Last weekend, volunteers from the Tuatha finished off phase 1 of a giant 'fairy ring' in the centre of the sacred Oak Grove within Terryland Forest Park.
Weaving olden dances
Mingling hands and mingling glances
Till the moon has taken flight..."
My Writings (I hope!) reflect my Guiding Principles: -'Enjoy Life to the Utmost but not at other people's expense'-'Think Global, Act Local'-'Variety is the Spice of Life'-'Use Technology & Wisdom to Make the World A Better Place for All God's Creatures'-'Do Not Accept Injustice No Matter Where You Find It'-'Laughter is the Best Medicine'
I was honoured to be one of the presenters at the recent 'Giob Geab'/Chit Chat evening hosted in the Mick Lally Theatre.
A mother (Caitriona) and daughter, a father (Kevin) and son- two families united by a common cause of rewilding Galway city.
I was glad to recently join the students of the highly active Botany Society of the University of Galway who, under the chairpersonship of the dynamic Katie Hennessy, undertook in association with the University Buildings and Grounds section a large scale planting of trees in woods along the banks of the Corrib River.
Sadly, as was the case nationwide, many large mature trees on the campus were victims of Storm Éowyn and the tree planting was to replace some of those that had fallen.
But sometimes, from something bad comes something good.
The Buildings and Ground staff kindly donated to the Tuatha two large cross sections of tree trunks, one of which will be put on permanent display on the exterior of An Nead HQ to be used as a learning aid for school children and others visiting the park. The accompanying plaque will tell the story of Storm Éowyn and the Climate Crisis but also the counting of rings will reveal the age of the tree when it was alive. So the fallen tree will have a new lease of life as part of our Outdoor Classroom.
Photo shows Seanín and Katie from the University of Galway's Botany Society holding one of the donated tree cross sections.
Finally a reminder to join us next Saturday's (March 29th) for a Community Tree Plantathon to celebrate 25 years since the first planting took place in Terryland Forest Park.
Register at https://www.eventbrite.ie/e/1284820375329?aff=oddtdtcreator
Thanks to the generosity of so many people, my son Dáire and his three friends-Conor Breathnach, Ruadhán Durkin and Seán MacUidhlinn- raised €2500 in their BARCELONA MARATHON run on Sunday last for the worthy cause of UNICEF Ireland’s GAZA Crisis Appeal.
Today this area represents the start (western boundary) of the Terryland Forest Park Galway whose defenders and guardians are the Tuatha and the council parks staff.
This morning the Tuatha gave due recognition and respect to Lá Fhéile Bríde as the first day in the Celtic calendar of Spring, the season of rebirth.
In the photo, our volunteers hold saplings grown from the seeds of trees planted in the park 25 to 20 years ago by the people of Galway. These saplings, from our new in-park nursery, will be planted next month to replace trees that fell during last week's devastating Storm Éolwyn.
It is so beautiful to know that offspring of some of these trees will replace their fallen parents and help the diverse life of the forest continue on into the next 25 years.
Devastating news! 😢😢😢. Tuatha volunteer John Sinnott and myself are just back from reviewing the damage caused to the Terryland Forest Park by Storm Éowyn. Lots of trees damaged and uprooted as a result.
Worse news of all is what happened overnight in the ‘Oak Grove’ planted on March 12th 2000 to serve as the symbolic centrepiece of Ireland’s first and largest urban native community woodland. Last month volunteers joyously started to lay the foundations of a mystical and scientific giant Fairy Ring in a circle around this oak tree to serve as an eclectic forest Outdoor Classroom (photo) that was agreed with Galway City Council to be the location for the official 25th birthday celebrations of Terryland Forest Park.
We expected this tree to last many hundreds of years serving humanity and biodiversity throughout its long life.
Sadly early this morning, it was a victim of the storm of the century (photo).
I am heartbroken 😢
But now we as members of the forest park volunteer group have to be brave and assess what can be done.
Maybe we can use some of the wood of the most famous tree in the park to not only to be a home for biodiversity as 'deadwood', but also to make a series of wooden sculptures to be placed along a new heritage trail? We will be contacting the parks management of Galway City Council to review the situation and come up with a plan.
But sadly we know that in the years ahead such storms are going to be become more frequent as a result of the unstable weather caused by the mam-made global Climate Crisis.
We as volunteers, cognizant of health and safety procedures, will tomorrow be picking up litter blown into the park by the storm and clearing paths of fallen branches.
This morning/afternoon, my brilliant friend Luke Porwol (right of photo) gave a training session to his colleagues who have volunteered to mentor workshops on Virtual Reality (VR) to schools visiting our Insight Research Ireland Centre for Data Analytics at the University of Galway as part of theGalway Science and Technology Festival.