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A walk along the misty river Erkina

The Path by the Misty River 4
The River Erkina, Durrow, County Kilkenny
Landscape Photography : Nigel Borrington

County Kilkenny has many rivers some are wide and flow the full length of the county, others like the river Erkina are much smaller and act as tributaries.

One Morning last year just after a big storm I took a walk along the banks of the Erkina, its was a damp and misty morning full of atmosphere as the river was clouded in a mist.

Misty river Erkina black and white gallery

The Path by the Misty River 1

The Path by the Misty River 5

The Path by the Misty River 2

The Path by the Misty River 3

The Path by the Misty River 6

The Path by the Misty River 7

The Path by the Misty River 8

Sunrise from the Mountains, Poem by : Anna Katherine Green

Comeragh Mountains 1
Knockanaffrin,Comeragh Mountains, County Waterford
Landscape Photography : Nigel Borrington

Sunrise from the Mountains

Poem by : Anna Katherine Green

Hung thick with jets of burning gold, the sky
Crowns with its glorious dome the sleeping earth,
Illuminating hill and vale. O’erhead,
The nebulous splendor of the milky way

Comeragh Mountains 8

Stretches afar; while, crowding up the heavens,
The planets worship ‘fore the thrones of God,
Casting their crowns of gold beneath His feet.
It is a scene refulgent! and the very stars
Tremble above, as though the voice divine
Reverberated through the dread expanse.
But soft! a change!
A timid creeping up of gray in east–
A loss of stars on the horizon’s verge–
Gray fades to pearl and spreads up zenithward,
The while a wind runs low from hill to hill,
As if to stir the birds awake, rouse up
The nodding trees, and draw off silence like
A garment from the drowsy earth. The heavens
Are full of points of light that go and come
And go, and leave a tender ashy sky.
The pearl has pushed its way to north and south,
Save where a line spun ‘tween two peaks at east,

Comeragh Mountains 7

Gleams like a cobweb silvered by the sun.
It grows–a gilded cable binding hill
To hill! it widens to a dazzling belt
Half circling earth, then stretches up on high–
A golden cloth laid down ‘fore kingly feet.
Thus spreads the light upon the heavens above,
While earth hails each advancing step, and lifts
Clear into view her rich empurpled hills,
To keep at even beauty with the sky.

Comeragh Mountains 3

The neutral tints are deeply saffroned now;
In streaks, auroral beams of colored light
Shoot up and play about the long straight clouds
And flood the earth in seas of crimson. Ah,
A thrill of light in serpentine, quick waves,
A stooping of the eager clouds, and lo,
Majestic, lordly, blinding bright, the sun
Spans the horizon with its rim of fire!

Comeragh Mountains 2

ST Patrick’s day , Irish landscape Gallery.

Irish Landscape photography 1
Coolagh old church , County Kilkenny
Landscape photography : Nigel Borrington

Today is St Patrick’s day here in Ireland and its a public Holiday, For many people religion will play a big part in the day.

Personally I love the outdoors far more and will spend most of the day walking and exploring the local landscape, I find nature and open spaces far more spiritual.

The following gallery of images are just some images taken in and around the wonderful county of Kilkenny.

What ever your doing today enjoy yourself and a happy St Patrick day.

Kilkenny Landscape Gallery

Irish Landscape photography 2

Irish Landscape photography 3

Irish Landscape photography 4

Irish Landscape photography 5

Monday Trees at Coolagh 001

Finding the light 03

The Light through the clouds

Mirror lenses 4

Kells Priory 100

Kells Priory 102

Knockroe pasage tomb 4

Knockroe pasage tomb 6

Knockroe pasage tomb 2

The Waterwheel 1

Jerpoint Abbey 1

Jerpoint Abbey 4

Friary Green Callan

Friary Green Callan 2

Sundays on the river bank 7

Sundays on the river bank 10

Littleton bog 7

Landscape from the Irish Hills and a Poem By : S. Weir Mitchell

A view from the Irish hills 5

Landscape from the Irish hills
Landscape Photography : Nigel Borrington

The hills of the South east of Ireland are on of my favourite locations to wander and go for long walk, they are not as spectacular as the peaks of the Kerry mountains but there is a stillness here. Space to think and clear your mind and just walk and photograph the landscape.

I will let the words of the below poem say everything else for me, complimenting just how much I like these locations in the soft Irish hills.

S. Weir Mitchell

HERE have I wandered often these many years
Far from the world’s restraint, my heart at ease,
With equal liberty of joy or tears
To welcome Nature’s generosities,
Where these gray summits give the unburdened mind
To clearer thought, in freedom unconfined.

Kind to the dreamer is this solitude.
Fair courtesies of silence wait to know
What hopes are flattering a poet mood,
Stirred by frail ecstasies that come and go,
Like birds that let the quivering leaves prolong
The broken music of their passing song.

Here may we choose what company shall be ours;
Here bend before one fair divinity
To whose dear feet we bring the spirit-flowers,
Fragments of song, stray waifs of poetry,
The orphans of dead dreams, more sweet than aught
Won by decisive days of sober thought.

