Friday, December 05, 2008

Maritime Conference Takes Place In County Clare

Academics and maritime experts from throughout Ireland have gathered in Ennis, County Clare, to attend a weekend conference on Traditional Boats and Currachs.

“Boats, Place, People” will feature presentations from nationally renowned maritime experts, including writer and broadcaster Críostóir Mac Cárthaigh, TG4 presenter Pádraig Ó Duinnín and Richard Collins of the internationally celebrated West Clare Currach Club. The event which is organised by the Clare Heritage Section of Clare County Council, in association with the Heritage Council, will commence with a presentation on the findings of the country’s inaugural Traditional Currachs and Boats study.

The completion of the study arrives during a period witnessing an ever increasing interest in the traditional currachs and boats of County Clare and across the country. The study was undertaken in 2008 by Darina Tully, an expert in the areas of maritime collections, under the direction of the Clare Heritage Section and the Heritage Council.

The pioneering project involved an audit and inventory of traditional boats and currachs in County Clare, and the establishment of a priority list for their future conservation. The study also examined the local variations in traditional boat and currach building, associated customs, and usage and typology.

According to Tomás Mac Conmara, Project Manager, Clare Traditional Boats and Currachs Study: “Together with a tangible renewal of interest across county Clare, the publication of the Clare Traditional Boats and Currachs Study will help explain, in a county Clare context, the distribution, diversity and structural intricacies of Clare's boats and currachs, as well as contextualising their profound role in Clare's history and culture".

Mac Conmara continued: “The study placed an emphasis on the artefact, its greatest achievement will be to reveal the human dimensions of currachs and boats. The boat remains a conduit for understanding far reaching cultural meanings, customs and traditions. Their preservation should be associated with the safeguarding of the communities that used them. It is hoped that this study will contribute in some way to the renewed interest in our enduring maritime tradition".

Conference Itinerary:
• Darina Tully will reveal the findings of the Traditional Boats and Currach Study. Darina has been researching and collecting data on traditional Boats in Ireland over the last two decades. Her work is a known quantity to the Heritage Council, having completed Heritage Council projects such as “Audit of Maritime Collections” (2005/2006) along with contributions to “The Future of Maritime and Inland Waterways Collections” (2006).
• Ted Creedon, Member of the Heritage Council and currently Chairman of the Heritage Council's Standing Committee on Archaeology, will officially launch the study. He is a journalist, broadcaster and photographer by profession with special interest in marine matters.
• TG4 presenter Pádraig Ó Duinnín and founder Ireland’s foremost maritime cultural and education centre ‘Meitheal Mara’, will provide a presentation entitled “Muintir Na Mara – The people of the sea”.
• Writer and broadcaster Críostóir Mac Cárthaigh will present “Traditional Boats Of Ireland – the Clare dimension”. Mac Cárthaigh is the editor of Traditional Boats of Ireland and is an Archivist-Collector in the UCD Delargy Centre for Irish Folklore and the National Folklore Collection.
• Risteárd Ó Cróinin, Architectural Conservation Officer with Clare County Council and Flan Gibson will present “Clare Maritime Placenames – Placing names from a boat”. Flan Gibson is a native of Moneen, Kilbaha, County Clare. Flan has been scuba diving and fishing since the late 1970s and has developed a life long interest in the different dimensions to the coast of West Clare.
• Founding member of the West Clare Currach Club, Richard Collins will speak about how the club has successfully revived an interest in currachs in Kilkee and the broader county. In his earlier years, he worked as a fisherman out of Carrigaholt and Kilbaha He initiated a Leader-funded building project to train local people to build currachs.
• Mick Carrig will present “Forth they go to rescue or to die” – The Rescue of the Leon XIII in 1907. The Principal of Quilty National School was a member of the LEON committee who organised the 100th anniversary of the historic rescue of the LEON XIII in 1907. The Kerry native and other members of the LEON Committee are currently researching the LEON rescue.

Meanwhile, the winners of the “Clare Maritime Photo Competition” will be announced at the conclusion of tomorrow's conference. The competition was organised to stimulate an increased interest in Currachs and traditional boats in the secondary schools of county Clare. Entrants were asked to submit an image that represents the maritime heritage of their local area. The winning entry will receive a Currach Building Course worth €2000. An expert boat builder will visit the winning school over five weeks and build a currach on site. The winning school will get the chance to participate in the intricate process of producing a water craft that has been for centuries an iconic symbol of Celtic Ireland. The currach will subsequently be launched at the most convenient water source to the school.

The Clare Traditional Boats and Currachs Conference will be held in Cois na hAbhna, Gort Rd., Ennis, County Clare, tomorrow (Saturday, 6 December 2008). The event is open to the public and admittance is free of charge.

A summary booklet relating to the Traditional Currachs and Boats Study can be obtained from Clare County Council at 065 6846456 or heritage@clarecoco.ie.