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V9 Voices of the Valley - Closed Captioning 1

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    'Before cars,
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    before tractors,
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    before electricity made its way
    to the Irish countryside
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    life was very different
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    This time
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    is still in living memory
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    for the people who grew up here
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    and who life here now.
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    In the Mealagh Valley,
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    hidden in the hills of County Cork
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    in the West of Ireland
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    We find the extordinary
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    in their ordinary
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    Their memories paint a picture
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    of real, lived experience
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    and prevent their
    widsom & knowledge
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    from becoming lost
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    in the ever quickening currents
    of change.'
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    - Trying to hand it down to
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    the next generation or the
    second next generation.
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    As I said to you before
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    my father drilled it into me
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    but we didn't listen.
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    We listened alright but
    we didnt write it down.
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    In places like the Mealagh Valley
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    - You could say really from
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    the 1930s until the EU money
    started coming in
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    that life didn't really change
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    in hidden valleys like
    the Mealagh Valley
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    - Born on the 21st of the 3rd, 1947.
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    I understand that was here in this house.
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    This is the house that I've always lived in.
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    - I was born in the Mealagh Valley
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    not everybody can say that.
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    My mother told me I think
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    I was born on the way up the stairs
    in Ards
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    - I was reared up where Pat is now like
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    reared there and...
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    My father was buried in 1974.
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    I was only just turning 18.
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    - You were young
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    - Yeah, yeah,
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    My mother had poor health
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    she had very bad eyesight
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    poor eyesight
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    like it was definitely different times
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    to now a days
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    - A lot of responsibility?
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    - A lot of responsibility,
    a lot of responsibility.
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    - Now, that was survival
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    we were never hungry but
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    I always say we were reared
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    in a cashless society.
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    Very well self-sufficient
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    and in those days
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    one of the things that is very important
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    for me to point out
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    that the women worked
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    probably harder
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    than the men.
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    - There was a lot, it was a lot
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    of hard work.
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    My God, compared to today now like
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    Everything was done by hand
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    - The way life has changed
    so much
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    My father used to always say to me like
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    No matter now long you live
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    you'd never see as much change as he did
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    in his lifetime
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    but by God,
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    I have a lot of them seen.
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    Definitely a lot of them seen. [laughter]
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    - Oh God, the farming long ago
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    Everybody helped eachother
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    there was nobody looking for money
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    you go to anybody to help them for a day
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    and they come to you like
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    and that's the way it was.
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    - It was good times
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    but we know nothing else like.
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    We had no radio, papers,
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    or anything ever
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    - There was very little distraction?
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    - Very little, very little.
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    - Blueberries used to grow
    in a ditch
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    We had one ditch
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    and all the blueberries used to grow on it
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    in the summer time
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    Well anytime our mother would want us
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    she'd have to go out the side of the house
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    and call us
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    We'd be about as from here now
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    to the bushes outside the house
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    and she'd call us
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    and we'd come home
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    for dinner or for tea,
    back out to the berries...
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    - Blackberries were the main thing
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    But there was one
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    crab tree
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    in the summertime we'd have great fun
    with that
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    picking them
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    they were wild, obviously
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    you'd have wild strawberries
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    and furze
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    that was about it like
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    - Oh any blackberries and things like that
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    of course, they'd be...
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    We know the season of them alright
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    and sometimes they were eaten when they
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    were rather green I'd say
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    yeah [laughter]
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    We... if they were anywhere near
    ripe at all
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    - You had jam when you had
    blackberries
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    People didn't
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    just go out willy nilly
    and buy jam
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    Most of the jam was made
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    and like
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    I have to keep repeating saying that
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    my parents carbon footprint
    was very light
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    When I think about what rubbish
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    we take to the recycling centre now...
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    There was no rubbish!
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    Everything was reused.
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    There was no food waste,
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    because you had animals to eat it.
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    Zero food waste.
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    There was no plastic.
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    We're back to the year of paper.
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    Ok, and when you were finished with paper
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    it went in the fire
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    to light the fire.
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    You know?
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    - There was no bin collection? There was no...
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    - Bin my HAT!!
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    - When we started going to school
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    then it got a bit tougher alright.
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    You'd have to walk to school
    two miles
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    and walk home again
    in the evening
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    - They're better times now
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    They're much better times
    than when I grew up
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    We had to walk to school
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    We had a mile, well, a little over a mile
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    to walk to Coomleigh School
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    So um,
    Rain, hail, or snow,
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    we'd have to still go to school
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    - Walk it with our two legs! [laughing]
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    - We had to walk from here everyday
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    so we didn't enjoy that
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    - How many miles is it from here?
