Intreoir
Tá dánlann á forbairt faoi láthair ag Ard-Mhúsaem na hÉireann - Saol na Tuaithe ag Páirc an Turlaigh i gCaisleán an Bharraigh, Contae Mhaigh Eo ina ndéanfar rogha bád ó bhailiúchán Shaol Tuaithe na hÉireann a thaispeáint go buan. Díreofar sa dánlann ar bháid thraidisiúnta chósta an Atlantaigh agus ar ábhar gaolmhar ó chontaetha feadh Shlí an Atlantaigh Fhiáin. Lean ár mblag ‘Báid Thraidisiúnta Shlí an Atlantaigh Fhiáin’ chun teacht ar nuashonruithe ar fhorbairt na dánlainne, agus ar eolas ar thaighde agus ar obair allamuigh atá á déanamh ar bháid thraidisiúnta feadh chósta thiar na hÉireann.
Leigh Nios moCurrach at sea off Inishere, Aran Islands, Co. Galway, 1968. © National Museum of Ireland
Georgian boat © LEPL Ajara Museum
Irish similarities with Georgia's Black Sea boats
19 September 2024 - In July, I published the blog post The Gandelow Boat of the Shannon Estuary. The gandelows design, notably its flat bottom, was observed as having similar characteristics to a traditional boat of Georgia. Megi Tetemadze, Public and International Relationships Coordinator at LEPL Ajara Museum in Georgia contacted the National Museum of Ireland after reading the gandelow post and very kindly agreed to write this latest contribution.
Leigh Nios moPromoting the Seine Boat in Kerry
28 August 2024 - The seine boat is a carvel-built rowboat that is synonymous with the south-west coast of Ireland. Seine boat fishing was in operation from the early seventeenth century while seine boat racing at regattas throughout the South-Mid Kerry region has been a feature of the tradition since the nineteenth century.
Leigh Nios moSeine boat regatta, Sneem, Co. Kerry, 1996. © National Museum of Ireland
Gandelow boat on the River Cashen, Co. Kerry, 1967. © National Museum of Ireland
The Gandelow Boat of the Shannon Estuary
03 July 2024 - The subject of this post is the gandelow, a boat type associated with the Shannon Estuary and most especially salmon fishing. The gandelow is typically 23 feet long, made from spruce or pine boards, with 13 feet oars used by two rowers.
Leigh Nios moThe rich history of a Blasket Islands naomhóg
20 May 2024 - The file on any museum object is never truly closed. Additional information, no matter how trivial, is always out there and can lead a curator, and their successors, on to more fruitful lines of inquiry. We are extremely fortunate to have a boat in our Irish Folklife collection whose provenance is so rich that it would make a very special display on its own.
Leigh Nios moTomás Ó Dálaigh with currach, 1971. © Máire Ní Dhálaigh.
Amélie Bonner and attendees at the IFAYA conference in Galicia, Spain, November, 2023. Image courtesy of Amélie Bonner
Voice of the next generation
05 April 2024 - Museums, naturally, are very much focused on the past. However, that statement is not as true now as it was a short number of decades ago. Listening to young people detail how their culture impacts on them is an important part of the modern process of museum engagement. In this post, 15-year-old Amélie Bonner from Árainn Mhór, Co. Dhún na nGall, (Arranmore Island, Co. Donegal), shares her experiences and hopes for her fishing community.
Leigh Nios moSteamed ribs on the menu in County Clare
23 February 2024 - James Madigan’s grandfather Sinon Blunnie was the last of the commercial currach builders in County Clare and built Scattery Island currachs in his workshop overlooking Kilrush Harbour. It was in that workshop, with no electricity or running water, that a teenage James learned the craft of boat building from his grandfather.
Leigh Nios moJames Madigan marking the centre of each rib. © National Museum of Ireland
A scoilteán set into gable wall. Image © National Museum of Ireland
Fishing in winter
12 January 2024 - Winter days are more often cold, short and dark but necessity meant fishing off the Irish coast never stopped. Fishermen who ventured out during the winter months often did so to fish with long lines.
Leigh Nios moExploring traditional boats with visual artist Dan Shipsides
15 December 2023 - My online talk to mark World Maritime Day last September continues to encourage conversations on Ireland’s traditional boats. Following the talk, I was contacted by multidisciplinary visual artist Dan Shipsides whose recent work involved exploring the boat or canoe and other forms of indigenous and traditional vessels from many places including Ireland.
