Cashel House Gardens / Connemara, Ireland

October 21, 2013

cashel house 2 A few weeks ago, when I was traveling around the west of Ireland with a bunch of other travel bloggers, we stayed at this wonderful old country house hotel. The Cashel House Hotel is like stepping back in time – the decor, the furnishings, the pace. They’re even an abundant (and might I add, progressive) traditional ingredient in their kitchen and garden – seaweed!

cashel house pink flowers And I think I’m going to have to employ some of their seaweed gardening tricks in my own garden because the Cashel House Gardens are absolutely luscious. Kay and Dermot McEvilly bought the Cashel House in the 1960’s. It was originally built by Kay’s grandparents, but they sold it when her grandfather ran into financial trouble. When Kay and her husband took the house back over, the gardens had become overgrown and they had a lot of work both restoring the house and the gardens in order to return it to its former glory.

cashel house hydrangea petals cashel house Kay now runs the house and restaurant, but it seemed that her real love was the garden. She said she finds great release in working in the gardens. “Life can get stressful, but go out and dig a hole and it all goes away.” I’m not sure I quite agree yet, my garden and I are almost friends, but it was so wonderful and peaceful to walk through the gardens of Cashel House. 

mary's garden cashel house Kay’s sister, Mary, died in a car accident years ago, so she created a garden dedicated to her.

succulents cashel house Kay travels around the world going to flower shows and collecting plants from the garden. And they’re all fertilized with a combination of seaweed and a few natural but secret ingredients. The best part? The seaweed leaves enough seaweed in the soil to keep the slugs and snails away. Maybe that’s how I can win the battle next year! Although I might need a few more visits to figure out the rest of the secret ingredients!

pink flower cashel house I should also mention that the food was delicious (I ordered venison!), the rooms were grand, and it was the best and quietest night’s sleep I’ve had in years. I went for a run early the next morning, with cows and sheep to my right and the sea to my left. It was beyond peaceful.

mary's garden cashel house 2

Cashel House Hotel, Cashel, Connemara, Co. Galway

Happy Friday!

October 18, 2013

leaf wall Happy Friday, friends! How was your week? Mine was wonderfully full and busy, and also a little exhausting. Today, when I woke up to pouring rain and driving wind, the adrenaline I’ve been running on for weeks just evaporated. The wind and rain haven’t stopped, and I feel a little like I’m moving through fog at the moment. Everything is taking just a little while longer to process!

This week, I had lots of meetings about upcoming projects, did a few interviews for my Marriage Snapshot series, and then hosted a lifestyle blogger meetup with almost thirty Dublin bloggers! The photo above is the photo backdrop (which I think we mostly forgot to use – too much chatting!) that Alex made for the night. Pressed leaves + stripy washi tape! So simple! I’ll be sharing more photos and details from the night next week. And next week will finally be the reveal of our bedroom makeover!

This weekend, Michael and I are going to an engagement party and a wedding afters (an Irish thing where you get invited just to the dancing part afterward, when you don’t know the couple that well), and I’m finally going to get to watch Michael play a little basketball! I’ve missed his first two games of this season, and I’ll miss the next two, so I’m excited to cheer him on this weekend.

Last night, I made pumpkin chocolate chunk cookies and fake mulled cider. I’ll share my recipes for that autumn combo next week! Until then, have a lovely autumn weekend!

 

Teen Room Design with Localise for Sophia Housing

October 16, 2013

Today I’m so excited to get to share a new project I’m working on. A week ago (very short time table we’re working with, obviously), I got a note from my friend Lily to say that the non-profit she works for was looking for someone to design a teen room in a housing association. After a whirlwind of conversations with that non-profit, Localise, I had managed to wrangle Alex (Hydrangea Girl, you know her well by now!) into helping with the project and we were measuring walls and meeting with the kids who are going to use the space!

localise before

There are a lot of players in this project, so let me give them all a bit of an intro. First, Localise. Localise is a non-profit based in Dublin that encourages young people to use their skills and talents in service to others. In this case, they’re also encouraging a not-so-young person to use her skills and talents to serve others! And I am hugely grateful for the opportunity.

