Saturday, October 18, 2008

Serendipity in Dripsey


West Cork was beautiful--wild, remote, punctuated with high hedges and crumbling buildings. Castles destroyed by Oliver Cromwell? Or just Big Houses that had fallen into ruin? We had no idea. We had no context for what we saw; we just drove and stared.

I wanted to go to Mallow, because of the old song--"The Rakes of Mallow." But first we got lost, due almost entirely to my pathological need to go on smaller and smaller roads. We ended up driving along a narrow country lane, with no idea if we were going north or south, the road twisted so much between the fields. A woman walked briskly up the road, out for her afternoon constitutional, and I pulled over.

Is this the road to Mallow? I asked.

She squinted at me in the sunlight and said, Well, maybe it 'tis and maybe it 'tisn't. But it's a glorious day to be lost. And she gave us a broad smile and walked on.

It was indeed the road to Mallow, but once there we got caught in Friday evening congestion and idled in traffic for a long time. We both agreed to keep going, and headed south. We ended up, quite by chance, in Dripsey, a village about halfway between Macroom and Cork.



We found a B&B, dropped off our bags, and went back out to the pub, The Weigh Inn. There were two young girls there, an Irish girl with rosy cheeks and a red ribbon around her neck, and her English cousin, who was visiting. They were the same age, but the English girl looked more worldly. She wore earrings, and her smile, when I took her picture, was polite and restrained, while the Irish girl's smile was broad and happy.



They seemed almost like icons of their respective countries.


The Irish girl's brother was there, too, playing pool.


The next evening we had dinner with our landlady and her daughters. I asked them what they did for fun, and they told me that they danced. The girls had won trophies galore for their Irish dancing, as well as hundreds of small medallions for lesser contests. They brought us into the living room to show us the trophy cabinet devoted to their winnings.


One of them bent down and hauled out two big plastic grocery sacks from inside the cabinet; both bags were filled almost to bursting with more medallions. Clearly, these girls could dance.

And then, with that flash of serendipity that happens only when you travel and are very lucky, they told us that they would be dancing that very night at the community center outside of town. Lila and I looked at each other. This was too good to be true.

Sure, they said, you can come.

The landlady gave us directions, and they told us to show up late--after 9. The girls dressed early and left, and around 9 Lila and I drove off into the hills. I had imagined some wee stone cottage, perhaps, but the community center was a low-slung metal building with a corrugated roof. It was fairly new, and big.

Dozens of cars were parked in front, and when the door opened a blast of music shrieked out. American country-western music. The band, fronted by a white-haired drummer who looked unusually like Archie Bunker, was singing, "North to Alaska."

Hmmm. This was not at all what I had expected.

They played until 10, and then the dancing began. The band, to our great happiness, switched to traditional Irish music, and the big knots of women--who had been gossiping like mad, and drinking--got up. And they danced.


And they danced, and danced, and danced.


We stayed to the very end and then swept out with the laughing, chattering locals into the starry April night. The windshield was frosty, the car seat was cold, and once we got going on those steep dark curvy roads the headlights blinked out. We were able to gerryrig something--I had to hold the lightswitch on with one hand, and drive with the other, which meant it was impossible to also shift gears. But we were in no hurry to get back. No hurry at all. I got the car in second gear and we coasted slowly down the steep dark roads, our headlights blinking on and blinking off.

We were filled with music and drink and dance and the happy luck that had us at a country dance in the hills of west Cork instead of shopping for sweaters in Killarney.

We had one more day in Ireland before we flew home. I slowed the car a little more. We were in no hurry, no hurry at all.

20 Leave a message!:

Mike Golch said...

man that sounds like you had a grand time.

Rudee said...

You have the best rocking chair memories. It sounds like Lila warmed to the small town charm after all.

Irene said...

We seek out quaintness and look for it in the old country and are glad when the local populace provides it for us. You will probably not find such a thing in Holland, we don't have any of that quaintness left. I wouldn't know where to go looking for it, except with carnival. I don't think we dance to the fiddle and the accordion anymore. Such a shame.

Babaloo said...

