Donegal, Ireland , 6/17/2016, National Geographic Orion
Aboard the
National Geographic Orion
Europe aboard NG Orion
The promise of fresh scones and hot tea at Glencolmcille Folk Village drew us back together from our various adventures around Donegal this morning. This beautiful place is globally renowned for its tweeds and exquisite woven woolens, but we found many other treasures to enjoy in this wild western region of Ireland.
In 1951, when Fr. James McDyer arrived in Glencomcille, he was determined to help the village create new employment and to stem the rush of emigration from this remote, beautiful and impoverished place. His early efforts brought electricity and running water to the people and later factories and tourism. The jewel of his legacy is the Glencolmcille Folk Village Museum that opened in 1967. Today cottages depict the lifestyle from recent centuries and offer demonstrations of daily tasks and crafts of bygone eras. We met a NetWeaver, a basket maker, a knitter and others in traditional costumes working around and in the cottages.
The more ambitious of our hikers explored the cliffs of Glen Head with their glorious high views of the sea, while the easy walk strolled through the village to the church of Colm Cille, a 6th century scholar who brought Christianity to Scotland and founded the Iona monastery. The history and archeology excursion visited several ancient burial sites- some dating 3-4,000 BC. And a few adventurers foraged the nearby beaches for edible seaweeds- seven varieties were harvested, roasted back aboard the National Geographic Orion, and consumed with three types of whiskey!
Late in the afternoon we convened at the Bayview Hotel to enjoy the extraordinary talent of three Irish musicians called – Socks in the Frying Pan… !!
Bette Lu's adventurous spirit has taken her around the world by sea — those adventures include tramping about the oceans on old break-bulk freighters, navigating the South Pacific Ocean and on to Antarctica on research vessels as well as several seas...
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Today, a day after the seismic vote by the United Kingdom to leave the European Union, we found ourselves in the United Kingdom for the only day of the voyage, the six counties of Ulster having been excluded from an independent Ireland following the treaty of 1922. Northern Ireland, as it happens, voted to remain in the European Union, its economy and more importantly its state of peace predicated on political and economic integration rather than separation. A full day saw us visit the UNESCO World Heritage Site of the Giant’s Causeway, a geological wonder with over 40,000 interlocking columnar basalt columns that speak to the origins of the island of Ireland in deep geological time. The site has been the fount of Irish folklore with associations with the mighty giant Finn McCool. Old Bushmills whiskey distillery nearby is a remarkable institution having been distilling uisce breaha continuously for over four hundred years and our tour, followed by tasting in the Still Room, gave us a superb introduction to an ancient craft. Later, in Belfast, after a tour of both Catholic and Protestant districts, we met for a guided visit to the new Titanic Museum in the redeveloped docklands of Belfast. The museum is one of several such projects in Britain, inspired by the success of the Guggenheim in Bilbao in successfully kick-starting urban regeneration. The Titanic Centre is a contemporary structure, inspired by the ill-fated Titanic and by its iceberg nemesis that, on 14 April 1912 when 1517 men, women and children lost their lives as “the unsinkable ship” slowly sank. Our last evening aboard National Geographic Orion was a festive one: the Captain’s Farewell Dinner and guest slideshow reminding us how much we had experienced in just one week circumnavigating the rich and varied island of Ireland.