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    - I think tis over three anyway
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    - Tell me, was the road tarred
    at the time?
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    - No, no
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    - And you had runners, I suppose?
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    You had shoes?
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    - The road wasn't tarred
    til the 1960s
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    We had no shoes
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    and fine stones on the road
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    broken stones
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    - A lot of them from the end of the road, .
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    they would go barefoot
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    even in the middle of the winter
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    Barefoot to school in the WINTER
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    cold, fresh from the road
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    They must have had soles
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    in their feet like steel
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    We had three schools
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    in the valley at one time
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    We had the one at Inchiclough
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    the one in Gortnacowley
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    and the one at Dromclough
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    - I think there might be a fella
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    in the back row there that you
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    - That's me isn't it?
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    - That's you
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    - English and Irish
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    and arithmetic
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    they were really the main ones
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    I suppose for a long time
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    And then I suppose...
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    history and geography then as well
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    -The writing was done,
    -with a quill?
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    the ink quill, with the ink
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    -The Irish i liked irish
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    -There would be fire
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    The neighbors would bring turf
    for the winter time
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    and it would be still cold like
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    You know in a big room like
    a little fire there
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    what good would be down here?
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    -They had for the play ground, they
    had the girls on one side playing
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    and the boys on the other side
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    but inside in the classrooms there was
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    -together?
    -yeah
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    -And he was good that way,
    teaching gardening and things like that
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    and you know, vegetables
    -lovely idea really, to be honest
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    -Twas, yeah!
    But i know that it used to be on a Friday,
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    from twelve till three, was all gardening
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    -There was no lunch boxes or anything,
    you know
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    no no yeah, been a long time now
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    -So what did you wrap it in?
    -I wrap it in a bit of paper,
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    Get a bit of news paper and
    a bottle of milk and away you go
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    -In 1968 the school was closed and
    we were given
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    free transport and we were taken
    to Dromclough
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    -I went to Dromclough school, obviously
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    and there was a small little black board
    on the wall, just inside of the door
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    coming into the big room as I used to
    call it
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    and the attendance was marked on that
    little black board, every day
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    how many were in 1st class
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    up to 6th class
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    and I can remember 112
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    total in Dromclough School
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    112, yeah
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    And whether they were all there that day
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    or not, I'm not too sure
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    but I can remember distinctly 112
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    being on that little black board
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    Where we all fitted....
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    I do know
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    that there were 3 sitting
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    at desks that were just built for 2
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    - When we'd come home then
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    in the evening
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    We'd have our dinner
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    when we'd come home
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    We'd have to go out and
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    do the jobs outside then
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    to help my father and my mother
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    Here in the evening
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    when you'd come home like
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    if it was summer time
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    you'd be out in the fields
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    with your pikes turning hay
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    If it was the bog,
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    you'd be at the turf.
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    And you know, if it was
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    in the winter time you'd have
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    like bedding to put in under the cattle
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    in the stalls
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    clean out the stalls
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    You wouldn't be idle at all like!
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    Well I had to cut...
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    it was called rathanóg
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    between furze and grass
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    - But by God, there would be
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    plenty of work
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    when you come home in the evening
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    You'd go out and bring in
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    the cows for milking
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    in the evening
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    and so on and so forth
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    help feed the calves
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    and of course,
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    before the creamery was built
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    we used to separate the milk
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    at home
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    and make the
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    homemade butter
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    and so forth before the creamery came
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    - You'd watch your father doing it
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    and see him doing it
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    and that was it.
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    Milking cows,
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    milk a couple of cows maybe
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    a cow or two before
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    you go to school in the morning
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    - You'd hand milk?
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    - Oh, hand milk, yeah.
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    - The separator at that time was...
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    to separate the milk, the cream
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    You'd make the butter
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    sell the butter
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    and a lorry, a truck,
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    a little green truck would come
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    once a week,
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    I think once a week
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    every Thursday they used to come from
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    Lyons's in Bantry, it's where
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    Keefe's took it over where
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    Supervalu is now
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    Lyons's
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    His name was Denis O'Reegan
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    and he used to come around
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    the valley once a week
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    They'd sell the butter to him,
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    he'd take the butter,
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    butter and eggs were the big thing like
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    - And would you sell the milk as well?
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    - No, that was later then
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    when we started going
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    to the Creamery like,
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    but before in my very young days
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    there was the separator
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    for separating the milk and the cream
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    for making the butter
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    - So the butter was the value?
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    - Butter was the value
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    yeah, butter was the value
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    - They'd be talking about
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    hygiene and the rest of it...
