Furnace Road north of Costelloe (Casla), Connemara
Rihla (The Journey) – was the
short title of a 14th Century (1355 CE) book written in Fez by the Islamic legal
scholar Ibn Jazayy al-Kalbi of Granada who recorded and then transcribed the
dictated travelogue of the Tangerian, Ibn Battuta. The book’s full title was A Gift to Those who Contemplate the Wonders
of Cities and the Marvels of Travelling and somehow the title of Ibn
Jazayy's book captures the ethos of many of the city and country journeys I
have been lucky to take in past years.
The Quays of the Parish of Chill Bhriocáin (Kilcummin), Galway.
Travelling the rutted roads
and narrow boreens of Connemara, Tim Robinson’s Gazetteer and Map to hand, in
search of the piers and slipways that define the relationship of that land with
the sea – like the base pairs of double-stranded DNA – has in essence been a
Knights Tour: an attempt to visit and photograph every such construction on the
irregular chessboard that is the landscape of maritime Connemara at least once.
My journey has been an open Tour because I have returned again and again to
some locations, attracted by the light, the history, the tidal hallucination
and not at all to some others, caught out by bad weather, missed turns and dodgy
map-reading.
The Quay of Cinn Mhara looking North West towards Twelve Bens
THE BRIDGE OF
MUCKANAGHEDERDAUHAULIA (Muicíneach idir
Dhá Sháile)
Predag Matvejevic in his
book Mediterranean – A Cultural Landscape
wrote, “The nature of a port is
determined by whether it is formed by a river, chosen by the land or
hinterland, or willed by the sea itself.”
On the 23rd
June 1975 just before 8pm, in a room in his residence at 11 rue
Simon-Crubellier, where on a small night table there was an ashtray with
‘Guinness’ engraved on it, Muckanaghederdaulhaulia was willed to the world by
Bartlebooth, the central character of George Perec’s novel Life A User’s Manual (French title:
La Vie mode d’emploi first
published 1978, English translation 1987), as to be one of the eternal 500
ports of the world that he would travel to – beginning with Gijon and ending
with Browershaven – to paint in watercolours the seacapes that presented
themselves.
Georges Perec was an author
associated with the Oulipo group of French writers and mathematicians who used
the notion of a Knights Tour permutation to evolve new ways or new structures to
express ideas and imaginations in literature. Ever since I was introduced to Perec’s
writing, and to the wonder of the Connemara landscape, by Tim Robinson in his
book Connemara – A Little Gaelic Kingdom; in the chapter he entitled The Bridge at Muckanaghederdaulhaulia,
and Robinson’s description of his own "Road to Damascus" moment at the bridge, I
have always wanted to visit this mystical or perhaps mythical place.
The Bridge of Muckanaghederdauhaulia
(Muicíneach idir dhá Sháile)
Perec came to include
Muchanaghederdaulhaulia pier in his “500” ports to be painted because he considered
it to be the port with the longest name in the world. Goodness knows what
reference book or atlas he had consulted to actually discover the name. At the
other end of the linguistic scale he included the port of U in the Caroline
Islands in the Western Pacific.
For many years
Muchanaghederdauhaulia was also thought to be the longest single-word Irish
place name, or at least English version of that place name, but since 2005 as a
name it no longer exists….officially.
Cé Cinn Mhara
Just before 8pm on the 23rd
June 1975, in the moments – allowing a decent interval for the spirit to take
its leave – after his character Bartlebooth’s death, is the beginning and end
of Perec’s novel, the big bang and vanishing point combined. At an equally pivotal moment just after
midnight on the 28th March 2005, under the mandates of the Official
Languages Act of 2003, a Placenames Order (An
tOrdú Logainmneacha) came into effect and ensured that Muckanaghederdauhaulia sole official
name reverted to its Irish origins: Muicíneach
idir Dhá Sháile, an exact and more beautiful geographic description in
language and intent of the small peninsula, shaped like a pig’s back that
separates two tidal sea inlets and which juts out into the waters of Camus Bay.
Perec’s longest named port is now called, in an even greater English/Irish mishmash, Cé Muckina.
Perec’s longest named port is now called, in an even greater English/Irish mishmash, Cé Muckina.
Matvejevic also wrote, “Some piers are like elongated ships: they
await their ships so patiently that in the end they come to resemble them.”
Perec may, or may not, have been surprised that Cé Muckina (Muicíneach)
pier does not really protect a bustling, busy port but it does project out into
seascape that Perec’s water-colourist Bartlebooth would not have been
disappointed in. To get there you drive/ramble north from Costelloe on the Furnace bog road and turn
left about 5km; into the town land of Kinvarra. The “famous” bridge or equally famous pier/port
is not signposted, and indeed the only signage apparent is that for MADRA; the
Mutts Anonymous Dog Rescue and Adoption kennels which is located down a side-road that takes you to another quay.
Looking north-west over
Bridge at Muckanaghederdauhaulia
Moving westwards you swing round and down a
corner and first reach the old and now dilapidated pier of Cé Cinn Mhara before
continuing on to the bridge beyond. A local told me that the quay is really
called after his great-great grandmother who lived in the vicinity when the
quay was being built. I missed hearing what he called it.
Cé Muckina
(Cé Muiceanach idir dhá Sháile)
The original wooden footbridge
of Muckanaghederdauhaulia was built in 1900 but collapsed into the sea in 1980
and has since been replaced by a single archway road bridge.
