Showing posts with label ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ireland. Show all posts

stone hives



Clochán: beehive huts built of laid stone. They were constructed by Irish monks in the Middle Ages as places for retreat and meditation.

1. Photograph of a bee hive style building 'The School House' on Inishmurry Island, Co. Sligo, Republic of Ireland, by R Welch, 1897.

See also: trulli, tholos.

of bees and bee skeps



'The most exact insects I ever knew' - two snippets from a program on Irish beekeeping. 

From the Irish tv series 'Hands' - originally aired on RTÉ television in 1983.

geansaí

Handknit Aran sweater from Harris Knitwear.

When we were in the Aran Islands, Sean bought one of these from young woman who was sitting in a tiny room packed floor to ceiling with sweaters she had made, and even as we spoke to her, she was methodically knitting while she rocked her baby's cradle with her foot. She took one look at Sean and pulled off the shelf a sweater with longer arms and a narrower torso that fit him exactly. It's too warm to wear on any but the coldest, dampest days.

It's only a myth that each fisherman had a uniquely patterned sweater to help in his identification in case he drowned and washed ashore.