raised in Ballyfermot, an avid sportsman intimately familiar with the area. A delightful day, filled with exploring, stories and lore delivered only as the Irish can.

16 sept 06 Drove on the left (on the right within the vehicle!) and off the beaten path exploring to the north today…if you’ve got a fair idea of where you’re going and how to get there you’re okay…if you miss a signpost because a vehicle passed by at an inopportune time…you might not know you’ve missed the turn for miles and miles….Ireland signage is spare and low…I KNEW there was a reason for working all those jigsaw puzzles when I was younger!!! In Ireland you're not "lost" you're simply taking another road...love that!

Took in Bru na Boinne and the Newgrange and Knowth monuments there (called passage tombs). 60% of all Western European Neolithic art is represented there, carved on 1 to 10 ton "kerbstones" that form the base of the passage tombs in combinations of spirals, lozenges, chevrons, triangles, parallel lines and arcs. There are more than 300 such decorated stones in the great tombs of Knowth, the greatest concentration of megalithic art in Europe. Some of the more dramatic designs are on the orthostats in the passages on the approach to the chambers. Amazing, still more so in knowing that the art and the tombs themselves are older than the Egyptian pyramids...dating to 2500-3000 B.C.

Newgrange is the largest passage tomb, unique for its roof box over the entrance, designed to catch the rays of the rising sun for the six days surrounding the winter equinox. On those days the perfect alignment of this box captures the sun’s light, illuminating the inner cruciform chamber for 17 minutes before all goes totally black. It is the only time of year the tomb is lit with natural light. To experience that as a simulation within the original 5000 year old stone and earth structure is both humbling and awe-inspiring.

In Knowth one can go inside and site down the long eastern passage, and get a sense of the structure itself. The mounds were constructed in such a way that to this day they are water proof and dry…an amazing testament to the knowledge of the builders of the stone age. The people lived in thatch and stick huts as opposed to the composition of these much larger structures. They lived an average of 30 years, and the structures are estimated to have taken in excess of 60 years to complete…evidence of a mission or intent larger than themselves? And a focus on something outside themselves…repeatedly struck by layers yesterday…layers involved in the physical structure of the passage tombs, layers of living imposed on top of them over time, while respected the location and in some cases the hallowedness of these places, layers of understanding unraveled in puzzling through how things were constructed then, layers we cover ourselves with literally and figuratively now as then, for protection, enlightenment, territorial things, and so much more.

I wonder at how complicated things become….green living strategies developed in the stone age that will continue to outlive anything we erect today….is our knowledge base sending us backward versus forwards??

The passage tombs from an arc from Wicklow Mountains to County Mayo (kind of rainbow style)…at least those still in existence today….how did they do it? Each new bit of knowledge increase our understanding and or appreciation of what we see around us….the undisturbed mounds in surrounding fields are pieces of history older than the pyramids…tended today by the livestock that graze on and around them.

Other sights/observations…. The overall countryside an hour north of Dublin is rolling and beautiful, with driving lanes arbored by trees (they trim only enough to accommodate double decker buses, versus shaving whole sides away as we so often see in the states), and often single lanes shared by whatever comes your way! Ever read “Everything I Needed to Know I Learned in Kindergarten” by Robert Fulgum? Sharing, playing nice with others, all come into play driving one lane unmarked roads!

Monteboice….has the familiar stories high monastic tower, and the fascinating juxtaposition of old and new…from headstones completely weather worn by the centuries to a days old interment. For whatever reason I had in mind that ruins such as they would not have new burials, nor would they hold graves (common or otherwise) within the walls of church ruins, etc., but this seems a familiar theme on more than one site/location. This location as so many others boasts the familiar farm ambience of childhood days (read eau de livestock here ).

The Old Millefort Abbey….interesting for the remains of the octagonal wash area used by the monks…must have been extraordinary in its day, and hints of what my imagination conjures for ruins in other parts of Europe yet to be seen…

Hill of Tara….it is said that one can hear the voices of past kings there…no kingly voices heard (that's for Tom), just a pastoral setting filled with sheep grazing and ravens cawing, the suggestion in earthen shape and form of past battles, occupation and glories.

11-15 sept 06 Work officially began at our Ballymun refurbishment site as we hosted the first volunteer crew there (YAY!) Filled two mid-sized skips (dumpsters) with material and started cleaning in earnest to prepare for a plethora of repairs, painting, and so on. Progress!

Let loose on the unsuspecting Dublin public as well...sharing a Toyota Yaris hatchback to facilitate getting to and from both work sites, picking up tools and supplies, and on days off, potentially roaming a bit farther afield. Opposite side of the road, opposite side of the car, stick shift on left, no turn on red, minimal street/road/traffic signs, and nary a straight street to be found....an adventure to be sure! All is well, and find the challenge to be finding things versus driving the vehicle (though I still reach to the left for the seatbelt (decades of conditioning at play, no doubt!)!