Landscape of the Irish hills a Gallery

A view from the Irish hills 1

A view from the Irish hills 2

A view from the Irish hills 3

A view from the Irish hills 4

A view from the Irish hills 6

To the River a Poem by : Edgar Allan Poe

Sunset over the river Suir 1
Sun set over the river Suir, County Tipperary
Irish Landscape Photography : Nigel Borrington

To the River (1829)

by : Edgar Allan Poe
(1809-1849)

Fair river! in thy bright, clear flow
Of crystal, wandering water,
Thou art an emblem of the glow
Of beauty-the unhidden heart-
The playful maziness of art
In old Alberto’s daughter;

Sunset over the river Suir 2.

But when within thy wave she looks-
Which glistens then, and trembles-
Why, then, the prettiest of brooks
Her worshipper resembles;
For in his heart, as in thy stream,
Her image deeply lies-
His heart which trembles at the beam
Of her soul-searching eyes.

Irish Landscape Photography : The barn by the bank of the river suir.

river suir 1
Images from the River Suir, County Tipperary
Landscape photography : Nigel Borrington

A walk along the River Suir as it flows through county Tipperary offers some wonderful views, the old stone barns and farm yards have to be amongst the best of these.

I took the pictures below on a spring walk last year, a warm Sunday afternoon.

The Barn by the river Suir, Gallery

river suir 4

river suir 3

river suir 2

river suir 1

The Green man of Spring returns to the woodlands.

In woodland places 1
Knockadrina woodlands, Knocktopher, County Kilkenny
Irish Landscape photography : Nigel Borrington

Untitled-1

The Cult of the Green Man

Greenman :

Of all the pagan gods, the woodland spirit variously called the Green Man or Jack-in-the-Green is one that has lived on the longest in folklore.

The Green Man is seen mainly as a symbol of spring and the rebirth of the earth after winter.Carvings of Green Men can often be seen in churches, usually in the form of faces with branches and vines sprouting from nose and mouth.

HISTORY OF THE GREEN MAN

Magic in trees

The Magic of Trees

Stukeleys DruidIn Britain, the Druids worshipped such trees as the oak and the rowan and attributed great power to them. When people touch wood to ward off misfortune, this comes from the times when guardian spirits were supposed to live in trees. Touching the tree was a mark of respect to the spirit, as well as a plea for good fortune.

Woodland Gallery

In woodland places 2

In woodland places 5

In woodland places 3

In woodland places 4

In woodland places 6

In woodland places 7

Monday Morning, The Motte at Slievenamon

slievenamon Motte 3
The Motte at Slievenamon , County Tipperary
Landscape Photography : Nigel Borrington

The Motte

This morning it felt like Spring for the first time here in Ireland, we have a good chance of a period of sunny days for the entire week and it was a wonderful Morning.

I took the chance to visits our nearest Mountain Slievenamon and walk around its lower paths and fields, one of these fields contains the remains of an old Norman Motte. From the top of which you get some wonderful views of the Landscape around this area.

A Motte is the foundations for a motte-and-bailey castle with consisted of a wooden or stone keep situated on a raised earthwork called a motte, accompanied by an enclosed courtyard, or bailey, surrounded by a protective ditch and palisade. These castles were built across northern Europe from the 10th century onwards, spreading from Normandy and Anjou in France, into the Holy Roman Empire in the 11th century. The Normans introduced the design into England and Wales following their invasion in 1066. Motte-and-bailey castles were adopted in Scotland and Ireland.

This is a location I will return to many times this year just to capture how the seasons effect the look of this wonderful setting.

Gallery

slievenamon Motte 1

slievenamon Motte 2

slievenamon Motte 4

Single tree, By : Daniel Dawes

Autonomy 2014 1
The Single tree on the river Barrow ,
County Kilkenny,
Landscape Photography : Nigel Borrington

Single tree

By : Daniel Dawes

I watch the light move across the land,
Gliding across the fields with ease,
Shades of green shifting constantly,
Darkness and light working together.

A single tree simply surviving,
Gracefully accepting all seasons,
Its deep roots keeping it grounded,
Its leaves allowing it to sing its song.

Autonomy 2014 2

I watch its movement in the breeze,
I since its aliveness,
I feel its stillness,
I understand its far more than its label.

The invisible wind changes direction,
The sun falls behind the clouds,
It becomes colder,
The senses pick this up but the stillness remains.

A thought passes through my mind,
A simple question,
I choose to follow it,
It simply sits in my awareness.

Autonomy 2014 3

What is this stillness?
That does not change with the environment,
That is unaffected by thought,
That senses the sensations.

I look back to the tree,
The awareness looks back at myself,
The mirror begins to reflect the same thing,
I thank the tree for its lesson.

Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening, Poem By : Robert Frost

Stopping by the woods on a snowy evening 3
Boherboy woods and landscape, Cloneen. County Tipperary
Irish Landscape Photography : Nigel Borrington

Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening

By Robert Frost

Who’s woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.

Stopping by the woods on a snowy evening 5.

My horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.

Stopping by the woods on a snowy evening 2.

He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound’s the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.

Stopping by the woods on a snowy evening 4.

The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.

Stopping by the woods on a snowy evening 1.

And miles to go before I sleep.
And me with a promises to keep!