Posts Tagged With: art history tours

NEW! Fiber Arts in Ireland tour and workshop June 2016

DSC_0422 - CopyWe are very excited to announce a new offering, a combination tour and hands-on workshop to be held in Ireland in June 2016.

Authentic Travel and Tours presents:

“Fiber Arts in Ireland: A Wooly Trail Along the Wild Atlantic Coast

Fiber Arts Workshop and Tour      June 19-July 1, 2016

The Irish landscape beckons to be interpreted in art: from the lush green fields to theDSCF8217 rugged coastlines, the inspiration is endless. Join us for this fiber art tour along the western coast known as the Wild Atlantic Way, as we explore the landscape, craft traditions in wool, and our creativity. We will be creating tapestry weavings and learning to make “pictorial” felt landscapes, and will learn about sheep and wool processes, and watch demonstrations of spinning, sheepherding, dyeiDSC_0613ng and knitting. We will watch tweed weavers work magic at their looms, and Irish artists create with hand-dyed fleece. Interspersed will be visits to craft villages, galleries and ancient prehistoric and Celtic sites, and days of immersion creating our own art with the luscious Irish yarns and fleeces.

The tour and workshop will include the exploration of out-of-the-way glens and coves, walks along stunning seascapes, and majestic mountain vistas, where we’ll gather photographs and sketches which will inspire our hands-on workshop days in felt-making and tapestry weaving.

Your tour guide and one of the felt-making instructors, Joan Molloy Slack, has led art and cultural tours to Ireland for over 18 years, and is an avid felt maker who enjoys interpreting landscapes of all kinds.

 

See all the details here Fiber art tour to Ireland

 

Categories: Fiber art tours, Ireland | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Sheepdogs, Stone Forts and Miles of Stone

Culloo Rocks and St Brendans well (12)Our Wild Atlantic Way Cultural Tour is coming up October 8th, and there are still some spaces left. One of the places we will visit on the tour is the Caherconnell Stone Fort in the Burren, a unique area of limestone and history. Archaeologists are working on excavations, providing a perfect opportunity to ask questions abut the finds and their work. In addition to the fort, we’ll get to see sheepdog demonstrations! The dogs’ skill and intelligence is definitely worth watching, plus a part of Burren and Irish history comes to light, as dogs have always been an integral part of the family farm.

 

An excerpt below from the Caherconnell website:

Caherconnell is home to the Burren’s premier Sheepdog Demonstrations, which were started by John Davoren, the landowner.  These demonstrations are attracting visitors from all over the world to see the combined skills of the Border collie and his master.

John has been training dogs since he was 16 years old and has trained a variety of dogs to work with sheep and cattle.He is now passing on his expertise to the next generation in an attempt to preserve a culture which has been part of Burren life for generations.

The sheepdog is an integral part of farming culture and here you will see just how useful a well-trained border collie can be for a farmer.  The sheepdog is of untold value when trying to move or direct sheep or cattle across open areas of karst landscape.

The use of a small number of well understood directions enables the sheepdog to complete tasks in half the time it would take a number of people.  This, along with the qualities of loyalty and hard work, make the sheepdog the very best pet a farming family could hope for.

Sheep Dog Demonstrations

Border CollieAt Caherconnell you will meet three of our dogs. Rose and Lee are Border Collies and Sally is half Collie and half Scottish cattle dog.  We will demonstrate the dogs working with both cattle and sheep.

The sheepdog and the ‘cattle-dog’ go about their business with very different tactics.  Sheepdogs, such as the Border Collie maintain control of the flock using their predatory behaviour.

On the other hand the cattle dog is much smaller than the cattle being herded and therefore needs to illustrate that its bite is most definitely worse than its bark.

Thus the ‘cattle dog’ will ‘nip’ at the heels of the cattle so as to get them to obey.

As you will see the skill, intelligence and obedience of a well trained sheepdog makes an invaluable contribution to any farming family.

Come along… we know you will enjoy the experience! Visit the website here to read more and watch the video of the border collies at work! http://caherconnell.com/sheepdog/

Shep the sheep dog working hard at Caherconnell

Here is a link to the video clip from the Caherconnell website:

Categories: Ireland | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Fiber Arts in Ireland Workshop and Tour, Summer 2016!

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“Starry Night” by Joan Slack

Culloo Rocks and St Brendans well (12)If you would love to travel in Ireland and also be involved in a creative fiber arts workshop, this new tour will be sure to inspire! Details will be available soon, so join our followers to receive updates, or like our Facebook page to get he latest news. OR, send Joan an e-mail at joanslack@wildblue.net to be placed on our e-mail mailing list with full brochures sent to you. Here are some tantalizing visual ideas of what might be created in this workshop!

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“Spring Melt” by Joan Slack

 

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Tapestry by Dermot Cannon     

J. Campbell Felt class 053

This combination workshop and tour will take place along the Wild Atlantic coast in Donegal in June, and promises to be spectacular. We will visit fiber artists, work with Irish weavers, learn natural dyeing with botanicals growing in the Irish countryside. Day trips will include outings to archaeological sites, ancient pilgrimage trails and woolen mills, with stops to absorb the stunning seascapes, mountain vistas and rolling green fields. All the details will be posted here very soon! DSC_0621

Categories: Ireland | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

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