Monday, September 11, 2006

Howth (rhymes with "both") and the city

Note: Pictures galore are posted at http://smarie.phanfare.com/ for this and all previous posts...

Sunday 10 sept
Explored "Ireland's Eye", a small island north of Howth Harbor and reachable only by "ferry", a large, no frills and well worn dinghy that seats up to 30 (snugly, I imagine). In Celtic times the island was called Eria's Island. Eria was a woman's name and this became confused with Erin, the Irish name for Ireland. The Vikings substituted the word Island with Ey, their Norse equivalent, and so it became known as Erin's Ey and ultimately Ireland's Eye. Its The island is "host" to a Martello tower c1800 and a ruined church said to date from the 6th century, and serves as a sanctuary to a variety of seabirds, including thousands of guillemots, razorbills, fulmars, gulls, and gannet (and a plethora of rabbits as well).

From its highest point there is a beautiful 360 view of the surrounding land and water, and the island itself surprises with "Nature's Sculpture", several rock formations (the most spectacular is the huge freestanding rock called the Stack), along with lichen-based "paintings" among the rocks, a bit of heather, and fields of fern like growth and blackberry brambles reaching 3-5 feet in height…a bit of a jungle exploration at 4'10" . Visitors are free to explore all, with comings and goings dictated by tide and weather.

Lots of sailboats showing their stuff in the brisk winds of the day, and a salty spray laden ride back to harbor through white caps and wind on the return trip.

Howth hosts a Sunday farmers' market, a tasty punctuation to the day's island hiking, with fresh produce, cheeses, meats, breads and a craft or two. Many an organic vegie found its way home with me today!

Sunday eve...
Into the city center for the Fire Installation on George's Dock. From the blazing "chandelier" over the River Liffey to globes and garlands of firelight, this "luminous landscape" opened the 2006 Dublin Fringe Festival, 3 weeks of music, art, comedy and performances. Check out
http://www.fringefest.com/ for more info; the fringe festivals occur in a variety of cities, including Orlando, Florida.

The "lights" are medium sized flower pots filled with parafin, lit with lantern oil on rag wicks, enough to heat and ignite the oil for a warm and unique firelight display of lights. The lighting is a bit like watching slow motion long lasting fireworks. Dramatic and beautiful (and quite toasty!).

Saturday 9 sept
Out to Howth Summit to "cliff walk", a series of pathways high and low on the water side of this island like extension north and east of Dublin proper. Beautiful, restful, exhilarating, and WINDY!

Descended into the village of Howth, to chat with locals and peruse the harbor, home to recreational and fishing vessels. Tides vary greatly here, and trawlers tied at the east pier quay were actually laid over on low tide….amazing to see.

A fisherman recently in was feeding harbor seals (they’re HUGE)….an au naturale version of Sea World…

Tuesday thru Friday 5-8 sept….
Days at the office planning tasks in detail for our two refurbishment projects, time at the sites, successfully resurrecting water and power to both (Yay!), and still waiting for the keys to wheels to facilitate tool and supply purchase and delivery (translation: no car yet, so the streets of Dublin are still free of our anticipated learning curve with stick shift/opposite of the car and road driving!).

Bits ‘n' pieces…
Terms:
You follow = understand?
Straight away = ASAP
Tipper = dump truck
Canteen = cafeteria
Aluminium = aluminum
Hire = rent
Rampai = ramp = speedbump
No bother = we’ll work it out = no worries
Meet vs meeting
A proper shop = shopping trip or provisioning

Phrases:
How’re ya keepin’
I’ve done me work
That’s crack = awesome, fabulous
Craic = conversation

Oddities and observations:
· Less superstores, nothing really like the "convenience" of Walmart or Kmart
· Texas/Tennessee/AND Kentucky fried chix seen so far : )
· US----more choices, greater quantities, more variety (except in the "crisps" (potato chips) selection….if there's a flavor you can imagine, they seem to have it here!)
· Litter runs rampant in the city…not as clean a city as I’d imagined
· Mad as a hatter was coined from the malady incurred by hat makers exposed to chemicals that made them, well, you know, MAD!!





Wednesday, September 06, 2006

"Labor Day" weekend

Monday 4 sept

Introduced Regis to both work sites and met with new construction supervisor Paddy Carroll today. Will spend the week getting everyone up to speed in anticipation of being out of the office and on site effective next week. Again I say, “YAY”!

Sunday 3 sept

Toured Wicklow Mountains by bus, experiencing a bit of the countryside this gal form the states associated with Ireland through John Wayne’s “The Quiet Man” and similar films. Very beautiful, and for the first time since arriving, could imagine myself staying, tucked up into the hills within walking distance of one of the tiny towns I saw, living as the “quiet woman” (okay, perhaps THAT’s a stretch!). Friends who’ve already seen more of the country suggest the Wicklow area’s just the start and the west will be even more enticing…..plans to go that direction are underway even as we speak….

