Burren Country Read online




  Burren Country

  Travels through an Irish Limestone Landscape

  PAUL CLEMENTS

  www.collinspress.ie

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  Contents

  Map: The Burren

  ‘Burren Prayer’ by Michael Longley

  Prologue – Epiphany: Caught and Smitten

  1. Westing and Arrival

  2. They all have Outrageous Names

  3. The Pool of Sorrows

  4. A Tour through the Paint Box

  5. An Aphrodisiac of the Senses

  6. The Hypnotic Fascination of Mullaghmore

  7. Time and Tide

  8. Grazing around Gleninagh

  9. Travels of the Wandering Rocks

  10. A Woman for all Seasons

  11. The Music of the Sea

  12. The Burren Painters

  13. Benign Storyteller

  14. The Tinker’s Heartbreak: Burren Roads

  15. Bard of Bell Harbour

  16. The Weavers of Sheshymore

  Epilogue – Flirting with the Spirit of the Burren

  Coda

  Glossary

  Burren Bibliography

  General Bibliography

  Acknowledgements

  Websites

  Author

  Copyright

  Burren Prayer

  Gentians and lady’s bedstraw embroider her frock.

  Her pockets are full of sloes and juniper berries.

  Quaking-grass panicles monitor her heartbeat.

  Her reflection blooms like mudwort in a puddle.

  Sea lavender and Irish eyebright at Poll Salach,

  On Black Head saxifrage and mountain-everlasting.

  Our Lady of the Fertile Rocks, protect the Burren.

  Protect the Burren, Our Lady of the Fertile Rocks.

  Michael Longley, Collected Poems

  For Felicity and Daniel

  Prologue

  Epiphany: Caught and Smitten

  Once in his life a man ought to concentrate his mind upon the remembered earth. He ought to give himself up to a particular landscape in his experience; to look at it from as many angles as he can, to wonder upon it, to dwell upon it. He ought to imagine that he touches it with his hands at every season and listens to the sounds that are made upon it. He ought to imagine the creatures there and all the faintest motions of the wind. He ought to recollect the glare of the moon and the colors of the dawn and dusk.

  N. Scott Momaday, The Way to Rainy Mountain

  It was a grey morning in early summer. I was wet and windswept, and with an Atlantic gale sweeping around me, I was getting wetter by the minute. A forlorn and despondent figure standing by the side of the road, I had been hoping for a lift from Ballyvaughan on the Black Head road that hugs the coastline round to Doolin in the northern part of County Clare.

  This was one of my earliest acquaintances with the Burren and it was an inauspicious getting-to-know-you encounter. I was halfway through a journey hitchhiking around the coast of Ireland gathering material for a book and had been deposited by a bread delivery driver, coming from Kinvara, at the water memorial in the centre of Ballyvaughan. I walked to the outskirts beyond the pier, passing thatched cottages, several bungalows and a pub. It was just after ten o’clock on a Wednesday morning. I can date precisely the moment: 14 June 1991, a day of heavy rain and coastal fog. I did not then realise but the Black Head road is not a busy one. Apart from local cars and tourists, it does not attract much traffic. As I stood at the side of the road with a barely visible mountain at my back, I thought it a miserable and austere place. It appeared to have a spooky eeriness to it, a brooding feel, inhospitable and soulless, with little to interest the restless hitchhiker.

  Slowly, the sea mist began to dissipate. The rain stopped and the clouds started to part. Over my shoulder I looked back on hills where the spreadeagled stepped terracing of Cappanawalla Mountain was gradually revealing itself. As I embraced the stillness, I began to wonder about the different shades and moods of the landscape around me. There were few cars and since no one was willing to pick me up, I had plenty of time to watch the chameleon colours, mostly grey and blue. My time here brought an appreciation of the chiaroscuro, the special interplay of light. I could not pin it down there and then but something within the place arrested my attention and excited my imagination.