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    in the scorching summer heat
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    he'd come around
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    I don't know how they'd take the butter... barrells...
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    - They must have had
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    some bit of ice in the barrel?
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    - There was no ice at that time
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    A lot of salt like
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    - It was just the salt?
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    No refrigeration...
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    - You'd seperate the milk
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    then you'd make cream off it
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    then you'd make butter
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    and sell that to the man
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    up above at the cross
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    If you had a good few cows like,
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    you could have maybe
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    20 pounds of butter...
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    it was only a half crown at that time
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    half crown you'd get
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    for a pound of butter at that time
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    Half a crown, was like like
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    12 and half pence at that time, Eleanor
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    But that's the way it was girl
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    The Mealagh Creamery
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    was a godsend, you know
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    - It was very important?
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    - And of course the shop then
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    you see
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    made all the difference
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    Because you were able
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    to get what you needed in the shop
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    and then, you see
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    you bought the stuff on tick
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    and it was taken off with a cheque
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    you got the cheque after
    everything was paid for
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    that's how it worked
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    - A couple of nights a week anyway
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    you'd have scoraíochters.
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    The neighbours, they'd have no where
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    no where to entertain themselves
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    so they'd go to each others houses.
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    They'd have the
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    news of the day like
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    - The scoraíochting was
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    very, very important
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    because that was the
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    social get together for people
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    in the evening.
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    And basically, whoever could
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    tell the best story
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    got the audience.
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    And I'd sometimes say,
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    whoever could tell the best lies.
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    - Men used to go around
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    scoraíochting, as we used to call it
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    and that word came natural
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    we always heard it like.
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    The man I remember mostly
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    coming here, he was
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    Jack O'Shea from Goulanes
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    Mikey Cronin
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    he used to come down
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    one night a week
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    There was a labouring man above
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    he'd maybe call twice a week.
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    Yeah 2-3 nights a week
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    you'd have someone in like
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    - And at that time
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    if some neighbour came
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    scoraíochting
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    and you were in the middle
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    of the rosary
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    They'd always kneel down then
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    They'd kneel down
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    until the rosary would be finished
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    there would be no words
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    spoken til the rosary was finished then
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    we'd have do go to bed then
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    and the neighbours would have
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    their own chat then
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    - Twas more male orientated
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    - There used to be piseógs like,
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    piseógs
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    they'd be telling stories...
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    People used to say that
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    like they'd be trying to frighten people
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    they'd say they'd see something
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    somebody that was dead
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    they'd see them walking the road,
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    crossing the road...
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    We were always told
  • 15:31 - 15:32
    they're only piseógs
  • 15:32 - 15:33
    don't listen to that
  • 15:34 - 15:35
    - There would be
  • 15:35 - 15:36
    the odd fairy story alright,
  • 15:36 - 15:37
    there would.
  • 15:37 - 15:39
    Whether the fairies were there
  • 15:39 - 15:40
    or not
  • 15:40 - 15:43
    I don't know [laughter]
  • 15:44 - 15:46
    - There was a fella coming home
  • 15:46 - 15:47
    one night anyway.
  • 15:47 - 15:48
    He thought there were fairies
  • 15:48 - 15:50
    after him and
  • 15:50 - 15:51
    it was a goat.
  • 15:51 - 15:54
    [laughter]
  • 15:54 - 15:56
    And when stories were told
  • 15:56 - 15:57
    in the scoraíochting house
  • 15:57 - 15:58
    they were like the snowball
  • 15:58 - 15:59
    going down the hill,
  • 15:59 - 16:00
    they never got smaller.
  • 16:00 - 16:03
    There used to be a light showing off
  • 16:03 - 16:05
    at the top of the road.
  • 16:05 - 16:07
    They would see lights and things
  • 16:07 - 16:08
    here and there.
  • 16:08 - 16:10
    But when we were widening the road
  • 16:10 - 16:13
    putting in a piece of the bridge or something
  • 16:13 - 16:14
    I cut the tree
  • 16:14 - 16:16
    and sure there was a nice flat piece
  • 16:16 - 16:17
    up on top of it
  • 16:17 - 16:19
    to set a candle or a lamp or something
  • 16:19 - 16:21
    that was the light
  • 16:21 - 16:24
    You know, it was put there like
  • 16:24 - 16:26
    - That was the fairy.
  • 16:26 - 16:27
    - That was the fairy!
  • 16:28 - 16:30
    - I noticed that if children were around
  • 16:30 - 16:33
    they wouldn't talk about the troubled times
  • 16:33 - 16:35
    and the Black & Tans
  • 16:35 - 16:36
    and what they did
  • 16:36 - 16:37
    and the civil war
  • 16:37 - 16:38
    and the rest of it...
