Friday, May 28, 2010
May 22 - Day with a Friend
On Saturday, we went for a drive to Connemara. Our friend Sinead is graduating from college and moving back to Drogheda in Eastern Ireland. We'll miss her! We enjoyed the day with her. It was almost 80* and sunny - we got our Vit D for the summer! Here are some pictures from the first part of the day. My camera battery died unfortunately, so no pics of the great beach we played at. :(
Monday, May 24, 2010
Kiddos
Just a collection of random pictures over the last couple weeks...
(Note it even has a helipad.)
This one's Aaron's - he said it's our church.
Lawn clippings!
Lawn clippings!
One of 'our' horses in the pasture in front of our house.
Now there is a herd of cows that graze in the pasture too.
I waited as Silas was digging in the serving bowl getting just the right bite....of spinach!
We bought the boys each a glider (they lasted apx 36 hrs). I took this picture right after Aaron told me that the 'driver' of his glider is 'Pontias Pilate.'
Saturday, May 15, 2010
May 8 - Coole Park
Last Saturday we drove just 25km south to visit Coole Park, the place with the strange tree we said we'd return to.
A Brief History of Coole Park
(taken from the Coole Park & Gardens website)
Coole estate was purchased in 1768 by Robert Gregory on his return to Ireland following service with the East India Company. It remained with the Gregory family until 1927 when it was sold to the state. Residing there at that time was Lady Augusta Gregory, already a legend in her lifetime as a dramatist, folklorist and co-founder of the Abbey Theatre with W.B. Yeats and Edward Martyn. Lady Gregory's love of Coole and its 'Seven Woods', immortalised by Yeats, is manifested in her writings and those of her literary guests.
She was one of the most important figures in the Irish Literary Revival of the early 20th century, not only because of her achievements as a playwright, but also because of the way she transformed Coole into a focal point for those who shaped that movement, making it a place they would return to time and time again to talk, to plan, to derive inspiration.
But the woods and lakes at Coole were richer than Yeats understood. The 'Seven Woods', which so enchanted Lady Gregory and her guests, held whispers of a more ancient ancestry, of which the literary visitors were scarcely aware: remnants of the earlier natural forest cover, and the disappearing lake and river are part of the finest turlough complex not merely in Ireland but in all the world.
Lady Gregory died on May 22, 1932. In one sense, the magic of Coole has been in abeyance since the demolition of the house in 1941, a time when more immediate concerns occupied the minds of most people. Coole is now a statutory Nature Reserve managed by the Nat'l Parks & Wildlife Service, whose aim is to preserve its rich natural and cultural heritage.
A Brief History of Coole Park
(taken from the Coole Park & Gardens website)
Coole estate was purchased in 1768 by Robert Gregory on his return to Ireland following service with the East India Company. It remained with the Gregory family until 1927 when it was sold to the state. Residing there at that time was Lady Augusta Gregory, already a legend in her lifetime as a dramatist, folklorist and co-founder of the Abbey Theatre with W.B. Yeats and Edward Martyn. Lady Gregory's love of Coole and its 'Seven Woods', immortalised by Yeats, is manifested in her writings and those of her literary guests.
She was one of the most important figures in the Irish Literary Revival of the early 20th century, not only because of her achievements as a playwright, but also because of the way she transformed Coole into a focal point for those who shaped that movement, making it a place they would return to time and time again to talk, to plan, to derive inspiration.
But the woods and lakes at Coole were richer than Yeats understood. The 'Seven Woods', which so enchanted Lady Gregory and her guests, held whispers of a more ancient ancestry, of which the literary visitors were scarcely aware: remnants of the earlier natural forest cover, and the disappearing lake and river are part of the finest turlough complex not merely in Ireland but in all the world.
Lady Gregory died on May 22, 1932. In one sense, the magic of Coole has been in abeyance since the demolition of the house in 1941, a time when more immediate concerns occupied the minds of most people. Coole is now a statutory Nature Reserve managed by the Nat'l Parks & Wildlife Service, whose aim is to preserve its rich natural and cultural heritage.
The 'Autograph Tree'
"I'm writing." - with a stick.
(We don't know how many of the 'seven' we walked through.)
"I'm writing." - with a stick.
This is the stable yard and the ruins of the coach and harness rooms.
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