  After a squally ocean shower spattered my face and rucksack, I watched the rain-polished limestone change colour again. My thumb tried unsuccessfully to attract a passing farmer in a battered Volkswagen but he indicated that he was turning off the road farther along. As I kicked my heels on that damp June morning of long silences, I realised that this was a special place, somewhere I wanted to get to know better. The colours were changing – not abruptly but subtly. It was turning into a soft, still morning. Within thirty minutes the landscape had been transformed. Light and rain, I was discovering, change the whole texture and face of the Burren. The colour, which had been drained from the landscape, had melted from grey murkiness into a brighter grey.

  From my asphalt-locked position the mist was slowly clearing and small islands in the distance became visible as I waited patiently for a friendly Ballyvaughanite to pick me up. Alas none came. I was forced to drink in the atmosphere as the rain returned, leaking through my supposedly waterproof coat. I idly wondered how the people living here eked out an existence in a place where the land looks infertile and uncompromising; how they survived the winters, farmed the hard, bare rock, and how it came to be the way it is. There were many unanswered questions but these were for another day. Today’s question was how to get a lift to Doolin.

  The light show was fascinating but the lack of traffic was a problem. I began to realise light and colour are at their most intense here. The rain stopped again and a few minutes later I was blinking in the sunlight looking far out to sea through binoculars. A pair of herring gulls dipped and cried, and a cormorant swept across, settling on a rock. The sun lit up huge boulders sitting at odd angles deposited in strange locations. After three hours I gave up the attempt to hitchhike the coast road and walked back into town opting for the inland route where I secured a lift within three minutes.

  From the next year I began making regular visits to the Burren, sometimes alone on walking trips, occasionally with family or friends, or sometimes just to listen to the silence. In the succeeding years I have climbed, cycled, examined, wandered, wondered, touched, smelt and considered the landscape from many viewpoints. I did not know it at the time, but on that relatively youthful hitchhiking morning in 1991, where happenstance threw me at the side of the road, I was experiencing a tantalising Burrenesque moment par excellence. The die was cast, the seed was sown and it was the beginning of a beautiful friendship. The moment, or rather the three hours that I stood by the roadside, remained etched in my memory. Through backward glances, that astringent morning has been replayed many times. Looking back on it years later, that encounter was mesmerising. The single most captivating element was the quality of light, and in the years ahead it is this that frequently lured me back as I succumbed to its seductiveness.

  Since getting to know the coastline of Ireland through hitchhiking along it, I have also immersed myself in the Irish landscape through climbing its mountains, looking down on the lie of the land and surveying its wider topographical aspect. Now I have wrapped myself in one small part of it, suckling long and hard at the Burren teat.

  This book is an attempt to capture some of what has turned out to be a lengthy love affair, unrequited and obsessive, a grande passion and an infiltration of dreams in which each year the Burren fire within my head is kindled and rekindled. It is not intended as a guidebook, but more a recording of impressions, a
collection of musings, thoughts, contemplations, and an elegy to a place of fragile beauty. This set of discursive essays, or more correctly pen-portraits of specific aspects of the physical and cultural landscape as well as interviews, do not have to be read in chronological order. In them I have tried to convey some of the affection and awe that people have for the place.

  Even with twenty years of familiarity, the small thrills of nature – the croak of a night-time frog, the shadow of a cloud scudding across grey hills, the fitful sunshine lighting up the rocks, an exhilarating glimpse of an Orange-Tip butterfly, a leveret trotting along a road – have never faded. They are imprinted in my mind, burned in my retina. Each visit perpetually yields new pleasures, as well as ensuring re-engagement with the old ones and recharging the inner batteries. The sorcerer’s magic has weaved its spell and the Burren has marinated me in its mystery and haunting magnetism.

  Lady’s smock © Marty Johnston

  1

  Westing and Arrival

  A wind’s in the heart of me, a fire’s in my heels,

  I am tired of brick and stone and rumbling wagon-wheels;

  I hunger for the sea’s edge, the limit of the land,

  Where the wild old Atlantic is shouting on the sand.

