Showing posts with label Sir Ranulph Fiennes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sir Ranulph Fiennes. Show all posts

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Immrama 2010 - another terrific weekend in Lismore

The 8th Immrama Travel Writing Festival has ended and it was a great success - I am still on a high after the buzz of all the events and the Eason's bag bursting with new books signed by the authors beckons from the sunroom table - a winter of reading is warmly anticipated, if they don't get me through the summer.

We had a blast - I am not going to do a journalistic resumé of the weekend, just dip in and out of what floated my boat - an apt analogy as Immrama is all about voyaging about in boats! The line-up was impressive as you'll know from my last post and the one from the launch, and there were some events and speakers that stood out more than others.

I found the deadpan droll self-deprecation of Sir Ranulph Twistleton-Wickham-Fiennes hilarious (with a name like that you'd need a major sense of humour!) and very engaging. He had the capacity audience of 500 enthralled with his tales of derring-do boys' own adventures, and was very open about his motives for doing expeditions - to put bread on the table, nothing loftier or nobler than that. He has written his autobiography and also a family bio, and some motivational books on fitness and endurance - he has been monitored and evaluated more than a recession-bound nation by the IMF. The elephant in the room of course (which he was asked about and duly elaborated on) was his digital self-amputation of most of the fingers of his left hand following a close encounter with Arctic water that resulted in frostbite and gangrene. He couldn't wait the requisite six months the medics demanded so off he went to the shed where he hacksawed them off - a messy job with the hand saw so he hightailed to the hardware shop for the Black and Decker version which did the business. All tastefully accompanied by graphic colour photographs, and not for the faint-hearted.

Today's Irish Times has a feature piece on him, and Immrama gets another mention . Manchán Magan wrote a nice piece last Saturday on it, so it's really arrived as a festival when it gets such national acclaim.



He seems to have been an impoverished aristocrat with a string of impressive titles and ancestry. That seems to be a pattern in such circles, and I still laugh at the description of the Anglo-Irish aristos of yore, in the post-colonial era so well described by Waterford's own late Molly Keane in Good Behaviour when she wrote about how the dogs ate better than they did in their shabby gentility lifestyle. Her father bought the dogs steak, a rarity on the family dinner table.

Homan Potterton wrote in Rathcormick that the Anglo-Irish were distinguishable from the Irish Protestants in the nascent Republic as the ones where the dogs occupied all the comfy armchairs while their owners shivered in their unheated big rooms, sitting on kitchen chairs. He distanced himself from these recent settlers and landlord classes, as a proud Irishman from a Protestant family with roots in Ireland for over four centuries.

Back to Immrama - we were very lucky to have an invitation for the premiére of a film on the life of Lismore's internationally renowned travel writer - Dervla Murphy - which was unique as she is such a private person. It had wonderful cinematography, and showed the moods of Lismore trailing Dervla through the Warren Path and down by the Blackwater as well as around the Old Market where she lives. It was a bit surreal to see familiar faces on the big screen - her daughter Rachel in Italy with her three daughters, Dervla herself, and Manchán Magan the film maker and writer/journalist who was in the audience - he was at Immrama as a visitor this year, having been the Literary Breakfast speaker last year.

We enjoyed Tim Severin on Saturday evening - he has been on some incredible voyages and writes novels now based on his experiences - the Viking Trilogy and the Pirate Trilogy - as well as lots of non-fiction based on his voyages. He lives in West Cork and is practically an honorary Irishman by now, and he showed some memorable film clips from his journeys, particularly the Brendan Voyage which explores the possibility of the Irish monk travelling to America centuries before Columbus.


The Literary Breakfast in Ballyrafter House was lovely - Damien Lewis was speaking about Africa and Burma where he has written the stories of some incredibly brave women of the Southern Sudanese conflict and the Darfur genocide, and the Karen refugees from Burma. A serendipitous moment was meeting his Tanzanian partner - we had a Kiswahili exchange - a bit rusty on my part but a surprise for her to meet someone in Lismore who could attempt to speak it! More serendipity was the link to previous Immrama speakers, as Tim Butcher

knows him and commented on one of his books.


