Friday, November 24, 2017

Ireland Trip, Dublin to Waterford (2 November 2017)


We wake up early for the first full day in Ireland. We’re headed from Dublin to Watertown, by way of stops in Glendalough and New Ross. I’m sitting in an aisle seat next to my brother toward the back of the bus. I want to watch the scenery, but I get so motion sick that most of my travel time will be spent sitting very still with my eyes closed, even though I’m using a scopolamine patch.

Ireland doesn't have Greyhound busses, it has Irish Setters
Glendalough is a glacial valley, coming from the Irish Gleann Dá Loch, which means “valley of two lakes”. We visit the lower lake section to see the monastery Kevin built in the 6th century, before he was a saint. Kevin was the son of nobles, but found his calling to be the priesthood. He came to the lake to live a secluded life. His home was a man-made cave, remnant of a Bronze Age tomb; his companions were the local animals. He lived as a hermit for seven years, and it is said he had a great reverence for nature and a deep love of the animals he shared the loch with.

I love my people too much to be a hermit, but I can absolutely see the appeal of living out here in seclusion. It reminds of Iceland and parts of the PNW, where it feels like the landscape is very much its own being. Small, green hills roll down themselves in the distance, ending in a lake I cannot see from here. A blue stream cuts in front of me: between the stream and the hills sits the ruins of the monastery. Another range of hills is quite close, and curves around behind us- we are, after all, in a valley. This hill is starting to color with autumn, more orange than green. I feel sort of held by the landscape, and the birds are very talkative. I think I could be here alone and not feel lonely. 

The Round Tower in the distance

Our group’s first stop is the visitor’s center, where we watch a short video on this history of the area, and then meet our tour guide. She leads us to the old entrance, known as The Gateway. The Gateway is the pair of stone archways that would have led visitors into the monastery compound. They’re made in the roman fashion, with a keystone, and are the only surviving examples of medieval gateways into monastic cities. Just beyond the second arch is a cross carved into a large stone wall.  

It’s the first cross, but definitely not the last cross you see. The burial grounds sprawl around you as you walk toward the Round Tower, Cathedral, and other buildings. Many of the tombstones are topped with crosses, most of them Celtic crosses. Our guide tells us that the Celtic cross is a marriage of the old religion and new: pagans worshipped the sun, while Christians worshiped Christ. The Celtic cross has the traditional Christian symbol, but incorporates the solar disc to fuse the two religions.


Our guide points out one cross in particular, called Saint Kevin’s Cross. It’s plain, and very tall. She tells us that the local legend is that if you stretch your arms around the base of the cross and you can touch your fingertips together (a big, ecclesiastical hug), you’re going to Heaven. Instead of going to Heaven, a different version of the legend says you’ll have your wish granted. I guess when you try it, you should probably wish to go to Heaven, just to hedge your bets. I’m saving my “get fresh with some old rocks” for Blarney, so I don’t rub up on ole Kev’.

We get to walk right up next to the Round Tower, something straight out of Rapunzel. The high doorway is over our heads, maybe 15-20 feet off the ground. Our guide tells us that Vikings frequently raided the monastery, and that the most likely use of the tower was not for protecting people, but protecting goods. Clergy or townsfolk would have hoisted valuables and food up into the tower for safekeeping, and then removed the ropes/pulleys or ladders. Then you just hoped the raiders were happy enough with easy steals instead of storming the tower, apparently.

The Round Tower during a sunburst. We walked right up next to it. The stones felt rough and very old. 
We walk past the remains of the Priest House, St Kieran’s Church, and Trinity Church. Glendalough is also called the City of Seven Churches, since it had that many different places to worship over the years. The Cathedral is now four large and crumbling stone walls. They curve upward, still wanting to support their long-destroyed wooden roof. The oldest parts of the structure date back to the 1100s. Inside holds many grave slabs, some set into the floor and others leaning against the walls. Th stone detail of a peaked window is still beautiful. 


Our guide takes us in the only complete structure on the grounds that I can see, Saint Kevin’s Kitchen. It’s called the kitchen because, not too long ago, people confused the bell tower for a chimney, and assumed this was the cooking kitchen. It’s actually a nave-and-chancel church from the 1100s. You can see post marks about 10 feet over your head where crossbeams would have been fitted in to hold up a wooden second story. There are two doorways, and one window. It is very dark inside.

