Surprise outing
Paddy and I are up early and I can't keep him waiting too long before we hike. First, the view from the house in Creeslough, taken yesterday afternoon.
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So off we went to Ards Friary for a swim at Monk's beach this morning. On the way, I took a photo of the estuary, but it doesn't capture the zig zag pattern that repeats: sand, water, sand, water, sand, water, in a lovely serpentine.
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One of Paddy's swimming holes below. Paddy's a wee dot one-third the way down the beach.
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So then he runs toward the water, turns and looks at me (throw stick, woman!!), runs toward the water, turns and looks at me, etc. This creates a line-loop-line pattern. Hard to make out but here it is:
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I brightened the image to try to capture the loops--he cracks me up. My plan for the day was to hike to Ards Forest and back however I got a text from Siobhan Bigger asking if I wanted to meet at the garage in Creeslough and carpool to the back of Glenveagh Park for a hike. So that is what I did. I drove with her on miles of back roads--a route I could never retrace--to get to a part of Glenveagh I didn't know existed. With her brother Donald, his girlfriend Gail, and friends Suzanne and Fergus, we hiked a few miles on one side of a valley.
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It was a cold day and I probably wasn't dressed warmly enough, but I was OK. All of us are old school friends, except Fergus. It was lovely walking and talking with each of them--lots of different conversations. I think Fergus is a psychologist. I know he has spent a lot of his time on reconciliation in divided communities. We talked about Say Nothing. He spoke both of IRA atrocities--killing three men in his town (Crossmaglen) as a warning to three women who were dating British soldiers. The men were picked randomly to stand in for the women, as killing women would be bad PR. They also disappeared a man whose son joined the British Army. But he also spoke of the IRA's role in keeping discipline in communities--for instance keeping drugs out (by killing drug dealers). I guess when you are trying to help former terrorists rejoin society you have to find positives??
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When we got to the bottom of the valley hike, there was a bothy--a seasonal cottage. We pulled benches out and enjoyed Prosecco, sausages (which Donald cooked on a gas cooker), tea, and biscuits. Siobhan, in the red jacket, is so like her mum in that way--getting people together for a bit of craic. Her mum invited me on some of their family picnics in Donegal--hike, eat in a protected sand dune, hike. Lovely memories.
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I ended the day making a fire and reading a really good book about the scandal that brought down the Northern Irish government. Ironically, the book is called burned.
21 March