Carson10 wrote: » .........big tourism and revenue for Sligo..............
mountainy man wrote: » We have some of the best scenery, beaches and historical sites in the country.
butterfly28 wrote: » It would be wonderful to have regular market stalls in town selling clothing and jewellery etc. and not just out in Strandhill!! Too many restaurants and not enough activity for tourists......I really don't know why they even bother. Like Dire Straits sang 'Money for nothing,but here your kicks aren't free!!' ðŸ˜
fillefatale wrote: » I ran the Sligo Flea Market in The Model and it was a struggle to get people there on the regular, even with all the posters and marketing. All the Yeatsian named cafes... its a bit naff imo. I don't think I've even been in any of them, I'd prefer a cafe on its own merits, not the novelty of a name.
Carson10 wrote: » Heard about the Flea Market and seen pics on FB but never got the chance to go visit. Really good concept and not getting the credit it deserves. I think Sligo needs a dedicated craft/fair street. Something similar to Tobergal lane, but not as 'naff' as calling it the Italian Quarter
galljga1 wrote: » A novel idea: how about calling it "The Yeats County Craft Fair"?
Kettleson wrote: » The Yeats theme is a narrow enough audience target. How many 18-30 year olds are going to rush to Sligo because of its connection with WB? Not many I reckon. How many families with young children are going to rush to Sligo because of the WB connection? The American tour buses stopped coming to Sligo many years ago. It's just pure lazy to jump on the Yeats band wagon. I'm not a fan. I'll be shot down for this, but a lot of his stuff I feel is very contrived. Starting off with mates in Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese pub to see who could come up with the cleverest, enigmatic rhyme. But sure I'm a philistine.
TireeTerror wrote: » Ive only lived in Sligo for 6 weeks and Im sick of hearing about him too. I was tempted to pull down the last "For Yeats Sake" style sign post which was telling me what not to do all over the place. Annoying to say the least. Maybe if poetry was my thing I would like it, but I find it utterly boring.
il gatto wrote: » Even if you liked poetry, you might not like Yeats' poetry. And even if you did, you might not be bothered seeing Sligo. Like I said on another thread, I think, if the person/people making these decisions see Yeats as Sligo's only selling point, they should probably move elsewhere.
TireeTerror wrote: » If they stopped shoving Yeats down peoples faces people might have a moment to actually see the rest of the things the county has to offer. It could do with a lot more shops, and a marina or harbour buzzing with excitement. I really like it here though, and there are so many other great places to visit within a 2 hour drive. I had never seen nor heard much about Yeats until I got here and I saw his name plastered everywhere. Read that garbage on the wall next to the bus station and cringed if thats the main thing being used to try and attract visitors. A minority isnt small enough to describe how many people who would actually bother their arse to come to Sligo to see it because of Yeats.
il gatto wrote: » The whole Quay Street area should have been developed like along the river/Tobergal Lane. Planners (again) missed a trick. The town doesn't make use of it's coastal location/seafaring history. You could forget it's a port. Unlike Galway, Cork etc. I'm a fan of Steinbeck. I would love to visit California, but seeing Steinbeck country would be a diversion, not the sole reason for going there. Winning a Nobel prize is nothing to be sniffed at, and I'm not questioning the man's contribution to poetry, but millions of people go to Florida each year because of an animated mouse. I think the people who market Sligo need to step back and weigh up if they're going about things in the right way (clue: they're not). The likes of Go Strandhill on Facebook do more for tourism in Sligo than the people payed to do it.
Vlove wrote: » You don't hear Bran stokers mother (who was born in sligo) or Father Teds Pauline Flynn being mentioned in the town.
fillefatale wrote: » Well there was the rather sloppily organised Dracula festival a couple of years ago that was a result of the Stoker connection.https://www.facebook.com/BramStokerExperienceGetSuckedIntoSligo
Vlove wrote: » That's right it wasn't mentioned much really
red sean wrote: » I don't understand this thread. Yeats himself was the greatest ever advertisement for Sligo and Leitrim having constantly mentioned them in his works. Thats now being commercially exploited similar to how Stratford upon Avon exploits its connection with Shakespeare. I'm no acedemic but I actually like a lot of Yeats's work. The links with Bram Stoker and Spike Milligan are more tenuous as neither ever mentioned Sligo or their connection to it until it was researched by someone else.
promethius wrote: » Why do you think it was sloppily organised? I was at the evening function, live theatre, food, everyone dressed as vampires, dancing in the old chapel in the clarion and then a few hundred kids gather up in the IT the next day all dressed as vampires. Done on a voluntary basis as a college project. hats off to the organisers in my opinion and other people who have the guts to try something a bit different.