Ian, inside the Kitchen
We don’t stay any one place very long- the tour is meant to be a sampling, an overview of Ireland. I’m glad I get to see so much of the country, but I would also really love to stay and explore some of the places in depth. We’re back on the bus and headed to an authentic pub for lunch. We arrive at The Cloch Bán in Clonroche, County Wexford. It’s sweet, white-washed building set right up next to the road, with a lovely coat of ivy covering the first story. Inside, a low-timbered ceiling hangs over the bar. There are 3, maybe 4 women working that day, and while they move very fast they don’t seem flustered to see 40 hungry visitors. We take up every available seat in the dining room, which is decorated with old taxidermy mounts, trophies won by local sports teams at least two decades ago, and faded photographs. I fold a napkin over and over to wedge under our table leg to keep it from wobbling.

Inside the Cloche Ban
You could only by teeny, tiny sodas. They look even tinier when you're 6'4". 
The Liar's Bar
Back on the bus, and we head to New Ross. New Ross is obsessed with President John F. Kennedy; in fact all of Ireland seems to be. During the trip, several tour guides talk about JFK with reverence. Kennedy visited Ireland in 1963, meeting the citizens and diplomats alike. According to our guide, the citizens of Ireland were shocked and hurt when JFK signed an order to limit their number of immigrants to the US, until Kennedy explained that it was in order to keep Ireland’s great minds in Ireland. JFK’s great-great grandfather, Patrick Kennedy, lived in New Ross: his homestead is now The Kennedy Homestead, a museum and historic site.  

We’re here, though, to visit the Dunbrody Famine Ship and Museum. The museum has two parts: inside, which has a section on famous persons of Irish descent as well as historical information on the Great Famine; and outside, which is a replica famine ship. Again, we watch a short orientation video. Our guide is a man named Michael, and I like that he makes an extra effort to engage the kids in the audience. Michael takes us to the ship, and points out that our group of 50 people is only a quarter of the people who would have been aboard with steerage-class tickets. Standing fairly close together, our small group takes up half of the deck.

Before the Famine, potatoes were the primary food (in addition to buttermilk) for the 3 million poorest people in Ireland. A blight (Phytophthora infestans) struck the nation’s crop in 1844. By 1845, it’s estimated that up to half of Ireland’s potatoes were diseased and inedible; by 1846, it increased to seventy-five percent. 1846 is when the first deaths by starvation were recorded. All told, a million people died, and another million emigrated to escape starvation. Government assistance was of varying help. In 1847, the Irish Poor Laws meant that landlords were primarily responsible for financing the workhouses and soup kitchens. Instead, many landlords just evicted their tenants to save money.

Aft.
We go below deck, climbing backwards down steep ladders. The accommodations are as poor as you’d expect: two levels of sleeping bunks line each side of the ship, with a narrow, open living space between. Michael tells us that when the weather was good, the captain would let steerage passengers have an hour on deck: the only chance they had to wash, cook, empty their latrine buckets, and see sunlight. We’re joined by a costumed reenactor, who tells about her family, how many children she has already lost to the famine, and how she and her now very ill husband hope for a better future in America. She leaves, and a first class passenger joins us to talk about how disgusting we all are as steerage passengers, how she dines with the captain, how she has family waiting for her and her husband in Boston.

I gotta say, I feel awkward as fuck about interacting with reenactors. I felt the same way when I visited a Renaissance Fair near Spokane, when I’ve gone to Murder Mystery productions, when I talk with them at Historic Houses. I don’t know why. Seeing an actor on stage it’s easier for me to suspend disbelief, I guess. Once they break that fourth wall and talk to me, I can’t tell how much of anything I should play along with, and I worry that when they ask for questions I’ll ask something they don’t have an answer to, and I’ll make this poor actor struggle for a response. Anyway, what that means is that when Annie and Mrs. O’Brien ask for questions, I keep my mouth shut and act extra-interested in my surroundings so I don’t get called on. Both ladies independently zero in on Kristina and her sweet husband, Willis. They’re a very nice young couple from Canada, but they both take the attention really well and play along.    

We make it to Waterford, home of the famous crystal factory and “Ireland’s oldest city”. Our bus stops about a mile from the hotel so we can debark and meet our Waterford tour guide and see the town as we walk to our lodging. He’s the first guide I haven’t liked: not that he isn’t knowledgeable, there’s just something about his air that’s off-putting to me. Some affectation that puts me on edge. I feel bad, not liking someone for really no reason. He talks about the city, its history with Vikings and crystal making, but I don’t absorb any of it. Something about the city makes me feel like I’m being tipped, like I have to dig in my heels and lean backward from falling over. I wonder why that is?