A new name for us was Pico Iyer who is an amazing, softly spoken travel writer and philosopher who has written a novel set in Cuba and a number of travel books on subjects as diverse as the Dalai Lama and airports - he has been described as a transcendental travel writer - and he reminds me of Alain de Botton with his reflective take on the trivia of travel. He was with his Japanese partner Hiroko, a lovely lady with silk clothing to die for - she wore a traditional Tibetan dress with wonderful intricate weaving and fabulous wraps - and they live in Japan though they travel all over the world. They spent the weekend in Lismore so we met on numerous occasions outside of his talk and book-signing.

Jan Morris was another rare treat and a great honour for Immrama to have such a well-known and respected writer speaking - she is in her eighties and has led an amazing life, writing over thirty books on so many subjects and places. She spoke at Fortwilliam House, a Georgian hunting lodge dating back to the 1830s - a wonderful place now owned privately and offered as a venue for Immrama to stage an event. A marquee on the tennis courts was the perfect location for the 150+ who were there for the closing gig of the weekend - although rain stopped play on two occasions as the noise on the roof drowned out the microphone. Undaunted, she read from her latest book Contact! and followed it with a Q&A session with Pico Iyer and her friend and biographer Paul Clements, who was here for the third time doing a Travel Memoir writing workshop over the weekend. We had a chance to savour the delights of Fortwilliam House before and after the talk as there was a wine reception beforehand and we had supper there afterwards, with some of the other guests. The vistas of parkland rolling down to the river Blackwater are idyllic and in the glorious weather which Lismore had for most of the weekend it was perfect - rainshowers notwithstanding!

There were Poetry Readings for kids in the Park by Alan Murphy, a locally based poet, and Pippa Sweeney, Irish Language Workshops for Primary Schools by Áine Uí Fhoghlú, Paul Clements' Creative Writing, Poetry Slams, and The Molly Keane Short Story Award, all going on over the weekend. So there was something for everyone, and the Family Fun Day in the Park on Sunday afternoon is a firm favourite fixture, with Buí Bolg (Yellowbellies) from Wexford entertaining with jousters and damsels in distress, and face painters from Lismore's Foróige, as well as the talented band Carouse who kept the crowd going for the afternoon.

The Farmers' Market was buzzing all weekend and hopefully they had plenty of business, with a great variety of stalls from Jane's ceramics to Pie in the Sky treats, with lots in between. A real treat this year was to meet one of my fellow bloggers - Ann from Inkpots'nQuills via Wisconsin and Dungarvan who was here last year before we met in the blogosphere!

I should really break up this post into a few parts as I could go on for way past anyone's attention span (and probably have done so) but I just want to convey a sense of the weekend while it is still fresh in my mind. We had late nights and early mornings which took its toll in that I was running on adrenaline and tea all weekend - no alcohol whatsoever as I daren't risk a hangover headache - and I was pretty wrecked on Monday! Lucky it was a day off work for me, and I could chill and zone out a bit. We were in a different pub each night as the Festival Club diplomatically spread itself around - and it really felt like old friends came to call as we met so many people who were at previous Immrama weekends - including Manchán, Paul Clements and some of the regular visitors. One of the joys of Immrama is the social contact with writers, speakers, journalists, locals and visitors all together at the events and the social gatherings afterwards, and the great accessibility to the speakers by the general public.

Who knows how many more of you might make it to Lismore for Immrama 2011! You'll be guaranteed a great time and plenty of good memories - as well as a lot of new books!

I hope you like the photos - they just give a flavour of the wonderful weekend in a lovely corner of the country.

From the top:

  • Sir Ranulph Fiennes
  • Fortwilliam House
  • Audience at Ranulph Fiennes
  • Jan Morris, Pico Iyer and Paul Clements at Fortwilliam, and audience
  • Shayne and Jany with Sofia in the Park
  • Our sons with Ranulph Fiennes
  • Me and sons and Jany with Tim Severin
  • Larks in the Park with jousters
  • Damien Lewis at the Ballyrafter House Breakfast
  • Me with Pico Iyer and Hiroko
  • Jane Jermyn Ceramics at the Farmers' Market
  • Áine Uí Fhoghlú (Irish Poet) with Bernard Leddy, schoolchildren and me at Lismore Library
  • Me with Ann - bloggers united!