Next, the place where we’re designing the teen room is in Sophia Housing Association on Cork Street. It’s a housing complex with fifty apartments for families, couples and single people who are “out of home”, or transitioning from being homeless. They have care workers there full time who help the tenants in a really holistic way to create better lives for themselves. The complex is safe and well-cared for and includes a creche for young kids, a coffee shop, and gardening and cooking groups.What they don’t have is a space for kids around 10-14 who live in the complex – one of the most vulnerable ages for kids in that neighborhood. Essentially, if those kids don’t have a place to hang out, they’re going start leaving the complex and walking a path that leads to trouble.

localise before 2

 

Localise has partnered with Notre Dame University’s study abroad program in Dublin in order to make this project happen. But here’s the hitch for me – Notre Dame is providing 20 of their study abroad students to help transform the room – on a day that I’ll be in Maine. Terrible timing! So that’s where Alex comes in to save the day! I asked Alex to team up with me for the project, and she’s going to be able to be there on the day to boss people around and give orders (just kidding…kind of) so that the room ends up exactly how we’ve envisioned it. Or at least very close!

Now, time to share a little of that vision!

Localise Youth Project - homework section

First, we met with some of the kids who will be using the space to get their opinions, requests and suggestions. Based on those suggestions (and they were fab), we came up with a floor plan to break the space into three areas – homework, lounging and playing. The space is small, but breaking it up will allow the kids to use it in different ways at the same time.

 

Localise Youth Project - TV section

Then Alex came up with these amazing plans and mood board type images. She is an absolute whiz when it comes to Photoshop and I need to bribe her into giving me some lessons!
Localise Youth Project - games section What we’re really hoping is that the space is comfortable, colorful, and inspirational. We’re also hoping that it’s a space where these kids can feel at home and really enjoy themselves and relax after school. And finally, we’re hoping this space provides the kids an alternative to going out into the streets and getting hurt or hurting others.

I’m so thrilled to be a part of it all. We’ll be sharing more info in the coming weeks – the the grand opening will be at the end of November, and I’ll have photos and even a time lapse video of the space coming together to share with you!

Can’t wait to share more soon!

{Thanks to Alex for the before photos, too!}

Three Websites for Fun Irish Info

October 15, 2013

Screen shot 2013-10-15 at 22.02.20 Friends, I keep coming across the most amazing and creative websites packed with info about Dublin and Ireland, so I wanted to share three with you today.

First, Bridges of Dublin. Anything and everything you could possibly want to know about the many (you’ll be surprised) bridges of Dublin. It’s the kind of website you can’t believe keeps leading you down more and more rabbit holes of information. History, design, trivia, this website seriously has it all covered. That bridge above? Apparently 80,000 people could be supported by the six back cables of the Samuel Beckett Bridge – the equivalent of a Croke Park full house. Isn’t that fascinating?

Next, Irish History in Six Minutes. Watch it. Then watch it again and try to catch all the hysterically witty cartoons flitting by. My only complaint is that YouTube doesn’t have a slow motion button! History has a way of slipping through the cracks in my brain, so this is a great primer on Irish history. (Thanks, Sue for the great find!)

Finally, Old Dublin Town. It’s more of a Twitter feed than a website, but it’s packed full of historic photos of Dublin that I find just fascinating. I love seeing what some of my favorite Dublin places looked like hundreds of years ago. And even if you’re not on Twitter, you can click here to open their images. How about this image of the man who controlled traffic on O’Connell Street before there were traffic lights in the 1960’s? Amazing!

Any wonderful websites for Irish info that you’d recommend?

 

Let’s Meet Bloggers Face to Face // Ketty from French Foodie in Dublin

October 14, 2013

ketty title Today I have another fun Irish blogger to introduce you to! In another episode of Let’s Meet Bloggers Face to Face, we get to meet Ketty, owner and inventor of the sweet blog French Foodie in Dublin. She’s downright adorable, so let’s all get to know her!

chez max

Chez Max is actually one of the places Ketty turns to if ever she needs a little dose of home. She moved to Dublin from France nine years ago, and now calls it home – with her fiance, Mr. French Foodie in Dublin as he’s called on her blog. Tres mysterious!

Ketty writes about her experiences dining and living in Dublin, and she has the most wonderful way of writing about restaurants and markets – always so positive, but not gushing, and very constructive. And somehow she manages to make iPhone photos of food look appetizing! I’ve started to take Ketty’s recommendations on her blog very seriously – sometimes I even reference her reviews to people when we’re choosing a place to eat in Dublin. Which means it’s safe to say I’m a total groupie.

chez max dublin But I’m certainly not Ketty’s only fan. She just won two awards at the Blog Awards Ireland over the weekend – for best personal blog and best newcomer blog!

