Plazaman wrote: » Thin Lizzy played The Baymount in Strandhill on a number of occasions in the early 70's. The unofficial green room after the concerts was up in The Venue. One of the weekends Phil and the boys were around, the owner brought them up to The Glen in Cullenamore and to Queen Maeves grave on the top of Knocknarea and regaled them with stories of Maeves battles as he was known to do. Out of that trip was born the song "Emerald".
promethius wrote: » wb yeats helped to save the life of a boy who fell through ice at lough gill forming a human chain with some other passers by
fillefatale wrote: » where's that from?
promethius wrote: » sligo miscellany
fillefatale wrote: » i thought it'd be from a book or sth
red sean wrote: » Hav'nt heard that story in years! Thank you. It's also said, you can see the shape of a horse in the stonefalls on the side of the mountain. The lake is on your left heading to manorhamilton
Kettleson wrote: » Mighty....is it true or urban legend?
FirstinLastout wrote: » Out on Innismurry Island there's a graveyard for each of the sexes and never must one be buried in the other for it is recorded that on one such occassion, many many moons ago, the ground trembled within the men's graveyard before it split open and with a great roar it spat the fresh corpse of a women up up into the air and over the wall into the adjoining female graveyard. Where she landed the ground opened and swallied her whole before closing upon itself so it did so it. And proper order too so it is!
mountainy man wrote: » The islanders had a great tradition of poitin making too
itac wrote: » Most people know of the Sligo connection with Bram Stoker & Dracula; I can't remember where I read this, but apparently, some inspiration was taken from a story by his mother about the exhumation of a body in the grounds of St. John's Church (on John St.) which was found to be perfectly preserved several months after the burial.
Truley wrote: » The one I heard was that his mother, during the panic of the Cholera epidemic, witnessed people being buried in mass pits and often they weren't fully dead yet and could be witnessed moaning and crawling out. And this was what inspired Bram Stoker when writing Dracula. Probably just an urban myth though. Also 'Sligo Stats' on twitter contains some interesting nuggets of info about our lovely countyhttps://twitter.com/SligoStats
Kettleson wrote: » I was reading P Heraughty's book a while back, the islanders called their poitin "Whiskey". And whiskey that was legal bought was called "parlement". (ie the required tax had been paid on it through Act of Parliament. Its a great read. "Inishmurray Ancient Monastic Island", I must read it again.