Tuesday 29 April 2014

Headford News and Community Spotlight-The Birth of Love Headford




Have you been wanting to go to college (or back to college) but you feel you don’t have the conventional educational requirements? If you are 22 years of age or older, you might get a chance to go to college for free through the Access Course for mature students. It’s a one-year course offered at NUIG and St. Angela’s College, Sligo. The course runs September 2014 through May 2015 and is offered in several different locations. After this course, participants will be eligible for direct admission to an undergraduate programme.

If you’d like more information, attend one of the sessions on May 7, 8 or 13. For further information, or to download an application form, visit: http://www.nuigalway.ie/access/register.html  You can also ring 091.493553.



COMMUNITY SPOTLIGHT 
When Leonardo da Vinci was a boy, he made sketches of creatures in nature. As a youngster, Monet drew charcoal caricatures. Even before Picasso could form full sentences, he was painting pictures of pigeons that flocked in the square near his home.

And when Sadie Cramer was a toddler, she used to draw fairies and mermaids on the underside of the dining table. 
Local artist, Sadie Cramer

In case you don’t already know, Sadie Cramer is the local artist who designed our ‘Love Headford’ mural. Sadie says, when she was growing up, ‘We didn’t have a lot of paper,’ so she drew wherever she could. ‘I’d pull back the carpet and draw under it.’ Or she might draw on walls, newspapers, or in books. And because she was ‘crafty’ (pun intended) about where she drew her pictures, she didn’t usually get in trouble. Her artwork wasn’t found until years later, when the table was moved or the carpet changed.

Eventually, Sadie went to art school at the University of Ulster at Belfast, where she had access to a lot more art supplies. There, she fell in love with an artistic Irishman and they travelled around Europe and Africa together.

All that diversity informs Sadie’s artwork. From whimsical illustrations for kid’s books to her colourful contribution to the Galway Hooker Exhibition at the Galway Museum, Sadie’s work is vibrant, joyous . . . rather like Sadie herself.


In her giant studio at home, her own children come and go, using art supplies as they please. She encourages them to create whatever they like (and clean up afterwards!). In spite of the lack of artistic resources when she was a child, or maybe because of it, Sadie has become an accomplished professional artist, inspiring children by offering workshops in primary schools so they can draw, paint and create. ‘I help promote creativity in schools to compliment the curriculum,’ because she feels strongly that ‘art should be a part of learning.'
Last year, Sadie was contacted because the Men’s Shed wanted to make a mural. Another artist had declined the job but Sadie was delighted to participate. There were about a half dozen meetings with Men’s Shed members and Sadie brainstorming ideas for the mural.

‘Some of the men weren’t actually from Headford,’ Sadie says, ‘and the real challenge was overcoming that whole “Headford/Deadford” negative image.’ She asked the group, ‘If you've chosen to stay here—and you have if you haven’t moved away—what do you like about the area?’ Then, she says, she and the group began to choose images that were unique to the townland. Ultimately, the nine images they created are quite fitting:
The Mayfly represents the transitory nature of youth and the local schools.
The fisherman on the lake and the single leaping fish are for Lough Corrib. 
The Book and Candle are a reference to religious study and also to writers, as there are many in the area. An elderly woman told Sadie this was the one image she really liked and could remember from the mural because it reminded her of Christmas. ‘So, really,’ Sadie says, ‘the images mean different things to different people. And that’s perfect.’
The panel with the sporting shirt originally represented all sports, but during the restoration it was necessary to keep the image simple, focusing on the Headford Soccer Club.
The Theatre Masques are for the two dramatist societies and the musical society. Though not particularly active now, they used to play a large part in Headford lives.
The next panel depicts Ross Errilly, cows and a tractor to symbolise the history, as well as the rural aspects of the area.
The contained fire is for the celebratory fires at the side of the road, a practise unique to our area.
The musical notes on the centre panel are for the many musicians in the Headford area.

Bright colours were chosen because they were fun to work with and would enliven people’s spirits. And, the background for the mural--maroon--is the Galway colour.

Originally, Sadie painted a giant bird on the same wall, with the words Watch This Space because ‘we wanted it to be a surprise,’ she says. So she began painting that bird at two in the morning. While she was painting, a woman parked there and turned on her car’s headlamps to help. Later on, workers from the Rural Social Scheme painted the maroon background. The final mural began with computer graphic images created by Sadie. She then drew those images on boards which the Men's Shed members had primed, and the men painted in those images. Finally, the fininshed boards were hung at midnight before the opening of Headfest and unveiled the following day.

The whole project took three months from start to finish, and, as Sadie puts it, ‘I couldn’t have come up with any of this on my own. None of us could. It was a real community effort. We all came together.’

Thanks for showing the Love, Headford!

Tuesday 22 April 2014

Headford News and Community Spotlight


Headford News and Community Spotlight is taking the week off for spring break to update our website. Come visit us next Tuesday for all the local news and stories. In the meantime, Happy Springtime!


