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Kilfenora

Kilfenora

The Home of Traditional Ceili Music and The Gateway to the Burren

The Home of Traditional Céilí Music and The Gateway to the Burren

  • Home
  • About
    • About Kilfenora
    • History
    • The Burren
    • Music
    • Kilfenora Ceili Band
    • Father Ted
    • Kilfenora Timeline
    • Kilfenora Time Capsule
    • Farming
    • Sport
  • News
  • Events
    • Kilfenora Traditional Music Festival 2025
    • Festival concert – Máirtín O’Connor Band
    • “The Sounds of Kilfenora” project launch
    • Riches of Clare concert, Kilfenora Cathedral
    • Architectural Heritage of Kilfenora Cathedral – 25 June lecture
    • Kilfenora Traditional Music Festival 2024
    • Main concert – Kilfenora Trad Fest 27.4.24
    • Céilís and Riches of Clare @ Kilfenora Trad Fest
    • Celebration of Irish Dance in Kilfenora
    • CD launches at Kilfenora Trad Fest 2024
    • Dance and music workshops
    • Past Events
      • Kilfenora Trad Festival 2023
      • Heritage events in Kilfenora in August
      • Kilfenora Trad Festival 2022
  • Visit Us
    • Visit Us
    • Kilfenora
    • Kilfenora Cathedral & Crosses
    • Holy Well
    • Around Kilfenora
    • Walking and Cycling
  • Facilities
    • Facilities Overview
    • Resources
    • Accommodation
  • Kilfenora Community
    • Kilfenora Development
      • Kilfenora Development News
    • Kilfenora Tidy Towns
      • Kilfenora Tidy Towns News
    • Kilfenora Sustainable Energy Community
      • Kilfenora Sustainable Energy Community News
  • Find Us

Jobs at the Burren Centre

Jobs at the Burren Centre

The Burren Centre is starting to gear up for the 2022 season, and is seeking to fill several posts now that normal business conditions are in view.

  • A part-time administrator – book-keeping, payroll, and some other duties
  • A full time cook/chef
  • A part-time general assistant (primarily working in the Tea Rooms)
  • Seasonal/summer staff – serving customers, helping in the kitchen etc

Manager Claire Collins says “we are looking for enthusiastic and customer-friendly staff, preferably with some relevant experience. But we will provide training, so it’s a good place to build your skills.”

The Burren Centre has been refreshing its menu and decor, and a significant investment in its exhibitions is underway.

Details of all the jobs can be found on the attached PDFs – just click the link.

Vacancies February 2022

The Burren Centre is hiring

 

 

 

Revised Kilfenora square parking proposals – any views?

Here is the new proposal (see map and notes below) from Clare County Council reflecting the input of Kilfenora residents collected in June 2021. If you as a local resident have any further views, send them to Kilfenora Development Community Group by email ([email protected]) or in an envelope at O’Gorman’s shop – by Monday 7 February. 

In June 2021, an extensive consultation was undertaken among Kilfenora residents about parking in the Square. Initial suggestions from Clare County Council about parking bays, bus stops and signage were considered, together with suggestions for installing ‘parklets’ and a central island. The great majority elected for keeping things simple and flexible as regards parking bays and installations.

The Council has reflected this in the recently released revised plan, which is very simple and respects three main conclusions from the consultation.

  • The only useful marked parking bays would be in front of the Burren Centre, including a ‘disabled parking’ space.
  • Access to the lane beside the Cathedral should be kept clear.
  • To address the issue of visitors mistakenly driving down the lane thinking they are heading for Lisdoonvarna, the traffic sign (by the Burren Centre) for Lisdoonvarna before you enter the Square from the Ennistymon direction will be removed. The directional signs near the recycling bins will remain.

Regarding other community requests from the 2021 consultation, note that bicycle racks were installed in a better location, and Bus Eireann bus stop signs may be provided in future. However, the Council as yet has no plan to install electric car charging points as we requested.

 

Kilfenora Trad Festival 2022

Hooray! We plan to stage the Kilfenora Traditional Music Festival again on the weekend of 23-24 April 2022. We will adopt a similar format to previous years with events and sessions on the Friday and Monday as well.

This will be the 12th festival in a series that began in 2009 with the centenary of the Kilfenora Céilí Band. The festival is noted for great concerts and céilís, plus cracking CD launches and pub sessions.

We can announce that our main concert act on Saturday 23 April will be the mighty ‘4 Man & a Dog’, who last appeared in Kilfenora 10 years ago. There should be some great supporting artists as well – watch this space. If you want to book your ticket early, contact Noel O’Donoghue on 0878364780.

The ever-popular Star of Munster Céilí Band will be leading a céilí later on Saturday night – bring your dancing shoes. And put them on again on Sunday for the traditional open-ait céilí in the Square with the incomparable Kilfenora Céilí Band. There will also be a younger band or two featured.

