Wednesday 10 September 2014

Headford News and Community Spotlight-Progressing Backward



Alpha – a series of interactive sessions that explore and debate the Christian faith – are now in progress at St. Fursa’s Parish Hall in Headford. They take place every Tuesday night at 8 pm and are open to anyone of any age and with any belief, or no belief at all. The talks are free, include a tea break and discussions.


COMMUNITY SPOTLIGHT 


Up until about a century ago, children went to school outdoors. Under the sky, inside a cave, behind a hedgerow, they learned the lessons nature teaches all young creatures—resourcefulness, insight, respect. Lessons more crucial, and arguably more valuable than turning on a tablet or playing wii tennis.

In our never-ending quest to survive and remain a strong species, we humans have brought our young indoors to protect them. But, to keep a child cloistered in an overheated classroom robs them of a connection to the natural world and restricts the development of empathy for the earth and their fellow creatures. 

‘Children cannot bounce off the walls if we take away the walls.’
Erin Kenny, founder of the Ancient Forest Education Foundation.

Across the globe, in places like the Arctic Circle in Murmansk, Norway; in the forests outside Berlin, Germany; and in the rain forests of Seattle, Washington; people have developed outdoor learning centres for young children, in an effort to regain the educational benefits of the natural world. The Glen Preschool in Letterkenny, was the first and only such school in Ireland. Until recently.

‘There’s no classroom as good as nature—the canvas is always changing,’ says Avril Grufferty, owner of the recently-opened Outdoor Explorers Preschool in Glencorrib. 
Avril Grufferty, founder Outdoor Explorers Preschool
A few years ago, when Avril and her husband were on holiday in Donegal, she discovered the Glen Preschool, and got some valuable tips and suggestions from its proprietor, Sally. Previously an NCO with the Irish Defence Force, Avril had developed a love of the outdoors, as well as a keen interest in childcare. Upon becoming a Montessori graduate, she worked in a traditional preschool setting and has found that children seem far happier when they are outdoors.
In addition to a stellar attendance record, the kids of Outdoor Explorers Preschool are seldom ever sick. Avril thinks it might be due, in part, to the environmentally friendly bacteria the children come in contact with every day. Grass, soil and butterflies have been proven to improve human health levels by lowering stress hormones.
In a study conducted in Japan, it was found that people who strolled in a wooded area and/or breathed in phytoncides (chemicals emitted by trees and plants), showed a 16 percent decrease in stress hormones, as well as an increase in the activity of cancer-fighting white blood cells.
Plus, going to school outside is fun! ‘The outdoor aspect of the school means that children are allowed to express their feelings in so many ways,’ Avril says. ‘In a normal setting a child will sit at a desk and paint.  But at Outdoor Explorers, one child may draw a picture using the chalkboard, another draws on the trike area, while yet another is drawing in the sand.’ 
Avril feels children who participate in this kind of school are ‘less likely to stay inside and be all about their play station,’ as they get older. ‘I firmly believe that if we all had 3 hrs a day outside when we were 3 years of age, obesity would not be the problem it is today.’
Because activities are regularly done in the rain, Avril supplies snow and rains suits, but the kids don’t seem to notice the rain, she says. ‘To them, it’s just another way to use our senses.’

When I visited the school, activities included planting cabbage seedlings, crossing the ‘wobbly bridge,’ hill rolling, playing outdoor music, and pretty much whatever struck the kids’ fancy. In the near future, Avril is planning trips to the Cong Woods and a treasure hunt. She’d like parents to know that the outdoors is much better for their children than being ‘stuck in a room.’
If you’d like to find out more, Outdoor Explorers brochures are available at Solas.


And in Other News . . .
Sylvia Donoghue, Parent Drop-In Service
Solas is hosting a new Parent Drop-In service. This is a confidential service where you can discuss any concerns you may have about your child's behaviour with a professional. Sylvia Donoghue of North Galway Family Services will be available to chat every Thursday from 9:30 am to 12:30 pm, starting tomorrow, 11 September.

Wednesday 3 September 2014

Headford News and Community Spotlight-Waiting for the Past. . .


