September 29, 2012
We slept like a log last night! And how does a log sleep?? I guess it was the 4 hours of sleep on the
plane and the walking all over Dublin yesterday. However, the 6:15am wakeup call this morning was
early.
We met the Mary Gibbons’ tour at a local hotel at 7:15. We were the first to be picked up, even
before Mary herself! Our tour went to
Newgrange which is the largest of the many passage tombs. It was about an hours drive and Mary described
all of Ireland’s history. I enjoyed the
scenery and the history lesson.
Newgrange is a huge lump on the ground. It and the other smaller passage tombs in the
area, Knowth and Dowth, were built in 3200 BC.
That is 5000 years ago in the late Stone Age. Whoa! (Ok, side note: When Mary was telling us about Nowth, Dowth and Newgrange I immediately thought of the Nina. Pinta, and the Santa Maria. I know, I know, wrong country and era.) There is an interpretive center where you are assigned a colored sticker
with the time of your shuttle to the actual Newgrange. The interpretive center is interesting as it
gives you some background on the passage tombs, who built them, why, etc.
I was impressed by the size of the Newgrange tomb. It is “surrounded by a kerb of 97 stones.” Or as BC says, “It had to be a couple hundred feet across.” The tour guide was very informative and interesting. Basically “they” built this passage tomb to
align perfectly with the winter and summer solstice. So for 17 minutes, twice a year, on the
equinox of December and June 21st the sun rises and shines perfectly
through the roof box above the entrance.
They only allow a certain number of people to enter the tomb and go into
the chamber. You must walk pretty much
bent over, holding your bag to the front of you as you enter the
passageway. It’s pretty tight on the
side too. You stand in the chamber and
the guide demonstrated how it is in the chamber at the Winter Solstice. It’s totally dark and then the shaft of
light magically appears. The entire
mound is heavy slab rock that was brought from about 15 kilometers away via the
River Boyne and then somehow brought up to the site and stacked up and up to
create the cross shaped chamber and covering mound. The graffiti inside the tiny chamber are
people’s names and dates carved from when the tomb was unearthed “recently”. The dates are 1871, 1901, etc. They believe that special people’s cremated
remains were put in the chamber. But
they aren’t sure as Newgrange was over grown and “lost” until 1699 when a guy
was looking for rocks to make a road and stumbled onto it. It is one of the most amazing things I have
ever seen. I’m so glad we were able to
see it and go inside. I suspect that not
too many years from now, it won’t be open to the public. Oh! If
you want to enter the lottery to be one of the people who get to be inside the
chamber on the winter equinox, you can put your name in for 2013. Only 24 of the 32,000 people who signed up
this year were chosen.
The carvings on the stones around and inside the mound are
interesting. I plan to use the swirls in
a quilt. It is interesting what constitutes
religious art, huh?
At the end of the tour, you get to take your colored time
sticker off and put it on a poster.
Another great show of color!
Next we drove to Tara Hill.
Now, this is where the Druids began Halloween. They dressed up in masks, drew pictures of skeletons
on their clothes and had a party on October 31st. Tara Hill is another group of odd hills. It was very windy up there, but you can see
so far away. Ireland is so beautiful. They say at the top of Tara Hill you can see 3/4 of Ireland. And all this time I thought Tara was a plantation in the south! Hollywood!!
We came back to our room to rest and write the blog. In a little while we will go back to The Chop
House for a nice dinner. Tomorrow we
pick up our car and start driving!
I hope we haven’t bored you with the Newgrange and all. It truly is amazing and well worth the
trip.
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