Obviously the pandemic prevented us from staging the festival in 2020 and 2021. We hope that by April the restrictions we have all faced will have been finally removed.

So keep checking the website and facebook page for more news in coming few weeks.

Biodiversity Trail at Holy Well

A new biodiversity trail was launched on 21 October at St Fachtnan’s Holy Well in Kilfenora.

This was created by the Kilfenora Tidy Towns team as part of the work it has undertaken on behalf of Kilfenora Development Community Group to improve the village’s appearance during 2021.

This has included improving and creating new flower beds in and around the village; installing planters in Kilfenora Square; weeding pavements; and undertaking clean-ups of approach roads and graveyards. This has involved some great community efforts, including Kilfenora primary school and kindergarten children planting 500 spring bulbs.

The biodiversity trail was created with the help of locally-based horticulturalist Lieke Schonemann of Lieke’s Natural Way.

The Holy Well is less well known than Kilfenora’s Cathedral and crosses, but is a wonderful place to sit and relax just off the main Square. There is ample seating for both the local community and visitors to use.

The improvement works have been aided by grants obtained by Kilfenora Development from Clare County Council and from the Tidy Towns organisation.

Councillors Joe Garrihy and Joe Killeen have been particularly supportive, along with Regeneration Officer Niamh Wiley, who attended the launch ceremony along with Father Ned and members of the Tidy Towns team, as shown in the photo taken below by Eugene McCafferty on behalf of the Clare Champion.

Kilfenora Trad Festival 2020-1

Regrettably, due to the Covid-19 Pandemic and related Government restriction on live events, we were not able to stage the annual traditional music festival in Kilfenora in 2020 and 2021. We will do so in 2022.

The festival is normally held on the last weekend of April and features great sessions, concerts, CD launches and more besides. In particular it is famous for the open-air céili with the Kilfenora Céili Band on Sunday afternoon in Kilfenora Square.

On 15 August 2020 we were able to stage on open-air performance and CD launch by the young Clare Céili Band. (https://www.facebook.com/clareceiliband/) We were pleased to welcome Catherine Martin (Minister for Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media.) and her family to this event.

Do check the Festival facebook page for news and updates.

The Clare Céili Band

Council’s refusal of 60 ft mast in Kilfenora overturned

An Bord Pleanála has overturned Clare County Council’s refusal of Eircom’s plan to erect a 60 ft telecoms mast just off Kilfenora Square.

Numerous objections from villagers were received by the Council, pointing out that this would be by far the tallest structure in the village, located right by houses fronting on Kilfenora Square (including a childrens’ creche) and on the road to Lickeen Lake, and visible from many parts of the village.  Given Kilfenora’s need to welcome visitors to its historic sites, the erection of an eyesore was seen by concerned locals as close to vandalism.

There IS a need for better cellular coverage in the area. However, there were significant doubts expressed about how much this mast would improve services – to the south, being placed in a dip (which is why it has to be so high), it would probably perform poorly, and in other directions might well only beam signal to outer areas rather than the village itself. The location chosen was clearly determined by the fact that this is a site that already has an Eircom installation, itself something of an eyesore – a matter of cost rather than effectiveness.

In terms of visual appearance, Clare Council rejected Eircom’s description of the mast as being akin to a ‘telegraph pole’. The Council recently and experimentally provided a wi-fi service in the Square; it would take little effort or cost to boost and extend this.

Eircom has provided no information on the precise performance of the mast. Indeed, strikingly this ‘communications company’ did not communicate with the residents of Kilfenora at any stage to explain their intentions and the potential benefits. Unsurprisingly, words such as ‘arrogant’ and ‘incompetent’ were among the politer comments to be heard about Eircom in local discussions.

This also seems to fit a pattern of initiatives by various public bodies that seem reluctant to engage with local communities in any meaningful way.

The same unfortunately applies to An Bord Pleanála. The Assessment by Inspector Adrian Ormsby, in rejecting the objections raised and the decision of Clare Council, was also not communicated to or discussed with the Kilfenora community, many of whom might find his various statements of ‘opinion’ to be quite debateable, for example that the mast will not be on a ‘scenic route’. The report indicates that he has not actually visited Kilfenora, and relied on some grainy photos (as below) and drawings.

An Bord Pleanála states that its decision can only be challenged by a ‘judicial review’, which of course would be hugely expensive.

So the situation seems to be that Kilfenora residents are left in the dark about when this installation will be erected, as well as whether it will actually be of any benefit in terms of connectivity.

Note that a previous attempt to erect a mast near Kilfenora some 15 years ago, in a forested area west of Noughaval (in reality less obtrusive than Eircom’s mast), was defeated after extensive public protests. In the course of that battle, a number of untruthful statements by telecoms company O2 were revealed.

The documentation on this case can be seen here.

A brief write-up on this decision was reported on the Clare Champion on 16.8.21, and can be seen here.

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