  • 16:38 - 16:39
    Television started to
  • 16:39 - 16:41
    get rid of the scoraíochting
  • 16:41 - 16:42
    because you went in
  • 16:42 - 16:43
    to somebody's house
  • 16:43 - 16:45
    and there was something on...
  • 16:45 - 16:45
    "Shhhhh"
  • 16:46 - 16:47
    - And he'd come early in the evening
  • 16:47 - 16:50
    and we'd be playing cards all night
  • 16:50 - 16:52
    and when it would be time
  • 16:52 - 16:53
    to go home
  • 16:53 - 16:55
    we'd light the lantern for him
  • 16:55 - 16:56
    and give it to him
  • 16:56 - 16:57
    and away he go
  • 16:57 - 16:59
    - There was always a lot of singing
  • 16:59 - 17:01
    in the Mealagh Valley
  • 17:01 - 17:04
    There was always a lot of music.
  • 17:05 - 17:07
    - The shop,
  • 17:07 - 17:10
    there were three rooms downstairs
  • 17:10 - 17:12
    they used to be playing cards in one room
  • 17:12 - 17:14
    they'd be dancing then in the kitchen
  • 17:14 - 17:16
    and they'd be selling millers
  • 17:16 - 17:18
    and things there in the shop side of it
  • 17:19 - 17:21
    There'd be plenty of music
  • 17:21 - 17:22
    and dancing
  • 17:22 - 17:24
    There'd be around 3 hours
  • 17:24 - 17:26
    every Sunday evening
  • 17:26 - 17:27
    or Sunday night
  • 17:27 - 17:29
    - You had the threshing
  • 17:29 - 17:31
    the threshing ball.
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    You had the wren balls
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    and then
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    we used to have
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    the stations.
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    And you know,
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    there was always, usually,
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    a bit of a sing song, dance
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    after the stations
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    So you know,
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    there were plenty of reasons
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    to sing
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    and opportunities to sing
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    - I remember one night,
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    I was going to a dance
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    I don't know where
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    to be honest with you
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    but my father was inside
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    and he wouldn't let me go
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    so what I done
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    I went upstairs
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    there was a little window
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    and a ditch on the other side
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    so I caught my shoes
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    and my clothes
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    and threw them out the window
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    a reach over the hedge
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    So then I went around
  • Not Synced
    and said I was only going out
  • Not Synced
    a small bit
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    so I went around
  • Not Synced
    picked them up
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    and off I went
  • Not Synced
    [laughter]
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    Vincie Crowley he was the most popular
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    a lovely singer as well
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    And there was a lot of the
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    young people now
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    like the Briens
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    at the end of the road
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    Pat Brien and Timothy Brien
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    they learned the accordian
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    they were lovely players
  • Not Synced
    and Denis
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    Denis Brien was a lovely player as well
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    There was a crowd that
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    would go out on the wren
  • Not Synced
    they'd collect so much money
  • Not Synced
    and they'd buy so much drink then
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    [laughter]
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    Light was an oil lamp
  • Not Synced
    single wick
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    a candle
  • Not Synced
    and for outside it would have been
  • Not Synced
    a storm lamp or storm lantern
  • Not Synced
    which again was single burner
  • Not Synced
    but had a special globe around it
  • Not Synced
    that the wind would stop it a quenching
  • Not Synced
    And those lanterns
  • Not Synced
    they burned a lot of places
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    because people were careless with them
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    And later on down
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    the tilley lamp came in
  • Not Synced
    that was a godsend
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    and the tilley lamp, of course, then
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    it burned the tractor vapourising oil
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    and when it was reasonably hot
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    you pumped it up
  • Not Synced
    and turned it on
  • Not Synced
    and the mantle lit up
  • Not Synced
    and that was marvelous!
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    After so much time,
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    it would gradually go down then like
  • Not Synced
    after say maybe an hour or two
  • Not Synced
    you'd have to give it
  • Not Synced
    another couple of pumps
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    and it would brighten it up again
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    - Twas Molly & MIkey's shop
  • Not Synced
    as we used to call it
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    I'd say it would be down
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    a good half mile from here
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    down at the bottom of the slop of the road
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    down at the corner
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    they used to always have the oil and the mantles
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    and they had a lot of groceries
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    which was to important
  • Not Synced
    for the locality like
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    - We didn't buy much in the shop
  • Not Synced
    to be quite honest with you.
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    The few things you bought
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    sugar
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    salt
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    bread soda
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    flour
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    tea
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    you know
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    and you wouldn't be seen
  • Not Synced
    buying veg, oh no.