Caught one of the brightest rainbows I’ve yet seen anywhere, seemingly within hands reach (sans leprechauns or pots o’ gold spotted) on a rise overlooking a portion of 5000 acres held by the Guinness family, replete with a mansion on glacial Loch Tay (Lake Tea), named for its tea (or perhaps Guinness?) color, whose sandy beach looks like the head of the country’s most popular stout. The mansion sits at one end of a beautiful extended valley with mist rolling over the mountains (3000 ft at the highest, but dramatic relative to the surrounding area), or in our case “blowing stink” (lead boots would’ve been helpful!). The Beatles’ Paul McCartney was inspired by the surroundings and penned the song “Yesterday” while walking the paths of the Guinness mansion/valley as a visitor there in the early 60’s.

Continued on through wide fields of “the blooming heather” heralded in many an Irish folk song, much of it topping bog where peat is still cut and dried for “fuel” in standard fireplaces (versus wood, a rare commodity for steady heating of a home here, with only 2% of the country “timbered” at this point in time (per our driver….facts/figures not verified ).

Interesting related facts: Deciduous trees are indigenous to Ireland; the conifers seen here are not, a purported bone of contention with some local environmental groups seeking to maintain the natural flora and fauna of the country. The “tea” color of the water in this area, which could easily be misconstrued as polluted, is actually produced as water flows/ filters through the dense natural vegetation that makes up the bog fields. Carrying the Guinness theme a step further, the falls and steams in this area look a bit like a steady cool stream of Guinness….quite the image/mirage for a thirsty hiker (or “hill walker” as they are sometimes referred to here), yes?

On to Glendalough (glen-da-lock), or “valley of Two Lakes in English, site of a sixth century monastic settlement, a fair share of which remains intact today. Pictures from this point on were visual only (camera battery died ), but a collection a pictures at http://www.bamjam.net/Ireland/Glenda.html will give you a feel for what the layout was like. A round 110 foot tower dominates the remains, and is typical of such towers built in monasteries around the country. Beyond suppositions about its height and purpose is the impressive nature of how it would have been constructed in the sixth or seventh century. Amazing to ponder for this builder “wanna-be” today . The “cathedral” ruins feature an older section whose “floor” is laid with flat tombstones and has no windows; the gable end of a Romanesque style room added later is dominated by a jagged edged oval “window” standing testament to the stained glass art once held there. Cemetery areas stand flank the cathedral and tower and are still in use today; when the last members of two families in the area are laid to rest there, the grounds will continue untouched for an additional 50 years….readable headstones/tombstones date back to the 1600’s, and the remains of founder St. Kevin are said to be there as well, from the sixth century. I continue to be captivated and humbled by the history reflected in the stones of the buildings in the myriad places like these that I see…..history come alive yet again…. A final stop in Avoca afforded the opportunity to watch weaving as it has been done by the Avoca Mills since 1723. Several of the looms on the premises are in excess of 150 years old, in full use today, and as a textile artist, fascinating to see in operation. The mill yields a plethora of high end goods made from all natural fibers, and distributes to locations both local and worldwide.

A leisurely ride back to Dublin with glimpses of the sea and rolling farm and pasturelands giving way to Georgian home and estates on the city’s south side completed the day. A final note: perfect winding roads for a bike ride….four motorcycles “group riding” spotted en route, and imagined the possibility of absorbing the views that way….mindful of sheep, cows, horses, and mountain goats (spotted four at the upper lake at Glendalough!) having the right of way, of course!

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

A bit of culture....

Saturday 2 sept
Explored downtown Dublin in search of an open farmer’s market (one discovered on Henry Street), tahini, almond butter and things organic (found two organic food store(s), and just to enjoy the day. Spent the afternoon at St. Stephen’s Green, a beautifully manicured garden like park in the city, and stumbled across “Public Shakespeare”, a group of local theater students that present fractures Shakespeare twice daily in the park through the summer. Delightful 2 hour “show” presented “theater in the round” style with a wee bit of audience participation included…an unexpected treat! The theater theme continued with an evening at the Gaiety Theater watching “Legends of Irish Folk”, as well known Irish folk singers shared stories, a bit of blarney, and several crowd pleasing Irish ballads.

Friday 1 sept
Picked up international volunteer "partner" Regis Richard at the airport at o-dark-thirty in the morning. His arrival, the hire of a local construction supervisor and the first slate of scheduled volunteers coincided to cap off a week of forward movement relative to the Habitat projects here…..YAY!

Spent an enjoyable day/weekend introducing him to Dublin and our neck of the woods, and am delighted to have a counterpart to help build the refurbishment program here.


Gaelic vocabulary:

Glen = valley
Baile (pronounced “bali”) = town
Lough (pronounced “lock”) = lake
Tay (pronounced “tea”) = tea