Tuesday 15 April 2014

Headford News and Community Spotlight - Communism in Headford

Ecologist, Janice Fuller, will be speaking about 'Managing Our Hedgerows' at Anglers Rest on Wednesday, 16 April 2014 at 8 pm. Admission is free, so come along and learn what you can do to help improve Headford's bio-diversity. If you'd like to know more about what Janet does, check out this article about her from the Irish Times: http://www.irishtimes.com/news/environment/the-ecologist-who-gets-locals-to-say-yes-to-biodiversity-1.1588639 

Green Sod Land Trust wants to remind us that Tuesday, April 22nd is Earth Day. They are having 'Wild Awake' Walks. These are guided walks over the Easter Bank Holiday weekend to celebrate biodiversity. They include guided walks through castle grounds, along rivers, sea shores, mountains and cityscapes--everywhere nature can be celebrated. The walks take place April 19th through the 22nd and you can register and donate here:  http://contact.greensodireland.ie/fundraising 
and read full programme details here: http://www.greensodireland.ie/wildawake-walk-where-you-are.php?--=5

Green Sod's purpose is to save this land for present and future generations. In holding land in trust, we acknowledge and respect it for its own sake, thus protecting its indigenous life from destruction.


COMMUNITY SPOTLIGHT 
Communism-The People's garden party-is alive and well in Headford.

Now, before you get nervous, ask yourself, Do I know what Communism really is? For those who aren’t one hundred percent sure, Communism is a system structured upon common ownership of a means of production.

So, what, you may ask, is our communist means of production in Headford? Why, the Headford Community Garden, of course.
Thanks to Louise Morrow and Kathleen McMahon, you can get a big, fat dose of communal horticultural therapy right here in Headford for just 10 a year. That 10 investment (which goes to cover public liability insurance), can help you grow your own dinner, make friends, swap harvests with other gardeners, store your personal gardening equipment in a locked shed, or just sit on a bench and listen to the wind chime while you watch others pull weeds. Even if you’re not a vegetarian, that 10, and a little elbow grease, can go a long way to putting food (and flowers) on your family’s table.

One year ago this week, this Community Garden was born when Kathleen and Louise were inspired by the Headford Environmental Group Bio-Diversity Scheme.

‘We found out that community land was available,’ Louise says.

‘And the Kilmaine Community Garden helped us organise,’ Kathleen adds.

The Headford group meets Mondays at 10:30 am, Thursdays at 7:00 pm and Saturdays at 11:00 am, but the garden is open all the time and gardeners are welcome. You can contribute to the larger space or have a personal space. Everyone pitches in and all supplies, from boards to build the raised beds to bags of soil and bulbs, to seeds and seedlings are donated by members. Even the fence was put up, ‘out of community spirit,’ the ladies tell me.

Both Kathleen, who says she’s grown roots in Headford literally, as well as figuratively, and Louise, who’s been an avid gardener for over ten years, have big goals in mind. ‘We want to provide a space that the entire community can enjoy,’ Louise says, ‘so new members are welcome.’
‘There are a lot of wonderful, interesting people involved in this,’ Kathleen says, ‘a great social aspect.’ It’s clear, there’s loads of help and inspiration available here. The ladies even want to involve schools so that kids can learn where food actually comes from.

‘We’ll be having get-togethers for holidays,’ Kathleen tells me. Those will include the upcoming Easter egg hunt at 2:00 pm on the 19th of April, as well as a Summer Solstice gathering, a market stall at Headfest, and a Harvest Festival.
The crops grown at the Headford Community Garden include strawberries, leeks, parsnips, French beans, runner beans, peas, pumpkins, lettuces, beetroot, kale, cabbage and brussel sprouts. In addition, there will be three double-height raised beds, including one to attract butterflies and bees, and a sensory garden with herbs for scent and touch.

When I ask if the garden is organic, the ladies tell me that they encourage people to leave their chemicals at home, but the garden itself is not 100% organic. For instance, corn seeds are always genetically modified.

And if the cheap food and social aspect of a community garden aren’t enough for you, then consider this: According to the Daily Mail, ‘Gardening is Healthy!’ That’s right. Researchers have now proven that pulling up weeds, planting seeds or seedlings, smelling roses, and pretty much any gardening activity can lower blood pressure, increase brain activity and produce a general optimistic feeling.
During World Wars I and II, victory gardens were a part of daily life on the home front. Why? Because they were considered a civil ‘morale booster.’ Gardeners felt empowered by their contribution of labour and rewarded by the produce grown.

Anyone who’s plunged their hands in the dirt to plant a tiny pansy from Tesco, or yanked out weeds ‘til their back ached, knows the joy of helping to coax life from the earth. Now there's proof. The Daily Mail article mentioned above cites a study reported in the Journal of Environment Psychology. Researchers took 112 stressed-out adults and split them into two groups. The first group sat in a room with a view of trees and then strolled through a garden. The second group sat in a windowless room and then walked in an urban environment. The group that relaxed in the garden showed decreases in blood pressure and a positive change in feelings. Researcher. Dr. Terry Hartig, from the University of California in Irvine, said: ‘Some of the changes could be measured within minutes.’

When I ask if people wanting to participate in the Headford Community Garden need to have experience or plant knowledge, Louise gives a negative shake of the head and flashes her perpetual smile. Kathleen answers with the quiet calm of a Buddhist monk who’s spent a lifetime raking sand. ‘You don’t need to be a gardener,’ she says. ‘New members, new participants, are always welcome.’

The garden is located next to the Headford Mart. After you turn left into the Mart, take the road that forks to the right and follow it until you see the raised beds and polytunnel. If you’re interested in joining the Headford Community Garden or finding out more, contact Louise at: 086.0849863.

And if you feel like you need a few gardening tips so you can use a space allotment efficiently, here’s a short programme to help you get started: