I would despair going home
were it not for the vast wealth I have stored back in the U.S. You know the
wealth I’m talking about – children and grandchildren, family and friends that
I could not bear to separate myself from and put such a distance between as our
continent and the vast Atlantic Ocean between. Otherwise, I could be happy with
you for the rest of my days because of how you opened your deep and kind heart
to us.
It was the cumulative
experience with you that has captured my heart. Your landscape, the climate,
and your people – all instruments in your wonderful orchestra. I’m sorry. That’s
a poor analogy at best and I apologize for it. While I have no doubt that you
have wonderful orchestral musicians, I have to say that your traditional Irish
music touched me most and fits perfectly with your towns and farms and
countryside. Cindy and I whetted our appetites by sitting in a few sessions
with traveling Irish musicians. And just last night I relived walking through
your Abbeys and castles and strolling along when we attended a seisiun with Rattle the Knee who regaled us with
reels and jigs, ballads and laments as they combined voice, uillean pipes, tin
whistles, guitar, and a marvelous fiddler. I was transported and because you
touched my heart it was all so very real.
Your ancientness was evidenced
in every town and valley with Abbeys and castles, towers and walls, bridges,
stone circles, and more – they all spoke to us of your enduring qualities as a
people and as a country. We were awed by your Book of Kells with its art and
the attention to detail. Your reverence to the King of kings demonstrated both
on the ancient ruins and the library but was most on display with how openly we
were welcomed by your people.
Of all the things I
experienced while touring your country it was your driving style that was most
foreign to me. This driving on the left side of the road in right-hand drive
autos never really allowed me to relax behind the wheel. That’s saying a lot
because I like to drive; at times I love to drive. The great thing about
driving your roads was that we did not witness one accident or lack of
consideration for other drivers. True, as with all places, native drivers go
faster and make us visitors a bit nervous. Coming from America where our
tolerance (mine included) has worn thin, it was quite amazing that I was not
yelled at once, even when trying to complete a left turn into an occupied
right-hand lane.
I love your rolling hills
and wide valleys with the neatly sectioned off fields for livestock and crops.
Your old stone walls, in town and field, create their own growing ecosystems
with fern and lichen clinging to every surface, cropping out of every nook. We
saw the Cliffs of Galway, marveled at the birds seen there, and wondered at the
monumental cliffs running north and south of our viewing points. We pulled to
the side of the road overlooking the Lakes of Killarney at the Ladies View Pub. My wife had me pose
there upon the rock wall lifting my hands in blessing and worship. It did it
gladly and from my heart. Time and again you gave us a 360o panorama
of beauty.
With the exception of one
day we had at least a little rain fall on us as we wove along the roadways and
walked your cities and parks. We are in draught here in Southern California and
we found ourselves refreshed. I guess the price of being known as the Emerald
Isle is the rain whenever the mood strikes Mother Nature but we reveled in it
often going without our hoods up to feel the rain upon our heads and wash over
our faces.
Cliffs of Moher - O'Brien's Tower |
At first glance your Cliffs
of Moher (Irish: Aillte an Mhothair) appear severe and
inhospitable. The Princess Bride
miscast them as The Cliffs of Insanity, although to great effect for the
storyline. After a time of walking along the trail atop the cliffs I could see
them as serene and embracing, at the same time an implacable force keeping the
Atlantic from surging in to cover the greens and ensalt your beautiful loughs.
As a lover of birds
for as long as I can remember, an observer of them for over three decades, I
had one of my most memorable experiences with my avian friends. I was fortunate
enough to lock onto a Great Black-backed Gull with my pocket-binoculars as he
soared along the cliff face with his five and a half foot wings (1.7m) outstretched
for an effortless glide first south toward Hag’s Head and then, with a glance
over his shoulder, he banked over to head northeast where he went out of sight
behind the point at O’Brien’s Tower. I was at the same time bereft of my travel
with him and enriched for having watched such effortless flight along the
magnificent vistas. Thank you for that, I will relive the gull’s flight over
and over again.
In the city of
Galway we walked through the Spanish Arch and down to the River Corrib and there
watched nearly an hundred Mute Swans ply the waters to snack upon the mosses. I
watched as a Grey Heron glided in to wade along the river’s bank just below the
concrete embankment. I was able to stretch out and over the edge to capture
what is most likely my best bird photograph.
The view of your
Lakes of Killarney from Ladies View is stunning, I imagined myself spending
days on end exploring the vale and lakes getting to know flora and fauna. I
believe that any road we could have taken would have led us to some dale or
field or copse and there to find creatures of legend where we would have been
happily waylaid for an extended visit.
Thank you Ireland
Facebook comment from Betty White: Good read, Jer! Very poetic! ššš Look forward to the next chapter!
ReplyDeleteThanks mom. I think Ireland can bring out the poet in people. I plan to take a poetry class; mostly to understand how to write them and maybe improve my prose. I'll be putting the next two Ireland post out every other day...
DeleteI'm planning to visit next year. Your stories make me all the more excited to go!
ReplyDeleteWonderful! Actually, lovely. Lovely is a word you'll hear over there. I have two more posts for my 'Dear Ireland' letter, I just couldn't boil it down to one decently lengthened post. I know two people would love carry your luggage. Enjoy!
DeleteI am glad that you enjoy the posts, thank you.