Leigh Nios mo“Sheebang” Framework detail mid section. Dan Shipsides (Shipsides and Beggs Projects) 2023. © Dan Shipsides
Harry Madill and project lead, Wes Forsythe at the launch of the Strakes and Skins exhibition at the Public Record Office (NI), June 2023.
The Madill Archive Project
7 November 2023 - To mark World Maritime Day on 28 September, I gave an online, illustrated talk that detailed the National Museum’s work on a planned traditional boat gallery. I am very grateful to Dr Wes Forsythe, Senior Lecturer, Centre for Maritime Archaeology, Ulster University for getting in touch with me after the talk to share with me the important work recently undertaken by the Madill Archive Project.
Leigh Nios moBoat Gallery Update
11 October 2023 - I am happy to report that planning for the traditional boat gallery is entering a new stage. A meeting with representatives from the Office of Public Works has helped clarify work to be done and the movement of boats from the gallery space in advance of that work is progressing.
Leigh Nios moWild Atlantic Voices talk to mark World Maritime Day 2023. © National Museum of Ireland
Michael Gallagher returns from fishing off Port an Chuaille, Clare Island, Co. Mayo. © National Museum of Ireland
Online talk: Wild Atlantic Voices
25 September 2023 - Join National Museum of Ireland – Country Life curator, Noel Campbell, for an online talk exploring his work on the development of a gallery dedicated to traditional Irish boats of the Atlantic coast.
Leigh Nios moDocumenting Ireland's last surviving traditional wooden boatyard
22 August 2023 - A beautiful exhibition of photographs closed earlier this summer after several weeks on display at Uillinn: West Cork Arts Centre in Skibbereen, Co. Cork. The exhibition Hegarty’s Boatyard: Last Surviving Traditional Wooden Boatyard in Ireland is the work of documentary photographer Kevin O’Farrell.
Leigh Nios moPaddy Hegarty (2019) © Kevin O’Farrell. Image courtesy of Kevin O’Farrell
Amy and John Reck, Galway, 2023. ©National Museum of Ireland.
John Reck - My time on the Dún Aengus and the Naomh Éanna
05 July 2023 - In the weeks following the Museum’s public request last March for objects and memories of the MV Naomh Éanna, I was delighted to receive many phone calls and emails from people registering their interest in the ferry that serviced Oileáin Árann (Aran Islands) from the Galway mainland from 1958 to the late 1980s.
Leigh Nios moClare master shipwright James Madigan
17 May 2023 - James Madigan is well-known throughout Ireland for his boat building skills and his role in preserving traditional boat types. I first got to see James’s craftsmanship when I joined up with students and teachers from the Raheen Wood Steiner Secondary School at Lough Derg, Co. Clare in June 2021.
Leigh Nios moMaster shipwright James Madigan working on a Dublin Bay 21 footer yacht, Kilrush Boatyard, Co. Clare. © National Museum of Ireland
Damien Donnellan. Damien Donnellan. Image courtesy of Damien Donnellan
Damien Donnellan of Galway City Museum shares his research on the heritage of the Galway Hooker
05 April 2023 - Damien Donnellan works at Galway City Museum and has recently completed his MA in Public History and Cultural Heritage. Damien’s research was on the Galway hooker and he kindly agreed to share his work in this latest offering on Traditional Boats of Ireland’s Wild Atlantic Way.
Leigh Nios moNational Museum of Ireland seeks Naomh Éanna material and memories
03 March 2023 - The National Museum of Ireland – Country Life in Turlough Park, Castlebar, Co. Mayo is developing a permanent gallery to display a selection of traditional Irish boats and associated material from Ireland’s west coast and we are looking for your help.
Leigh Nios moPassengers ready for the journey by currach to the waiting Naomh Éanna, Inis Oírr, Co. na Gaillimhe, 1968. © National Museum of Ireland
Fourth year students from ATU Mayo with lecturer Niamh Hearns, Turlough Park. © National Museum of Ireland
Irish traditional boats inspiring the next generation
22 February 2023 - Since opening in 2001, the National Museum of Ireland – Country Life has encouraged cooperation with third level institutions and we continue to strengthen those relationships. The Irish Folklife collection, and the various staff who work with the collection, provide valuable and relevant information to students who visit us at Turlough Park.
