Ah well then, on to Blarney Castle

Lila had been very patient. She had swapped Dublin for Doolin, Waterford for Dingle, sweater shopping in Killarney for folk-dancing in Dripsey. She had not complained.
She had not rolled her eyes too much when I went for my walks across the fields of sheep, and sometimes she even accompanied me.
(This was the day we hiked to the Cliffs of Moher.)
But she was not to be denied Blarney Castle. She wanted to kiss the Blarney Stone. I tried not to roll my eyes. I tried not to feel all superior-like, and sarcastic. I did not say, Tourist trap!, though I thought it.
Foolish me. I did not stop to think there was a reason why Blarney Castle attracted tourists, and why it was there at all. It's not like it had just been built 50 years before to lure Americans. It had a history that dated back a thousand years. But in those days I was too smart for my own good.
We aimed our tiny car west again, and Blarney.
It was a gorgeous day. Our trip had started at the very end of March, with rain and rain and rain and rain. But now it was crisp and sunny, and the rhododendrons were blooming with their big deep pink blossoms along the side of the road.
For a "tourist trap," Blarney was very quiet. We saw almost no one else as we walked the grounds. And then we climbed the stone steps to the top, where the Blarney Stone lived.
There has been a castle on this spot since the tenth century, though the stone building there now was built in 1440. It belonged to Cormac McCarthy---not the American writer, but the King of Munster, who helped Robert the Bruce during the legendary battle of Bannuckburn.
The famous Blarney Stone, which Lila was determined to kiss and I was equally determined not to, was a gift from Robert the Bruce to Cormac McCarthy. It had been hewn from the Stone of Destiny, which apparently dates back to Biblical times and was used as a pillow by Jacob.
Neither Lila nor I had realized that kissing it was a feat of daring and athleticism.
The stone is built into the battlements, and it is not just lying there in full view for you to walk up to and embrace. No, no, you must lie on your back, grip the iron handles that have been installed there for this purpose, and then shimmy your horizontal body out over an open space three storeys above the famous Blarney flower gardens, stretching your neck and shoulders as far out and as far down as you can, until you are more or less upside down and you can reach the stone with your mouth.
And then, without worrying about germs or who had kissed it before you, you kiss it. And then you shimmy back. Here's a google picture to help you understand:
Lila and I walked up three flights of worn stone steps and came out onto the top of the castle. A man was sitting on a chair, reading the Irish Examiner and drinking a cup of coffee. He was wearing a cap, and he had a lined and weathered face. There was no one else around. When he saw us, he politely folded up his paper.
He showed us what we needed to do, and Lila lay down on her back. The man told me to hold her ankles, and I gripped them tightly, while he held her around the waist. She shimmied. She kissed. And then we pulled her back.
Your turn, Miss, he said, nodding at me.
Did I kiss the Blarney Stone? What do you think? (Poll below.)
Afterward, we wandered around the gardens, which were very green but just beginning to bud out. There's a lot of magic in the grounds surrounding the castle--wishing steps, and an old sacrificial altar that was allegedly used during the time of the druids.
Lila had strong objections to taking this picture. She thought it would bring the wrath of the ancient gods down on my head. But it's been 18 years, and so far, so good.
UPDATE: Ack! Blogpoll ate my poll. ah well.....


















17 comments:
I am enjoying this trip with you.
Course you didn't kiss it. You were 'far too smart for your own good in those day'
But I could be wrong:-)
Wow, you did see a lot during that trip! And you've been so close to where we live. Only that we didn't live here yet at the time. :)
I think you did kiss it. What's the harm?! And you never know, it might have worked. Or maybe you've always had the gift of the gab and didn't need to kiss it...
My lovely mother-in-law, at the age of 67, laughed when her friend Rosalind suggested she kiss the Blarney Stone, thinking it the most ludicrous thing ever suggested to her.
I have no desire to kiss the Blarney Stone, but I would love to visit Blarney Castle. It looks beautiful.
Laurie:
I lived quite near there growing up and would regularly bike over to gawp at the crazy tourists. (We took so much for granted about old castles and stuff!)
XO
WWW
I think that in a what-the-hell-I'm-here moment, you kissed it.
I once went to the visitor center at Lough Ness, knowing it would be a tourist trap. It was, but you know what? It was educational and interesting and rather unbiased, and it far exceeded my expectations. I'd recommend it to anyone!
Wow - great photos. Thakns for taking me along since I can't seem to ever get there myself!
and I tagged you on my blog - come see!
Of course you kissed it. I mean, it's not like you could just go back a couple weeks later when you suddenly regretted not kissing it!
I've heard rumors that locals pee on the Blarney stone. I'm hoping that's just an urban legend.
byf, seems pretty hard to do that, given where it is.... here's what snopes.com says on the subject:
As far as the rumors go about Irish Americans urinating on the stone, Donald Swan, who visited the castle with his wife, Mary Fran, said that's hard to believe because castle employees are always on guard in the area.
"I don't know how they're going to urinate on the Blarney Stone, there's somebody right there with you and it's on the outside of this buttress that's up there," Abrahms added. "I would say the equivalent of maybe four stories up, so unless you got, obviously we're talking about males, really good aim I would think the urine's going to go in the air more than anything else."
Rumor has it, of course, that locals get around the guard problem by breaking in at night to urinate on the stone.
- snopes
Of course you kissed it. How else would you have had the nerve (and the gift of the blarney) to tell us all that detail? Great story-telling; keep it going, Laurie!
I don't know if you could have turned down the challenge. I think you kissed it. And I agree with everyone else about your gift for gab.
If the poll had still been working, I would have voted that you kissed the Blarney Stone in order not to offend the nice Irishman who was there to assist with the kissing.
We didn't make Blarney when we were in Eire...can ya believe that?!
We did have an 'excellent' bus ride from Cork to Killarney where this really cute Irishman sitting next to me fell asleep with his head falling down onto my shoulder. (much to the dismay of hubby sitting across and up a few rows!) haha!
Thanks for the great pics and story, I'll be back for some more readin', but family duties call!
I've kissed the Blarney Stone. They sprayed it with a Lysol-like aerosol between kisses. It was still gross to think about. And I obviously got totally scammed out of the gift of eloquence.
They had palm trees on the grounds, which I thought was bizarre. And there were giant slugs. It seemed more California than Ireland. And the exit sign said, "Way Out," which was hilarious.
ah, yes, the way out. i remember those signs fondly.
we saw lots of palm trees in cobh, in the very southern most part of county cork. strange to see such tropical trees there.
Laurie, reading about your adventures on the Emerald Isle makes me long for a trip there - RIGHT NOW. I'm really really hoping that I can go visit soon with Beans, my true blue (green?) Irish guide!
Oh good lord, the blasted Blarney Stone. My family visited Ireland when I was a kid, and I believe Chevy Chase was there with us in spirit, every single step of the way. My mother's dearest wish was to find her relatives in the church records (which didn't happen) and to kiss the Blarney Stone. This was in 1977 and it looks like nothing has changed. We too hiked up the slippery steps of the ruins only to find we had to do arial backbends. It was raining, everything was vaguely muddy, and the man assisting our stunt-kissing was at least 97 and feeble. My mother, dressed in white from head to toe, refused to participate, annoyed. The rest of us, dressed more sensibly in wooly warm things, were good sports and rolled around on the ancient rocks, risking our lives to make out with an old building. On the way back down, my mother the non-kisser, fell down the steps and sprained her ankle. The staff was somewhat sympathetic, but asked if she had kissed the stone and when she snarled "No!" they shook their heads and shrugged. I assume the believed the fairies pushed her.
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