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May Bush Féile celebrations take root in Wexford with plenty of traditional music, song and poetry
May Bush Féile celebrations take root in Wexford with plenty of traditional music, song and poetry

Irish Independent

time20-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Independent

May Bush Féile celebrations take root in Wexford with plenty of traditional music, song and poetry

Local performers Anne Mulhall, Helena Dunbar, Pat Fitzpatrick, Mick Doyle and CCÉ Craobh Chaoimhin Naofa took to the stage at Christ Church in Gorey recently. Special guests on the night included; Mark Redmond, Éire Ní Fhaoláin and Chulainn Ó Faoláin. Speaking after the community concert, organiser Rachel Uí Fhaoláin said: 'It was brilliant, an absolutely fantastic community event. It was lovely because the residents from Oakfield Nursing Home came out and joined us. They were so delighted to be involved. We collaborated with them last year on the Gorey May Bush Féile as well, so they came to the concert and really enjoyed it'. The celebrations didn't end there as the entire community was also invited to be involved in the tradition of decorating eggshells for their May Bush. 1st, 2nd and 3rd place prizes were awarded for the best decorated eggshells, which people hung on their own May Bush at home, at school, or on the communal Gorey May Bush on May Eve. Others joined the group at Gorey Library for the May Bush Decorating & Traditional Song Workshop for families where singer and folklore collector Rachel Uí Fhaoláin led the workshop.

Wexford school revive old May Bush tradition at special community event
Wexford school revive old May Bush tradition at special community event

Irish Independent

time11-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Independent

Wexford school revive old May Bush tradition at special community event

An old village tradition was revived at the school on the afternoon of May 2, as the school held a May Bush ceremony to mark the start of the summer. In accordance with the tradition, the first decorations were put up on May 1 (May Day), but the school held the ceremony the following day to coincide with Kilanerin National School's garden club and the mid-term break. More than 50 people turned up to celebrate including schoolchildren, the school band, local residents and people from across Wexford, Wicklow, Dublin and overseas. Niamh Clarke of Kilanerin Tidy Towns was one of the leaders of the event alongside the school's garden club volunteers and Principal Mary Byrne. Kilanerin Tidy Towns thanked the students for their involvement and for helping decorate and playing music. They also gave a special mention to their 'May King' and 'May Queen' as well as Maureen Bushe, who remembers a May Bush Féile from her youth in Ballyfuff around 90 years ago.

How are eggs and Easter connected? ‘Gugging' and other customs explained
How are eggs and Easter connected? ‘Gugging' and other customs explained

Agriland

time21-04-2025

  • General
  • Agriland

How are eggs and Easter connected? ‘Gugging' and other customs explained

The egg is synonymous with Easter festivities, with its roots dating back to the pre-Christian symbol of fertility and restoration. The egg was later adopted by Early Christians as a symbol of the resurrection of Christ – an empty shell representing the empty tomb from which he rose. In Wexford, the age-old tradition of 'gugging for eggs' – which involves children dressing up in colourful costumes and visiting neighbours to ask for eggs – is still practiced in small pockets of the county. Folklorist Michael Fortune of explained that historically, gugging was mostly done on Holy Saturday or on Easter Monday in some cases, and was often perceived as a 'class-based practice', typically involving children from poorer families. The name derives from the colloquial Irish term for an egg, known as a 'gug' or a 'gugee egg', which is still widely used today to refer to the simple dish of a boiled egg, mashed together in a cup with butter and salt, the folklorist explained. Armed with sticks, baskets, aprons, old clothes, and masks, children would walk out from towns and villages into the countryside, where they would call into farms, singing rhymes and uttering the words 'me aester (Easter) egg on you?', to which they would receive an egg and be on their way. Children would then have a picnic, or a 'clúdog', during which they would light a fire and boil the collected eggs in a field, often adding fragments of leaves, flowers, or berries before tying string around the eggs in an effort to decorate them prior to eating. An almost identical tradition is also practiced in Sweden and in Finland, Fortune asserted. Easter eggs In the past, the church prohibited Catholics from eating eggs during the week before Easter, which resulted in believers devouring several on Easter Sunday, with a side of soda bread marked with a cross, as a means of celebrating the end of lent. This custom of splurging out on eggs is still evident today, with chocolate varieties having since replaced the traditional egg. Additionally on Holy Saturday, people would often have salt blessed, which would later be used on the eggs on Easter Sunday morning for good luck. According to Fortune, the same salt was also often used to by farmers, who would sprinkle it on their livestock as a means of blessing the animal. Lastly, the egg shells would usually be put aside and used to decorate the 'May Bush' on the eve of or during May Day, in a bid to appease the fairies or 'the good people', as some people referred to them as. The May Bush was typically a a hawthorn tree, which is notorious in Irish folklore for its apparent connections with the 'fairy people'. This act was mostly undertaken by girls, who in addition to colouring the egg shells, would collect seasonal flowers, rags, and ribbons to don the tree in an effort to ward off misfortune for the year ahead. Additional Easter customs: Spring clean – traditionally, people would clean the house from top to bottom on Good Friday, before the local priest would visit to offer an easter blessing; Holy well – water collected from holy wells on Good Friday was considered particularly potent in healing properties; Haircut – getting ones hair cut on Good Friday was thought to grant immunity from headaches for the year ahead; Shaving – people were advised to avoid shaving on Good Friday as shedding blood on the day was considered to bring bad luck to the subject.

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