Pic Thread : Ennistymon Horsefair

It’s been ages since I have posted a pic thread outside the Willie Clancy week, so there you go.

It was Horsefair in Ennistymon, Co Clare today. Nothing on the scale of Spancil Hill or Ballinasloe but good fun nevertheless. Spent the morning walking the street taking pictures of the animals and the people, donkey, horses and geese, farmers dressed up for the day out, travelling people up for the craic and to buy or sell a few horses, wild mountainy men and women, traveller kids tearing up and down the street riding bareback, locals and blow ins. Great day, great atmosphere.


That burro shot outside Monument Hair is GREAT! :laughing:
The beer light in the window was a little distressing however. I hope those horses don’t think that is an appropriate beverage for man or beast.

Indeed, and “2 hour parking.”

Wonderful pictures, all. Thanks for posting them.

Best wishes,
Jerry

Certainly must give townsfolk a taste of road conditions which prevailed in the pre-auto days. Road apple conditions, that is. I noticed quite a few human shanks clad appropriately in rubber boots.

Oh shiznit…I probably used another dirty word.

They’re wellies

Do they still have real horse fairs like this, or was this just a spectacle put on to attract the tourists? Your intro suggests the latter.

djm

Budweiser? The ponies are after the Budweiser? Sacrilege.

It’s a ‘real’ horsefair, nothing particularly touristy and I don’t think I suggested any different. These things just happen, they have them regularly in Kilrush as well. Ballinasloe and Spancil Hill are huge and attract a lot of visitors and have a more touristy element but they’re still primary horse fairs


Before they had the Mart built Ennistymon had regular cattle fairs in the street, some great photographs of that were done by Dorothea Lange during the fifties.



they’re in the book:

I think it might have been this part that got that image going in djm’s mind:

“Traveller” refers to an ethnic minority in Ireland kind of like Gypsies, right?

Thanks for the pics Peter. They’re a great mental escape from being cooped up in an office all day in front of a computer. (Producing absolutely nothing of real value)

Jim

Nothing else.

Okay, thx, but that’s what got me to wondering. A lot of the photos I see are from fifty years ago, so I’m never certain of what is still current and what is passé.

djm

Great photos. I especially liked the first one.

Yes travellers are, well, Travellers. Both Ennistymon and Kilrush have quite a few settled travellers in their population. There are a number of halting sites around Ennistymon as well (as well as regular illegal roadside encampments) . Sometimes there are ad hoc horseraces in the main street.
Travellers have always been associated with horse trading, the Dorans were trading horses for example.

There aren’t a lot of working horses left but farmers keep a few horses or donkeys as a hobby and sell them off every now and again.

Added:

Lovely photobook, pics from the sixties, Irish Travellers, Tinkers no more by Alen MacWeeney:

some great shots in it of the Fureys and Paddy and Johnny Keenan, very young all of them. CD with songs and music with the book

A pony, a pony, I want a pony! :laughing:
thanks a million for these pics, Peter. they made my day.

From my own experience, having been in Ireland a few times in november, there’s not much touristy stuff going on there compared to may-september. That’s why I love going there in november. Bad weather, but cheap rental cars and empty hostels.

Beautiful photos, as usual, Peter. You’re so great at capturing the feel of a place/event.

Susan

Nah… they’re probably discussing something like…“Heh… so that’s where our spent waters a bin goin’!.. Haw!” :laughing:

These are your best pictures yet-but then I am biased towards equines.

I’m curious, most of these horses seem to be small draft horses, and the pied color is something we almost never see around here (in draft horses). Is this a particular breed? I’m guessing Gypsy Vanners.

good guess :smiley:

cob, eh