I just cannot believe that you spent time in Dripsey and went to the Weigh Inn! It's less than 10 minutes from our house! I turn off at the Weigh Inn whenever I come or go from or to Cork.

It seems like you had a perfect time here!

laurie said...

irene, i am a lucky traveler. remember in donegal doug and i happened upon the fiddle contest in the small town of glencolumbcille.

babaloo, i know! too bad we weren't in dripsey for the st. patrick's day parade.

does the Weigh Inn look the same? what about the community center? i had no pictures of the exterior and wrote that based entirely on memories of 18-year-old memories. so tell me if i got that wrong.

Indigo Bunting said...

Lovely, as usual...

Dumdad said...

Great stuff, Laurie, as perusual.

I love the photos especially the boy with the cue. I clicked on it to enlarge it and behind the boy the two faces at the bar are fascinating. There's a story always lurking somewhere if you can just see it.

laurie said...

dumdad, yes! the ruddy-faced man in the sweater, and the schoolmarmish publican. i agree completely.

Babaloo said...

The Weigh Inn looks still the same, Laurie, they didn't even change the colour outside. I'm not sure about the community centre, don't even know where it is! Was it far from the pub? What direction?

laurie said...

oh, boy, babaloo. my memory is good but not that good. remember, this was 18 years ago.

your mission is to go to dripsey and find the community center. i bet they know at the pub where it is.

-Ann said...

I wonder if the community centre is the place in Coachford where the GAA club is.

Funny enough, I drove through Dripsey today and had a giggle at the Weigh Inn. Funny name. And as Babloo confirmed for you, it looks exactly the same!

Babaloo said...

Ann, Felix & I were thinking exactly the same - the community centre could be in Coachford. Because I can't think of anything in Dripsey matching Laurie's description. The closest then would be Coachford.

laurie said...

well, i guess that could be, except...

a) i remember it being all by itself out in the country, not in any town, and

b) if i were on the dripsey-coachford road, wouldn't i get ambushed by the IRA? oh, i guess that was years ago that that happened.... but it was on that very road.

Kaycie said...

What strikes me most besides the loveliness of that experience, is all of the rosy cheeks in those pictures. You just don't see cheeks like that around here. Too much native blood, I'd guess. It makes us all sallow looking instead of ruddy.

laurie said...

kaycie, if i had to guess i'd say the dark-haired man's rosiness comes from Guinness, and the dancer's ruddiness comes from rosacea. just a guess.

Wisewebwoman said...

OMG Laurie, many was the Sunday aft spent in the Weigh Inn. Do they still have the turf fire I wonder? Probably all modded now.
Don't tell me you missed REAL West Cork, Schull, Bantry, Baltimore, Skibbereen? I order you back. At once.
PS Looking at those dancing girls, I wonder what became of them? What are their life stories?
And yes the people behind the boy....
XO
WWW

DogLover said...

I hope I won't offend babaloo - or anyone else - when I say I can't stand Irish dancing. The footwork in those clodhopper shoes is marvellous, I grant, but why don't they use their arms?

I saw young Irish girls and young Scottish girls dancing their respective dances at the Edinburgh Military Tattoo once and, though the girls were all charming, the contrast was amazing. The Irish girls looked like automatons, while the Scots were graceful, athletic and heart-warming.

Or does my Scottish ancestry make me prejudiced?

laurie said...

WWW, there was a turf fire when i was there, but this was 18 years ago. and i am very happy to go back. immediately!

doglover, they weren't doing stepdancing. this was set dancing. no clodhopper shoes. and as you can see in the pictures, they were definitely using their arms.

-Ann said...

There was an IRA ambush on the Dripsey-Coachford road? I don't know about that one. I know about the one near Kilmichael.

The GAA club and community centre in Coachford is not on the main street of the town, it's maybe 2-minutes away. So, depending on your got there, if you didn't drive through Coachford, you might have thought you were out in the middle of nowhere.

Anonymous said...

The comunity centre is in ballyanly inniscarra bout 3 miles up da hill left of da pub. I live in dripsey all my life and find nothin grate bout da place maybe dare is history but its a dump and dat pub is a shit hole haha.