Our day in Killybegs and its surroundings offered a look into Ireland's past and a vision of its future. This is a country where history reveals itself around every turn, and sometimes the juxtapositions between the old and the new can be quite jarring. Today, we saw ancient monuments from prehistoric times incongruously sitting by the side of the road like druidic traffic signs. We visited a model village where we witnessed techniques for knitting traditional fishing nets and weaving ropes from straw on the same day we passed by factories of fast-growing, hi-tech electronics companies specializing in outfitting ships across the world with the latest technologies. The dock where National Geographic Orion berthed in Killybegs, a quiet, somewhat non-descript village that happens to be Ireland's largest fishing port, was lined with the enormous disassembled sections of brand-new wind turbines, destined to provide clean energy for this fast-developing country. Even our young guide at Glencolmcille Folk Center, which was established over 50 years ago to preserve the architecture, artifacts, and folk traditions of this region's rural communities represented Ireland's blend of old and new. Above his waist Kevin was dressed in a classic Irish tweed vest over a traditional pullover shirt that would have fit right into a pre-twentieth century daguerreotype print. He complemented this traditional look with sweat pants and Adidas. Kevin might not have intended to symbolize the ways in which modernity and tradition exist side by side in Ireland, but I couldn't resist making the metaphorical comparison. Our journey through the hill country southwest of Donegal took us past magnificent views, moss-covered ruins, and up and down nerve-wracking single-track roads, where every oncoming vehicle required a series of polite maneuvers in order to allow both parties to proceed on their way. At one point, we found ourselves in a small village where we stopped to pay a visit to a local woolen craft studio where veteran weavers churn out beautiful tweed on traditional looms. We spoke to one man behind a loom, John, who had been working here for 46 years. I asked him if it was backbreaking work, sitting on the hard wooden bench of an old loom every day, pushing levers back and forth to create the intricately patterned cloth that is used to make iconic Irish hats, scarves, and jackets. Quite the contrary, John told me. He loved his work, which had afforded him a happy life that he was proud of. While none of his sons continued in the tradition, he pointed at the young man sitting at the loom behind him who led John to have confidence that this important handicraft will continue to be practiced by future generations. Our day ended at the Bayview Pub in the center of Killybegs, where we were treated to a live performance by Socks in the Frying Pan, one of the hottest up-and-coming bands in the Irish traditional music scene. Brothers Shane and Fiachra Hayes, the former playing button accordion and the latter violin, with guitarist Aodan Coyne rounding out the trio, presented a virtuosic set that ranged from upbeat jigs and reels to haunting acapella ballads. All three hail from Ennis in County Clare, considered one of the epicenters of Irish traditional music today. They were raised by musical families who gave them the techniques, repertoire, and passion for Irish music that led these three 20-something musicians to pursue careers in the traditional music arena. Watching these three young musicians bringing new influences and youthful creativity to folk songs that have been passed down for generations was a fitting end to a day in which the past and the future existed side by side in perfect harmony.
There is a sense of permanence here, a sense that this is the only way it can be. It seems so perfect, meandering our way through the landscapes of Ireland. We step forward and back in time at a rate that sometimes makes your head spin, every new vista hurling us back into the Mesolithic, or dragging us back to the modern world or perhaps even looking ahead to the way it might be. Time leaps to and fro in thousands of years, sometimes millions! It seems an age ago that we moved south from Dublin, through the fertile south coast and to the towns and villages of Kerry that welcomed us so warmly and to the Aran Islands and the fort of Dun Aoenghus. Yet, today was different again, which seems impossible in the space of twenty miles. Here we are in rock, that most permanent of things. The Connemara landscape speaks of this permanence, rigid against the world, with a rocky beauty all of its own. There is stone everywhere, sheep grazed highlands, the occasional village full of smiling welcoming people. Yet at the same time we heard a history of hardship, of terrible times in the famine, of resilience and optimism and a path to the future. We learned that the permanence is not real – the land itself growing along the flower rich sand dunes, while side by side the raging Atlantic erodes the hard coast. It is a land and a people in flux, and the permanence that seems so clear is an illusion. We visited the beautiful village of Roundstone, saw turf cut along the roadside, stood in awe and perhaps shed a tear at the romantic story of Kylemore Abbey. We watched a man guide his sheepdog with almost a whisper, fed the lambs and sheared the sheep. We are happily tired, well fed, full of the laughter and fun of an expedition that’s not sure what tomorrow brings, but certain in the knowledge that we will embrace it fully in this country of rock and sea and smiles and mystery and wonder.