Reginald's Tower in Waterford, Ireland's oldest civic building
Replica Viking ship outside the tower, which is also a museum.
A church building that was used to house the elderly in Henry VIII's time. Henry VIII had to be talked into allowing the elderly to live out their lives here by being promised two prayers every day would be devoted to him. 
Street art
King and Queen statue chairs
Cathedral of the Most Holy Trinity, Waterford.
The cathedral's 10 chandeliers were made and donated by the Waterford Crystal Factory.
Name origin.









Thursday, November 9, 2017

Ireland Trip, Dublin (1 November 2017)



My brother and I meet in Boston to fly to Dublin, where we’ll join up with our parents for a week-long coach tour of Ireland. We take a red-eye, leaving Boston’s airport at 7pm on the 31st, to arrive in Dublin, Ireland at 5am local time. I somehow lose my neck pillow between security and the plane, and I forgot to bring my headphones, so the 7 hour flight is not exactly comfortable. We are stuck in the middle of a row of 4 seats, and I’m glad I have my brother on one side so I don’t feel claustrophobically stuck between strangers.  

We land in Dublin in the dark. I'm delighted to see that all the signs are in Irish as well as English. Customs is quick so early in the morning, and we get out to the taxis soon after. We’re traveling with the CIE Tour company, and the only other couple in the taxi que has CIE tags on their luggage. We think about asking them to share a cab, but it’s too early for me to want to be social, so we leave them be. Our cab driver tells us that he’ll be busy today as the train and bus operators are on a 1-day strike for wage increases. I have no idea what the political scene in Ireland is like, so I just make non-committal noises. I don’t know if the general population supports the strike or not, but I figure I likely support it. 

The Ferryman, a traditional pub next to our hotel
We’re at the hotel by 6am, and it’s still dark. We somehow beat the couple who were ahead of us, but introduce ourselves in the lobby to Mark and his mother Joan, two darling people we’ll spend more time with on the trip. The staff welcome us to check in early, and it feels great to be free of our luggage. I go out to take some photos before dawn, but the cold and tiredness quickly drive me back inside. Ian and I decide we’ll take an hour or so nap before the coffee shop opens, but we end up sleeping soundly for 4 hours. Our poor folks are held up by long lines in emigration at the airport, so they miss the very first part of the trip: the bus tour of Dublin and a visit to Trinity College.

Our coach driver for the week is a man named Paddy, and he’s joined by our Dublin guide, Felicity. Paddy is quite difficulty to understand- his accent is thick, and on top of that he’s a little mushy in his pronunciation. Felicity has a beautiful, lilting voice, something you’d expect an aristocrat to have. They both have gone through lcoursework and certification tests to be official tour guides. I take notes, thinking I’ll do so the entire trip, but it makes me too motion sick to continue past the first day.

Our tour starts by our hotel, and Felicity points out the River Liffey, which cuts Dublin in half north and south, and the beautiful bridge that looks like a harp. Dublin has lots and lots of statues, and we pass by The Famine Memorial. These statues are emaciated figures, representing the starving masses who emigrated from Ireland to the States in the 1850s during the famine. The memorial’s twin is in Boston, showing the still starving figures after having just gotten off the ship. A short ways away is the third piece in the series: the figures are fatter and golden, having experienced the health and wealth of America.

Samuel Beckett Bridge at 6am
I don't know what RTE is, but I love that they use muppet as an insult
Statue on the far side of O'Connell Bridge
We pass points of interest so quickly that I have a hard time taking anything in. The GPO, which Felicity says is the “most important building in Irish history”, is visible behind busy pedestrians and ornate ionic columns. In 1916, this is where Irish Nationalists demanded freedom, and were subsequently arrested and executed. We go over the O’Connell Bridge, which is as wide as it is long. We pass Christ Church, and stop outside St. Patrick’s Cathedral to take photos from afar. We drive through an area of Dublin known for its Georgian architecture, and it’s full of cheerfully colored doors and beautifully intricate fan windows.