  John Masefield, ‘A Wanderer’s Song’

  For days, if not weeks, before each visit, I am generally unable to sleep for thinking of the Burren. Frequently it occupies late night and early morning thoughts. The American travel writer William Least Heat-Moon warned in Blue Highways about these middle-of-the-night epiphanies:

  Beware thoughts that come in the night. They aren’t properly turned, they come in askew, free of sense and restriction, deriving from the most remote of sources.

  The Burren also enters my daydreams many times at work – those quiet moments when I slip into a catatonic trance before being rudely awakened by a telephone, the ringing melody of a mobile phone, or the ping of a newly arrived email. Since getting to know the Burren, there has always been an intangible romanticism about its name; partly it has to do with the journey west, towards the sun and the ocean, the space and sweep of western skies, the long horizons, a sense of escape and a trip into another world so different from anywhere else.

  Henry David Thoreau said that when he was in need of regeneration he walked towards the west. ‘Eastward I go only by force; but westward I go free,’ he wrote. Richard Mabey suggests in Nature Cure that he thought he saw portents and signs in nature of an inclination towards the west. That was the way the sun moved. He saw ‘westing’ as a kind of primal instinct.

  The Burren is unmistakably apart in the geographical sense from any other place in Ireland or Britain. On each occasion this knowledge alone gives a sensuous thrill of anticipation in making the journey. Like sex, part of the fun lies in the tingle of anticipating it. The stranger may be forgiven for thinking that he or she has strayed off the map into foreign territory and is entering an esoteric land.

  My internal compass always tends to the west. After I leave my home in Belfast, large blue motorway signs say ‘The West’, without specifying exactly what, or where, this symbolic destination is. Part of it seems to be left to the imagination and where your wheels take you. Everyone has a different ‘West’. It could be a particular place on a map, somewhere in their heart, or a fanciful, romantic location.

  My journey takes me through a variety of landscapes, passing the fertile fields of the Lagan Valley, the apple country of Armagh, the drumlins and speed cameras of Tyrone where it is time for a caffeine pit-stop in the Clogher Valley. The road then skirts around the calm lakes, island-hills and far-famed dreary steeples of Fermanagh beyond which the Belfast Express transmutes into the Béal Feirste Express.

  As I cross the border my sense of excitement increases. The trees, crows and fields look the same but road signs, post boxes and fingerposts turn a different colour; miles become kilometres, the currency changes from sterling to euro, and the mobile phone bleeps to a new network provider welcoming me to ‘Ireland’. The view through the car windscreen encompasses the mountains of Leitrim, the Glencar Valley and long white bungalows standing against the wind on Sligo hillsides before turning due south through Mayo’s wide horizons. Low, drystone walls and fields filled with cattle, sheep and horses lifting their heads occasionally, casting a curious glance at the cars rushing past, make up the flat countryside of east Galway. Finally the ‘promised land’ of Clare looms ahead and journey’s end. When I first started going to the Burren, the route went through twenty-seven towns and villages. It is a measure of how Ireland’s road system has changed that, in twenty years, sixteen of these towns are now bypassed, liberated from thousands of cars and lorries each day, and returned to pastoral backwaters ironically encircled by roundabouts and fast roads.

  Down the years their names and main streets have been milestones on the long journey, echoing the ghosts of my own Clogher Valley past: the Tyrone triptych, Augher, Clogher, Fivemiletown (‘where the hills are green and the fields are brown’). Fermanagh’s talismanic and musical-sounding road signposts always bring a smile as I pass them and, like the most eye-catching newspaper headlines, are best sung out loud: Clabby, Cooneen and Tempo; Creagh, Monea and Boho. Next come the blink-and-you-miss-them Bally villages south of Sligo: Ballysadare, Ballygawley and Ballynacarrow, before the busy Mayo market towns Charlestown and Claremorris. Charlestown is an example of bypass-itis. In 2007 an €80-million road named after the campaigning journalist and author John Healy was opened, stretching for 18.2km. The road now runs straight as a die through small fields where he worked and played as a child. Healy was a fervent supporter of regeneration in the west of Ireland. When the road was opened his wife told the press that it symbolised to some extent that the ‘West’ has been saved. She said it would have pleased her husband.