I asked Ketty to choose one of her favorite spots in Dublin for us to meet, and she suggested Chez Max. I’ve walked by Chez Max at the entrance to Dublin Castle (there’s another location on Baggot Street as well) about a million times, but hadn’t registered it as a potential stop. Turns out, it’s wonderful and authentically French! Ketty wrote about it back in January of this year – you can check out her review right here.

ketty and emily We ordered apéritifs – a before-dinner drink. And did you know apéritif was spelled like that? I was definitely missing that first i in my pronunciation and my spelling! I chose a peach apéritif and Ketty went with raspberry. Mine was delicious, not too bubbly which was just perfect for me.

ketty oui Isn’t her engagement ring adorable? It says oui!

ketty drinks Ketty’s new venture gets totally interactive – French Food and Wine Tours of Dublin guided by Ketty herself! You get to see and try some of Dublin’s best French treats – macarons, wine and cheese, all in the course of a few hours! The best part? She actually carries a baguette to make sure you don’t lose her in the Dublin crowds! Hilarious!

So give Ketty a big welcome, check out her blog, or maybe book yourself onto one of her tours!

Thanks to the wonderful Julie Matkin of Half a Dream Away Photography for these photos!

Urban Chicken Update / Who’s Minding the Hen House?

October 11, 2013

urban chicken dublin

The last time I mentioned our new urban chickens, only one of them had started laying eggs. So I thought it was high time for an update on how they’re doing, and how we’re doing with them in our back yard.

Shortly after we finished naming the chickens (they’re Frittata, Florentine, Lorraine and Sou, in case you missed that episode), they all started laying eggs. The eggs started out small, but now they’re as large or larger than medium-size eggs you’d find at the store. And they’re always light brown, just like you’d find at the store. Nearly a month later, the novelty of going out every morning to collect four eggs still hasn’t worn off. It’s so fun!

But that was the easy part. The hard part, as it turns out, was getting them to stay in their run. Apparently, when chickens are young they’re not heavy enough to keep them from flying. For our lovely bunch of hens, that meant they could fly straight up and over the fence – the three foot fence and then the five foot fence which we extended because the three foot fence was obviously not working.

Unfortunately, the five foot chicken wire fence really didn’t do the trick either. In fact, just after we finished making it higher, we watched Sou fly straight up and over it and land right at our feet. Errrrr, thanks, Sou. Way to rub it in!

But we weren’t ready to surrender the garden and all of my flowers to our new flock. We spent a few hours watching YouTube videos on how to clip chicken wings before mustering up the courage to give it a try. We were swayed when we realized clipping chicken wings looked pretty simple, wouldn’t hurt them, and the feathers would grow back. I held each chicken while Michael snipped the ends of their flight feathers on one wing. Lo and behold, it finally did the trick. No more flying, no more eating my begonias.

Success on the flight front, but now we’re facing a yet another problem. What to do with the girls while we’re in the States for a week at the end of this month. They’re really low maintenance, but they do need to be let out each morning, the eggs collected each day, and shut in again at night – to keep them safe from urban foxes. I know, go figure.

If you know anyone who’s interested in chicken sitting (or house sitting, if that appeals) for a week at the end of the month, shoot me an email!

Lessons and Lads on a Galway Hooker in Connemara, Ireland

October 10, 2013

galway hooker grandpa, connemara, ireland Last weekend, I attended TBEX, the travel blogging conference for which I did this welcome video and this Dublin video. It was a whirlwind two days of meeting people, talking about Dublin, and listening to some inspiring speakers. One of those speakers was legendary Irish photographer John Minehan. He is a member of the oldest of schools of photography and it was wonderful to listen as he reminisced about film photography, slower and more thoughtful years gone by, and making relationships instead of just snapping photographs. One thing he said stayed with me, “These days, our souls are stolen constantly, and deleted at the click of a button.” He was encouraging us to engage, to experience, and not just to snap, snap, snap, sucking the souls from our subjects and moving on to the next victim.

Flash forward twenty-four hours later, I set out with twenty travel bloggers for a marathon tour of Connemara and Galway. And, at the risk of offending any of my trip mates (who were great company for the three days), there’s nothing that makes you want to take a photo less than being surrounded by twenty people taking photos. It’s hard to engage, it’s hard to experience, and it’s hard not to feel that by taking photographs, you’re doing nothing more than hoarding pictures and sucking the life out of a place. In fact, surrounded by twenty cameras, it’s really hard to feel anything or to show real reverence for a place. It’s hard not to feel that being a blogger is simply about consuming and collecting, not being truly present.

***

On Sunday morning, after a short run in the fogged in Cashel point where we were staying, we set out for what turned out to be my absolute favorite hour of the whole weekend. We were headed for a ride on a Galway Hooker, a traditional fishing boat used off the coast of Galway for hundreds of years. I think the whole of Connemara was socked in with fog, but the air was unseasonably warm and we were bundled and ready for the sea.

low tide connemara ireland The tide was out, so the first hurdle was climbing ten or fifteen feet down a slippery metal ladder into the boat. But once in the boat, with burgundy sails raised, we zipped across the bay so smoothly and quietly. And once we were under sail, all I wanted to do was soak it in. Not with my camera, but with all of the rest of me. I wanted my brain and my heart to really be there.