St. Patrick's Cathedral, with fountain in front
We get off the bus to visit a statue of Oscar Wilde. He reclines on a rock, one half of his face joyous and the other sad. In the courtyard in front of him sits a small statue of his pregnant wife, and across the street is a building in which he lived. Nearby is a maple planted on the 40th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots and during the 26th Dublin LGBT Pride Festival in honor of the Irish gay community. Oscar Wilde wrote plays and prose for adults, but he also wrote fairy stories for children. Behind his statue is The Giant’s Garden, a giant-themed playground for children. There once was a giant with a beautiful garden. Children would often sneak on to his property to play, and this angered the giant. One day he came out in a rage and yelled at them to leave. Frightened, they ran away. Soon after, the garden withered and died. Years and years later, a new generation of children came to play, and their laughter encouraged the plants to grow back. The giant saw this, and this time told the children that they could play in his yard whenever they liked. We walk through and hear the story from Felicity as actual children play on the wooden structures around us.

Giant's Garden sign. We were not allowed to photograph inside the garden so we didn't inadvertently photograph kids
Holly plant with a branch of all-white leaves in the Giant's Garden. These leaves are unable to photosynthesize, and so exist at the expense of the rest of the plant. 
Our big stop of the day is at Trinity College to see the Book of Kells. A sweet-faced student gives us a tour of the campus, pointing out buildings of interest and 200 year old Oregon maple trees. The Book of Kells is Ireland’s national treasure and one of the most famous medieval manuscripts in the world. It illustrates the stories of the four Gospels, and sections of it are on display in Trinity’s Old Library building. There is no photography allowed in the exhibit. It starts with towering, huge panels that talk about the monks who illustrated the text. Large reproductions of pages and details hang on the walls. The exhibit space id quite dark, and it’s very crowded. I push past most of the panels so I can spend more of our limited time at the book. Unfortunately, it’s so crowded around the book that I only catch glimpses of it. Bored children stand in the way looking at their gaming devices or phones, but forced to stand next to it while their parents look. I'm disappointed, like seeing the Mona Lisa but with 100 other tourists in front of you.

Trinity campus
200 year old maple trees on campus
Madonna and Child. The book is full of spelling errors and on-page corrections, but accuracy wasn't as important as the illustrations. The book was meant to share the Bible with a largely illiterate population, and so the emphasis was on the visuals, which anyone would understand because they knew the stories from Mass. [via]
The Chi Rho monogram [via]
Most passage contain highly decorative first letters [via]
The real highlight of Trinity for me is upstairs, in the Long Room. It’s a long, narrow room filled with over 200,000 antique texts. The Long Room is exquisite, and there’s a quiet reverence that makes it feel much calmer than the Kells exhibit. Two stories tall, the books and library ladders tower overhead. It’s on the second floor of the building, but centuries ago would have been the first floor, with empty space between the floor and the ground. The foundation supports would have held the building and the precious manuscripts off the ground away from the damp. The space between the first floor and the ground has since been filled in with offices and exhibit space, giving the building an extra floor without raising its height.

Photo without all the tourists in the way by Hannes Ambrosch
Second-story stacks
Moody exposure
After the tour, we head back to the hotel where Ian and I can finally meet up with our parents. There’s a meet and greet with the tour group, and then we’re free to go into the city and get dinner on our own. This is the part of the trip I’ve dreaded, the parts without a schedule. I get anxious when I don't have an immediate answer for a question of dad's, so being without a schedule can be nerve-wracking. There’s nowhere nearby to eat, and none of us know the city well enough to have a dinner suggestion. The hotel’s front desk recommends we get a cab and ask them for a recommendation in the Temple Bar area. We head out, not realizing that the Temple Bar area is the younger, hipper area and is quite touristy: we would get much more authentic options a few blocks away. Our cab driver doesn’t want to suggest anything- he lets us off in the neighborhood and just says he’s sure we’ll find something we like. Elephant and Castle has a 90 minute wait, so we cross the street to The Auld Dubliner because a) it’s open and b) has seats available. Dad and Ian are somewhat cross with each other, and we’re all tired, jet-lagged, and overstimulated. The food is bad, and we are tense.

Temple Bar
Temple Bar is an area I’d like to come back to another time; in a way it reminds me of the French Quarter in New Orleans. We catch a cab back to the hotel, and it’s a relief to shower just so I can be alone and unstimulated for the first time in 24 hours. I miss Jason so badly it’s a physical ache. I’m so happy to be with my family, to be in Ireland, but in that moment all the stress and frustration catches up to me and I feel very fragile. I don't want to come off as ungrateful, but at the moment I'm all funned out. Tomorrow we’ll drive out of the city to Glendalough and Waterford, and it will be beautiful.