After crossing the bridge and turning right at the next crossroads with an alternate bog road back to Costelloe you then turn immediately left into a narrow boreen, gradually descending to the pier/port of Perec’s Muckanaghederdauhaulia where it exists as a snub-nosed vanishing point between land and sea, and shaped by both.
After crossing the bridge and turning right at the next crossroads with an alternate bog road back to Costelloe you then turn immediately left into a narrow boreen, gradually descending to the pier/port of Perec’s Muckanaghederdauhaulia where it exists as a snub-nosed vanishing point between land and sea, and shaped by both.
Edge of old slipway at the ford of Snámh Bó
THE FORD OF THE SWIMMING-PLACE OF THE COWS (Snámh Bó)
After returning back to
the Furnace Road and travelling north you enter Camus town land and taking the
next left turn brings you westwards along a twisting road and across a small
bridge and slipway that separates Camus Iochtair (lower) from Camus Uachtair
(upper).
Cé an tSagairt (Priest's Landing Place) beside bridge
in Camus
This is not the natural direction of the road as the illustration below from an 1922 Ordinance Survey map shows where the road appears to peter out eastwards before it has connected with the Furnace Rd.
1922 OS map
The area was first surveyed in 1839 and the 1841 OS map shows no evidence of the road.
The Board of Public Works had taken over road building in Ireland in 1832. Then came the famine and a designated body the Congested Districts Board was established in 1891 to alleviate poverty in the west and north-west of Ireland. Part of the CDB's remit was the building of roads and piers in the under developed parts of Connemara and this included a road that ran from Cé Chill Bhriocáin in Rosmuc to Camus. This road appears, partially unfinished, in the updated 1922 OS map.
The reason for the road
being there in the first place was probably to allow easier access for farmers and
livestock men of the Rosmuc peninsula to get to the markets at Maam Cross and
Costello. The area on the Rosmuc side had always been known as Snámh Bó or Swimming Place (Ford) of the Cows, and thus the road followed the ancient livestock trail. On the Camus side you reach a small slipway and a gutted quay with
the abandoned shed of a curragh boat-builder nearby. Immediately ahead of you
is a small island, the Island of Dun Mánas.
The unfinished Spinster's road on the tiny island of Dun Mánas off
the new Snámh Bó quay. (looking east)
There is no fort or dun on
what is a tiny island. When it is approached from the Rosmuc or western side
you can see the remains of a stone road laid out upon the island. This roadway
directly aligns with the newly refurbished Snámh Bó quay. This quay of the “swimming cows” was
originally a slipway (slightly to the north of the current quay) down which
cattle were led and then made to swim across the ford to the slipway on the
Camus side.
View of Dun Mánas island from Camus side at the Cé Dun Mánas
A local man, who lives in the house at the head of the quay, told
me that the island of Dun Mánas was once owned by two spinster sisters, who
lived nearby. They had an idea that when the roads were being built that the ford
might be bridged. The Congested Districts Board contracted and paid the two
women to carry and break rock to lay out a causeway on the island, much of which is still
visible, but then cancelled any further progress towards a bridge when one of
the women was found not to be fulfilling her quota of stones hauled. When J.M. Synge travelled through Connemara with Jack Yeats, on behalf of the Manchester Guardian newspaper, he wrote in 1911,
"Then at a turn of the road, we came in sight of a dozen or more men and women working hurriedly and doggedly improving a further portion of this road, with a ganger swaggering among them directing the work... As we drove quickly by we could see that every man and women was working with a sort of hang-dog dejection that would be enough to make any casual passer mistake them for a band of convicts. The wages given on these works are usually a shilling a day.... I have been told of a district not very far from here where there is a ganger, an overseer, an inspector, a paymaster and an engineer superintending the work of two paupers only."
It is possible that Synge had heard stories of the two spinster sisters building the road of Dun Mánus Island!!!!
"Then at a turn of the road, we came in sight of a dozen or more men and women working hurriedly and doggedly improving a further portion of this road, with a ganger swaggering among them directing the work... As we drove quickly by we could see that every man and women was working with a sort of hang-dog dejection that would be enough to make any casual passer mistake them for a band of convicts. The wages given on these works are usually a shilling a day.... I have been told of a district not very far from here where there is a ganger, an overseer, an inspector, a paymaster and an engineer superintending the work of two paupers only."
It is possible that Synge had heard stories of the two spinster sisters building the road of Dun Mánus Island!!!!
St Brecan's Monastic Church, Rosmuc Peninsula, Connemara.
The quay of Snámh Bó links
directly westwards with the old monastic church of St Brecan, after which the
parish of Chill Bhriocáin – which includes Camus, Rosmuc and Muicíneach idir
dhá Sháile – is named. St Brecan, the
Dalcassian saint of the Seven Churches of Inishmore on the Aran Islands and
where he is buried, founded the complex in Rosmuc around 520CE. Below the
church and burial ground is the very sturdy and picturesque quay of Cé Chill
Bhriocáin.
Cé Chill Bhriocáin
I left the parish and quays of Chill Bhriocáin, and my
Knights Tour and for some reason the abiding image was not of the Bridge or Port/Pier of
Muckanaghederdauhaulia but was that of the unfinished Spinster’s Road on the small
island of Dun Mánas. It was and is the embodiment of Georges Perec’s Life A User’s Manual: a
road to everywhere and nowhere, caught in a moment of time.
And the cows went swimming by…….
And the cows went swimming by…….
Reference.
Galway County
Council Survey of Piers and Harbours. A
Record of 244 such places.
See: http://data.galwaycoco.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/0487f02f76ea495aa02653c9e56fde25_0