So I snapped a few photos, and then sat and soaked it all in. The sea, the wind, the fog, the Irish sailors, and the sheer history of the place hanging in the air.

under galway hooker, connemara, ireland I struck up a conversation with the older man in the blue hat in the first photo. I have a very soft spot in my heart for grandpas, and as it turns out this man was a grandpa to ten grandkids. He had lived in Dublin and in Cork, but he’d settled with his wife back in his hometown in the west of Ireland. He said sometimes he wrote articles for the local paper; he recently walked part of the Camino in Spain and he wrote a piece for the local paper about it. He hated it, hated the writing. He said he’d rather dig a hole than write. His wife sometimes helped him type things, but she had a hard time spelling in Irish, and in this tiny town in the gaeltacht, his articles would have to be in Irish. I suggested perhaps a student from the local school could type while he talked, but he thought that might be a tad embarrassing.

no lifejacket on a galway hooker, connemara ireland This man is the father of the woman who organizes the Galway hooker trips (who, by the way, I could have listened to speak in Irish all day long). She explained that her father doesn’t believe in life jackets. He was also wearing suede shoes, which I found wonderfully rebellious.

starboard side, galway hooker, connemara ireland My older friend explained that it’s hard to get a whole crew to sail a Galway hooker, because so many of the young men have left in search of jobs in Irish cities or abroad. We were sailing with six crew, we should really have had seven. Sailing a hooker takes strength, and the seas can get rough. He said the young lads still living in town took the motor out of the berth of the boat, so they could race her during the summer. One of the younger lads, my age at least, said they race every weekend, all summer long.

***

I did take photos, you can see that of course, but they’ll be reminders of the experience of that time I sailed on a Galway hooker, with the fog frizzing my hair and the sea salt on my hands. They’ll be triggers that spark a daydream of what living in rural western Ireland would be like, the routines and season changes, the storms rolling in or waking up to socked in fog. They’ll remind me of the muted colors of the sea and the sails, and the lilt of the crew spitting Irish back and forth at each other, sly smiles on their faces as they joke in a language so few people have the privilege of understanding.

I am a blogger, so I think by nature that means I love to share. One of my first reactions to most things is so and so would just love this! But sometimes you need a reminder to have an experience first, to fully feel and touch and ask questions, before you snap the photo and share the details. So, to John Minehan, thank you for that important reminder. And thank you to the lads on a Galway Hooker for allowing me the privilege of having a few Sunday morning chats. I hope to be back some day for more.

Best Lifestyle Blog Finalist / Blog Awards Ireland

October 8, 2013

Irish blog awards finalist Last week, I found out that From China Village has been named as a finalist in the Blog Awards Ireland! I was surprised (and thrilled!) to be nominated to begin with, so when the field was narrowed from about thirty down to five, I was shocked to still be on the list! It’s so exciting!

On Saturday, I’m heading to the awards ceremony with some of my favorite blogger friends, and I can’t wait to meet even more people I’ve only known on the internet! And if you were involved in the nominating of From China Village, thank you! It’s such a happy surprise to learn how much people are enjoying visiting here!

 

The Wild Atlantic West of Ireland

October 7, 2013

leenane I just returned from three days in Connemara and Galway with twenty travel bloggers from around the world. We had a wonderful trip enjoying the Wild Atlantic West, and gorgeous parts of the country I’ve never seen before.

Lots of photos to share, and lots of stories of incredible Irish people doing amazing, creative things. I can’t wait to share more. But for now, time to have a glass of wine with my husband, who held down the fort with the chickens and cat for the long weekend while I was away. Back tomorrow, friends! Happy Monday!

 

An Autumn Craft Class with Avoca Malahide

October 3, 2013

Avoca Craft Class

I have fun news to share today, friends! I’m going to be teaching an autumn craft class at Avoca Malahide in just two weeks! I’d love for you to join me for a night of crafting, treats, and chats! And we’ll get to do a little browsing and shopping while we have the store to ourselves!

We’ll be making our own stamps and stencils to create sweet autumn table runners and tea towels that you’ll get to bring home with you that night. It’s the perfect way to jazz up your home for autumn!

You can book your spot by ringing Avoca Malahide (01 893 1900), dropping into their store, or by sending me an email at emily@fromchinavillage.com. Spots are limited, so you’ll want to book soon!