  From Claregalway the road turns left and you negotiate or bypass a series of bustling one-horse towns: Clarinbridge (for the oysters), Oranmore (for the bucks of the eponymous song title), Kinvara (for the Galway fishing hookers) until you feel the gravitational pull towards Ballyvaughan (for the gentians) before heading on – if the mood takes you – to Lisdoonvarna (if you are looking for love or simply the craic), ending up in Kilfenora (the home of the céilí).

  With the comings and goings of the Celtic tiger, the towns and villages have vibrated with change, but the land, although now dotted with many more houses, is timeless. Some of the countryside is unchanged since the early 1970s when I first started driving the back roads of rural Ireland. Many stretches have special meaning and occasionally cry out for me to stop, inviting me to pull over, adding more time to the journey. The route – much more to me than just places connected by red lines on a map – is part of my own personal history. Often I reflect on journeys I made along it in the 1970s having just started a job as a newspaper journalist. I would head off on solo weekends to music festivals such as the Boys of Ballysadare, take a boat to Aranmore Island off the Donegal coast, pick up hitchhikers, sample the beer in the pubs of Sligo or Galway, meet friends living in the west, or follow the Circuit of Ireland car rally the whole way to Kerry just in time for the Sunday run to Caherciveen.

  There is an old saying that the grass is always greener in the past but the light still dances from field to field. Louis MacNeice’s ‘Sligo and Mayo’, one of the five sectional poems from ‘The Closing Album’ is as relevant today as when he wrote it in 1939:

  In Sligo the country was soft; there were turkeys

  Gobbling under sycamore trees

  And the shadows of clouds on the mountains moving

  Like browsing cattle at ease.

  Every journey has its own fun and dynamic, and is part of the thrill of getting there. In places it is a romantic trip, driving over old stone bridges and bumpy level crossings. High hedges enclose the road for short stretches. One of the most important aspects of the journey is not to be distracted by signs encouraging a detour to Westport or Achill Island, or to feel the ur
ge to look up at Croagh Patrick at close quarters, or be seduced by the high life of Galway city’s cosmopolitan cafes.

  For the first-time visitor, an eyeful of Burren hills emerges shortly after turning off the busy N18. From a hidden dip in the road leaving Ballinderreen, over the tops of tree clumps, some rounded hills are visible in the distance. On the way in to Kinvara brief glimpses are seen through tall roadside hedges and from a wall on the outskirts of the village the first proper sighting of the grey terracing and network of low-rise hills emerges. They look unprepossessing, even unglamorous. Some people, seeing the area for the first time, find it depressing. They drive through it quickly, saying they found nothing of interest, just a dull sameness. A magpie, flaunting its long straight tail, surveys the scene from the telegraph wires. It too does not seem overly impressed with what it sees. From this distance the emptiness of the hills looks intimidating yet there is a curiosity that also draws you in, teasing and inviting you to see more, to delve deeper into this tight-laced exterior. On a wall, pied wagtails curtsy and bob, welcoming the visitor.

  Soon, perhaps around Dooneen or Bell Harbour, you may become aware of orange or yellow flickers – butterflies dancing across your path out of the hedges, flitting past the car. Cattle with their heads pointed in one direction – west – look serene. There is an air of calmness and otherworldliness. You feel the power of the ancient with a sense of an older landscape, an alien environment, almost a changed planet. The nature writer Gordon D’Arcy describes it as ‘a most un-Irish place’. With these subtler symptoms you suddenly realise you have entered a startlingly different kind of country, a different realm of consciousness. You have driven through a curtain into a place with a patina of its own. Sitting on this extreme western rim of Europe is a bestiary of rocks, making up a theme park, a playground for those who love limestone, and a place of international ecological and botanical significance. The road signage emphasises the importance – The Burren: Protected Landscape. Tourists pose for photographs with grey, rain-sodden hills as a backdrop. They are entering a world far removed from the clamour of the twenty-first century and its twin evils of hurry sickness and time famine; a world where guesthouses with large extensions are called Gentian Villa, Orchid House, Fuchsia Heights, Rocky View and Dolmen Lodge.