 HAVE YOU GOTTEN YOUR TICKET YET? If not, you better hurry because Sunday September 14th 2014 is the Solas Family Resource Centre Annual Dance. It will be at the McWilliam Park Hotel in Claremorris and tickets are available now at Solas for only 10. Music will be by TR Dallas (from 5 ot 8 pm) and Showbud (from 9 to 11:30 pm). Everyone who is anyone will be there. Rumour has it even Garth Brooks will be there. What? It could happen. So get your tickets quick, before all the Garth groupies do.


COMMUNITY SPOTLIGHT 

Waiting for the Past to Influence the Present

In the mid-1840’s, there was no ‘famine’ in Ireland. Famine is a lack of food. There was plenty of food grown here in the mid-19th century. Unfortunately, that food, grown by Irish people on Irish soil, had to be sent to England to pay rent to British landlords. Consequently, many people in this country were left to suffer prolonged starvation, typhoid fever, cholera, and all the various horrors associated with famine.

At that time, a 15-year-old girl in Headford must have been listening to the national sentiment against this unjust situation. For, although she was educated by a private governess, and her father was a wealthy gentleman farmer, the young Headford girl wrote poems that accurately reflected the nation’s angst. That young girl, Mary Anne Kelly, had her first poem published in The Nation in 1845:
Down Britannia, brigand down!
No more to rule with sceptred hand:
Truth raises o’er thy throne and crown
Her exorcising wand

Soon after that, this young poet began to use the pen name ‘Eva’ and became known as Eva of the Nation. Being a patriot with a knack for writing rebellious poetry, it was probably inevitable that Eva would fall madly in love with a passionate-‘Liberate Ireland!’-type guy. His name was Kevin Doherty. He was arrested and transported to Tasmania for his involvement in the Young Irelanders, but Eva promised she would wait for him. And she did. After seven long years, Kevin was released on condition that he not return to Ireland. But he returned anyway, risking his life, and married Eva. Aw, sweet.

Fast forward one hundred and fifty-ish years to 1992 . . .
Eva and Kevin’s great, great granddaughter, Vivian Nesbitt, travelled from New Mexico, USA to Headford on a quest to learn about her ancestors. But that quest turned into a surprising personal pilgrimage.

When Vivian first visited her great-great granny’s old home, Lisdonagh House, she met the infamous Valda Palmer (the woman who, according to legend, put the ‘eek!’ in freak). In addition to this startling encounter, Vivian met other unforgettable characters on that trip. They included a cook, a maȋtre d’, a bartender, and a dream encounter with granny Eva.

Vivian openly admits that back in 1992, she was ‘ill-prepared for life,’ and as a result of this journey she recovered from drinking, faced some personal demons, and stopped holding herself back. That’s a heck of a lot to get from one holiday. But Vivian got even more. Romanced by the story of Eva of the Nation’s boundless integrity to her one true love, Vivian was inspired to write an award-winning play.

The Bark and the Tree, is a fictionalized documentary about Vivian’s 1992 pilgrimage including heartbreak, comedy, insight and profound synchronicity. At its heart, this seems to be a story of how ancestors—even if they are separated from us by centuries and continents—can help us heal. In this one-woman show Vivian plays seven different characters, and you’ll have a chance to meet all of them this coming Saturday night.
‘I’m excited,’ Vivian says. ‘This is a real homecoming for the play because it started here twenty-two years ago.’

In spite of the great amount of words written by and about Eva of the Nation, there’s almost nothing that actually describes who she really was. So Vivian explains that part of her writing process involved sort of channelling Eva’s emotional life.

Most importantly, she ended up getting some life changing advice from the whole process of researching and writing about Eva, who waited so long for her one true love. ‘She waited for a purpose,’ Vivian says. ‘Her message to me was, “What are you waiting for?”’

So if you find yourself waiting around Saturday night for something to do . . .
The Bark and the Tree
(winner Best Documentary Play, United Solo Festival, NYC)
6th September
9 pm
Headford Parish Hall
Tickets: 10; Seniors 8