Leigh Nios moHare Island lobster fishing
19 January 2023 - During a recent listing of our fishing related objects from Co. Cork, I came across a beautifully made, and well preserved, lobster pot from Hare Island. Hare Island (also known as Heir Island, Inishodriscol and Inis Uí Drisceoil) is an inhabited island located just north of the larger Sherkin Island in Roaringwater Bay, Co Cork.
Leigh Nios moAchill VTOS Coastal Guiding group at Turlough Park. © National Museum of Ireland.
Engagement with the north-west continues
05 December 2022 - October was a busy month in terms of the development of our new boat gallery. A kick-off workshop was held with Museum staff and the gallery’s design team Metaphor at which project objectives, key audiences and themes were discussed. These initial design stages encourage ideas and different approaches that promote the overall objectives of the gallery.
Leigh Nios moResearch visit to the National Folklore Collection at UCD
18 October 2022 - My recent visit to the National Folklore Collection in University College Dublin to view its boat and fishing related material, further demonstrated the close link that exists between that collection and the National Museum of Ireland’s Irish Folklife collection.
Leigh Nios moDetails from the National Folklore Collection of bogdeal rope making in the Sneem area of Co. Kerry © National Museum of Ireland
NMI’s Noel Campbell and Tom Doyle, National Ploughing Championships 2022. © National Museum of Ireland.
Community engagement at the National Ploughing Championships
21 September 2022 - The National Ploughing Championships is back after a hiatus of two years due to the Covid pandemic. On the first day of the event, 91,500 people visited the 900 acre site in Ratheniska, Co. Laois and the National Museum of Ireland was there to meet them. The three-day event is a great opportunity for the Museum to engage with rural Ireland and to share details of our own upcoming events and projects.
Leigh Nios moExciting progress at Turlough Park boat gallery
07 September 2022 - The planned boat gallery at the National Museum of Ireland – Country life took an important step to realisation a number of weeks back when key figures in the development met on site at Turlough Park. The gallery’s project manager Vincent O’Shea met with members of the NMI, Office of Public Works and Metaphor Communications Ltd. Metaphor are a UK based masterplanning, exhibition design and architecture company.
Leigh Nios moMembers of the Metaphor team viewing the boat gallery © National Museum of Ireland.
Breandán Mac Conamhna, born in Béal Deirg in 1936. © National Museum of Ireland.
“The currach fed the people”
08 August 2022 - Earlier this year I published a post on the energetic work behind a push to revive interest in the large, five-man currach once used in Béal Deirg, Co. Mhaigh Eo. Work by Currachaí na Sceirí, an east coast based group of currach enthusiasts, and others including locals from Béal Deirg (Belderg or Belderrig in English), resulted in what was truly a very special and emotional day in north Mayo on 30 July. On that day, for the first time in 69 years, Béal Deirg currachs raced in their natural waters.
Leigh Nios moLobster fishing season is no pot luck
This time of year is lobster season for many fishermen. Along the Irish coast, boats will make perhaps several journeys weekly out to the rocky inshore waters to check the catch in pre-set lobster pots. The money brought to the fisherman’s household from the sale of his lobster catch was always welcomed. Lobster fishing was relatively straightforward for anyone who had access to a boat
Leigh Nios moLobster pot made from willow from Lispatrick, Ringrone, Courceys, Co. Cork © National Museum of Ireland.
IIMRO secretary Séamus Bonner, Warsaw, Poland, 2016 © Séamus Bonner
Community engagement central to boat gallery development
On the subject of traditional boats and wider coastal life there are scores of organisations working to capture, preserve and utilise seafaring knowledge. Those who live beside and work on our coastal waters are often best placed to inform our work in the Museum.
Leigh Nios moA new addition to the Irish Folklife boat collection
A year ago I wrote a post about the model boats in the Irish Folklife collection. We were very fortunate to have been contacted since then by a member of the public who offered to donate his model of a Galway hooker to the Museum. The model is a beautiful object in its own right, but its provenance and connection to people and place made it a perfect fit for the Irish Folklife collection.
Leigh Nios moModel Galway hooker rests in the large freezer © National Museum of Ireland
Albert Siggins’ drawing of the Museum's Belderrig currach © National Museum of Ireland
Researching the Belderrig currach
In 2002, the National Museum of Ireland chose to build a Belderrig currach to be included in its collection and eventually to be put on public display. Skilled boat-builder, Pádraig Ó Duinnín and his team from Meitheal Mara, used traditional tools and methods to construct the Belderrig currach in the grounds of the National Museum of Ireland – Country Life, Turlough Park in Castlebar.
Leigh Nios moStorm season in Sligo eighty years ago
Storm Barra has left us in no doubt that the 2021-22 storm season is upon us. Barra, the second named storm this winter, has done much damage and hampered the delivery of services across the island of Ireland. The west coast bore the brunt of Barra where footage of ferocious seas and high winds reminded me of a near tragic sailing that involved my own grandfather Garda James Campbell during the storm season of 1940-41.
Leigh Nios moGarda James Campbell and his family, Sligo, late 1940s. © Noel Campbell.
A.T. Lucas sketch of ‘the remains of a curious structure’ at Fallmore, Co. Mayo, 1955. © National Museum of Ireland.
Mayo defences against the wild Atlantic weather
In May 1955, the Director of the National Museum of Ireland, A.T. Lucas and leading Irish folklorist, Kevin Danaher travelled from Dublin to the Erris region of Co. Mayo to carry out a week of fieldwork. The Director’s handwritten fieldwork notes tell us much about how local people adapted to defending themselves and their livestock against the often-destructive weather experienced on the Mayo coast.
Leigh Nios moThe last fisherman of Portdoon, Inishturk
The surname O’Toole has a long connection to Inishturk. Working on the first Ordnance Survey of Ireland, John O’Donovan wrote in 1838, ‘This island is said to be in the possession of the O’Tooles for an unknown number of centuries’.¹ Much of Mikey’s life has been shaped by the island.
Leigh Nios moPortdoon Harbour, Inishturk, 2020 © National Museum of Ireland
Anita White outside her rented cottage on Inis Oírr © Anita White
1970s Inis Oírr - an American's diary
I was delighted to receive an email recently from Anita White from the midwestern US state of Minnesota. As a young artist in the mid-1970s, Anita moved her life to the unknowns of Inis Oírr to record the island people’s way of life. After viewing our online exhibition, Anita contacted me to share her own tale of Inis Oírr and her time spent with Mikey Conneely.
Leigh Nios moCork’s currach rowing success
The sport of rowing is strong in Cork with numerous clubs located across both the county and city. Nestled between two of those city-based clubs along the south bank of the River Lee is an alternative rowing club that I recently had the pleasure of visiting. The Naomhóga Chorcaí currach rowing club aims to promote an appreciation of the culture of traditional boats in Ireland.
Leigh Nios moEarly morning commuters rush past the relaxed currach rowers © National Museum of Ireland
Limpet remover, called a sligheán in Irish. Inis Oírr (Inisheer), Aran Islands, Co. Galway © National Museum of Ireland
Shellfish collecting objects from the Irish Folklife collection
Now that the summer has arrived, many of you will be planning trips to our beautiful beaches. The views along our coastline are unparalleled and you would be forgiven for spending the majority of your time gazing out to sea. As you crunch over the sand to access the best vistas, take a moment to look down at the history under your feet.
Leigh Nios moClare students get a taste of the sea on Lough Derg
One of the attractive characteristics of the currach is its accessibility. They are relatively easy to transport and handle on the water which makes them a growing favourite for recreational rowers. I travelled to Mountshannon in County Clare recently to join students and teachers from the Raheen Wood Steiner Secondary School as they rowed their way up through Lough Derg in beautifully-built west Clare currachs.
Leigh Nios moJohn Tynan rowing with students from Raheen Wood Steiner Secondary School © National Museum of Ireland
Mattie O’Malley working on the frame of the nobby
The rebirth of a nobby in south-east Galway
or the past three years, Mattie O’Malley has been building a 40 foot nobby at the yard of his timber construction business. Mattie is building his nobby from the design and measurements of the ‘Santa Maria’ nobby that was built in 1918 for the Cloherty business family of Roundstone, Co. Galway. The ‘Santa Maria’ was built by Bartley Cloherty on Inishnee, Co. Galway.
Leigh Nios moMaking a currach - Michael Conneely, a new online exhibition
n 1968, the National Museum of Ireland recognised the threat to the traditional currach and given the Museum’s role in preserving heritage objects for the benefit of the Irish people, it began the process of having one commissioned for the national collection.
Leigh Nios moMikey Conneely, Inisheer, Aran Islands, Co. Galway. © National Museum of Ireland
Gathering seaweed with a racán ceilpe, a seaweed hook © National Museum of Ireland.
Seaweed harvesting - the tools of the trade
For tenants living in coastal areas where the soil was not as fertile as further inland, seaweed was a productive manure. Because of its high potash content, seaweed is suited to potash feeders, such as potatoes. In the often rocky and barren coastal fields, mixing seaweed with quantities of sand could literally create soil in which crops were grown to feed families.
Leigh Nios moModel boats of the Irish Folklife collection
The National Museum of Ireland’s Folklife collection contains about 35 model boats of varying size and quality. While attention to detail and scale are not always guaranteed, those that are of a good quality can tell us much about their full-size versions. Models can be a useful reference when one cannot access the ‘real deal’.
Leigh Nios moModel of a drontheim yawl © National Museum of Ireland
The Brendan currach. Photograph by Cotton Coulson.
Tim Severin's The Brendan Voyage
Tim Severin was an explorer, author and historian who sadly passed away last month at the age of 80. Throughout 1976-1977, Severin led a small group of fellow explorers as they sailed the journey from Ireland west across the Atlantic Ocean to the Promised Land believed to have been completed by Saint Brendan in the sixth century.
Leigh Nios moDónal Mac Polin artwork donated to Museum
The National Museum of Ireland – Country Life received a very generous donation of 18 boat prints recently from artist and traditional boat expert Dónal Mac Polin. Dónal was the assistant editor and art editor of Traditional Boats of Ireland: History, Folklore and Construction, which was edited by Críostóir Mac Cárthaigh. Dónal is also the author of The Drontheim: Forgotten Sailing Boat of the North Irish Coast and of The Donegal Currachs.
Leigh Nios moInis Óirr currach, Co. Galway. Artist Dónal Mac Polin © National Museum of Ireland
The hand line - if it's not broke, don't fix it
While working in the stores of the Irish Folklife collection recently, I came across a fishing hand line that was acquired by the National Museum of Ireland in 1928. It did not look familiar and a check of our object database told me that in my almost twenty years working on the collection, I had not worked on this particular object.
Leigh Nios moReviving the Galway hooker
Covid restrictions have struck again and travel outside of Mayo has been controlled. Thankfully, I was able to get to Galway city on Culture Night (18th September) to get updated on the tremendous work being carried out locally to revive the iconic Galway hooker. The hooker is an iconic symbol of Galway and the west coast that was admired in the past for its usefulness in a range of tasks and today for its beauty and history.
Leigh Nios moThe hooker Nóra Bheag, rebuilt by Cóilín Hernon © National Museum of Ireland
Currach at the quay, Clare Island. Photograph by Noel Campbell © National Museum of Ireland
Currach fishermen of Clare Island
In planning this year’s fieldwork last spring, I drew up a list of locations that I was keen to visit during the summer months. Traveling during the favourable summer weather would allow for some nice photography, more flexibility with extended ferry timetables to the islands and calmer seas which would permit more activity on the water. My plans were dealt a blow with the introduction of pandemic restrictions but once travel within your own county was permitted I immediately set about organising a visit to Clare Island.
Leigh Nios moAn afternoon with a currach fisherman
Standing at Port an Chuaille on Clare Island, I scanned beyond the quiet pier and tried to imagine what the seascape would have looked like when working currachs delicately hugged the lobster rich rocky coast and crisscrossed the choppy waters on route to the better local fishing areas. I did not have to imagine for long when a fisherman appeared on his motorbike and began to ready his currach for a day’s work.
Leigh Nios moOut on the ocean. Michael Gallagher, Clare Island © National Museum of Ireland
Traditional boats in storage at Turlough Park. Photograph by Noel Campbell. © National Museum of Ireland.
What boats are in the Irish Folklife Collection?
The collection contains over thirty traditional Irish boats. These boats are stored in three sites throughout Ireland including the home of the Irish Folklife collection at the National Museum of Ireland – Country Life in Turlough Park, Castlebar, Co. Mayo. Currachs are particularly well represented in the collection with fifteen examples.
Leigh Nios moRemembering our West of Ireland boats
Did you grow up in a fishing community, was your family involved in boat building or have you a memory of boats from the west coast? If you do, we would like to invite you to contribute your memories to inform the development of a new gallery at the National Museum of Ireland – Country Life.
Leigh Nios moWest Village, Inishere, Aran Islands, Co. Galway, June, 1968. © National Museum of Ireland