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    You wouldn't be seen buying veg
  • Not Synced
    and if you were seen buying potatoes... [scoff]
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    - Like the only thing you'd need would be
  • Not Synced
    paraffin oil for the oil lamp like
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    There was no such thing as
  • Not Synced
    that fella [motion up at light]
  • Not Synced
    paraffin oil
  • Not Synced
    that was your light
  • Not Synced
    and you'd get salt and sugar
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    nothing else like
  • Not Synced
    nothing in the line of food really
  • Not Synced
    because you had it all at home
  • Not Synced
    self... from the farm like
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    - In the north side
  • Not Synced
    in Dromsullivan
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    you had Willian Carney's
  • Not Synced
    little shop
  • Not Synced
    and then
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    the next shop over then
  • Not Synced
    was over by the school
  • Not Synced
    which was known as Mrs. Patty's
  • Not Synced
    her husband was a shoemaker
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    - They were sufficient, almost
  • Not Synced
    with their own animals and fowl
  • Not Synced
    and eggs of course
  • Not Synced
    there were always hens
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    - I learned how to cycle
  • Not Synced
    when I suppose I was about
  • Not Synced
    10 years of age
  • Not Synced
    and do you know what it is
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    I remember I had the frame
  • Not Synced
    of a bicycle
  • Not Synced
    and a wheel
  • Not Synced
    and I had a piece of a stick
  • Not Synced
    put through the wheel
  • Not Synced
    and the frame fitted down on the wheel
  • Not Synced
    it was only two wheels
  • Not Synced
    and an old frame that I found in the shed
  • Not Synced
    And I made my bicycle out of it
  • Not Synced
    We had run from the house to the road
  • Not Synced
    we had a bit of a slope out from the house
  • Not Synced
    and I'd go to the top of the slope
  • Not Synced
    don't say this, they'll say were were mad
  • Not Synced
    and I'd slide down the hill with the bicycle
  • Not Synced
    - No brakes?
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    - No there was no brake in it.
  • Not Synced
    If I fell I fell
  • Not Synced
    and if I didn't
  • Not Synced
    I stayed up on it.
  • Not Synced
    - That's how you learned?
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    - That's how I learned to cycle, yeah
  • Not Synced
    - We hadn't much to play with
  • Not Synced
    you'd get toys at Christmas.
  • Not Synced
    I can never remember
  • Not Synced
    getting toys
  • Not Synced
    just for getting them...
  • Not Synced
    You kind of played
  • Not Synced
    with anything you found
  • Not Synced
    you know?
  • Not Synced
    No, very simple.
  • Not Synced
    Very simple.
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    I suppose the summer time
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    you'd remember more than the winter
  • Not Synced
    because the days would be longer
  • Not Synced
    but the summer holidays
  • Not Synced
    or summer weekends of evenings
  • Not Synced
    we'd kick ball a bit around in the fields a bit
  • Not Synced
    You could spend half a day
  • Not Synced
    down in the river like
  • Not Synced
    just making your own game
  • Not Synced
    or whatever
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    - We hardly ever see a frog now like
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    because in Ards
  • Not Synced
    we lived by the river
  • Not Synced
    you'd have otters
  • Not Synced
    badgers
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    rabbits were just 10 a penny
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    - I was below one day crossing
  • Not Synced
    the next thing there was a splash
  • Not Synced
    in the river
  • Not Synced
    a wild pig!
  • Not Synced
    - Oh my god!
  • Not Synced
    - Wild pig.
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    - Eels were there
  • Not Synced
    you'd have very small trout
  • Not Synced
    the biggest I ever saw
  • Not Synced
    was about 3 inches
  • Not Synced
    You'd go down then
  • Not Synced
    to the main river
  • Not Synced
    and it was packed with them at that time
  • Not Synced
    fish
  • Not Synced
    packed
  • Not Synced
    and none now
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    And I had a relation from Waterford
  • Not Synced
    he was down in Lismore
  • Not Synced
    that's a big country for fishing
  • Not Synced
    and he taught me how to fish.
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    I came out one evening
  • Not Synced
    started fishing
  • Not Synced
    and I caught 64 trout
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    and they were trout about [this big]
  • Not Synced
    in one evening
  • Not Synced
    I was around the valley
  • Not Synced
    giving every household fish
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    But then, silage came in...
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    Things change
  • Not Synced
    for the worse.
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    We had no trout.
Title:
V9 Voices of the Valley - Closed Captioning 1
Video Language:
English
Duration:
01:45:56

English subtitles

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