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Countdown to Immrama 2010 - Lismore Festival of Travel Writing

I am too busy to write a proper post these days as I am getting swept up in the flow of the preparations for Immrama 2010 - our literary festival of travel writing in Lismore. I blogged about the launch here and also last year's festival here. We are looking forward to this year's festival as there are two great keynote speakers - Sir Ranulph Fiennes and Tim Severin.

Both are speaking on Saturday June 12, which happens to be our wedding anniversary. For the past 7 years this has fallen during the festival so it's subsumed into the events and celebrated on the hoof, rather than romantic candlelit dinners-for-two. We're more likely to be at the gig and then at whatever pub the festival crowd gathers for the evening afterwards - one of the many in Lismore, where we enjoy the post-event celebration and the post-mortem of the event, and chat to the presenters as they usually come along.

So next week I hope to post on the festival and how it went. There has been great national radio coverage and also press coverage this year, with interviews on Arena and the Pat Kenny Show on Radio One (RTÉ - Ireland's national broadcaster) with Pico Iyer and Ranulph Fiennes respectively.

Pico Iyer is a new name for me, and he sounds really interesting, having a philosophical approach to travel, reminiscent of Alain de Botton, in that he writes about the experience of air travel and airports and how we get hung up on the destination and ignore the journey. Maybe that's why I like slow travel - overland rail and road trips appeal far more than mad stressful flights and jet lag!

There is a film tonight in the Courthouse Theatre on Lismore's own travel writer extraordinaire, Dervla Murphy. A retrospective on her life, the film crew have been following her for the last year and this is the result, and it is going to be screened over the weekend for the punters at the festival as tonight is invite only.

Our book club (real, not virtual bloggers' one!) are planning to go to Sunday's Literary Breakfast with who sounds like a treat of a travel writer, Damien Lewis, in Ballyrafter House Hotel. He is another new name and we are looking forward to his talk while we enjoy the full Irish heart-attack-on-a-plate breakfast!

Meanwhile we pray for fine weather as it's been a very rainy week so far, as you can see from the raindrops on the lovely Irises in the garden the other evening. As it's Exam Time -Leaving and Junior Cert State Exams are in full swing - we can expect good weather - it's one of life's ironies that the weather is always sweltering during the weeks of the exams!

Today is fine and dry but Monday's Bank Holiday was a washout. Good for the farmers and gardeners, and it was great that the weekend to then was blissfully sub-tropical. The Farmers' Market looked positively Provençal, as in the photos even though these ones were taken the previous weekend - in the interests of blog integrity I can't pass them off as last weekend's as one already put in an appearance in another post!

Carmen at Lismore Castle was the inaugural opera of the new Lismore Music Festival, and was widely acclaimed locally, though the Irish Times' Michael Dervan was less fulsome in its praise. They had two performances, and if it takes off in future years it will be good for Lismore and have a knock-on effect on Immrama. We noticed this year that every preview in the national media for Carmen also referenced Immrama so we will become known as a cultural watershed for Munster and Co. Waterford.
(I have to declare an interest on a few fronts: I look after first aid, hubby Jan is the Festival Administrator and graphic designer son Martin designed the logo you see above for the first Immrama when he was still in secondary school.)

Friday, April 30, 2010

Launch of Immrama Travel Writing Festival 2010 - Exploration and Endurance in Lismore Castle


Last Wednesday night I attended the launch of the 2010 Immrama Festival of Travel Writing, which just keeps on growing from strength to strength, even seemingly recession-proof. This year's line-up is as star-striking as previous years, and we are all excited and looking forward to the big weekend itself, just over a month away. The festival takes place in Lismore from 10th-13th June and there are some innovations that could become part and parcel of future festivals.

The format is quite similar to last year in that there are two main speakers on the Saturday, and this year they are the renowned Arctic explorer Sir Ranulph Fiennes on Saturday afternoon, followed that evening by the intrepid voyager, Tim Severin. They are indeed a stellar pair, and promise to be captivating for their audience, and they embody the theme of this year's festival - Travels: Exploration and Endurance.

Another exciting innovation this year is the world premiere of a film on the life and times of Dervla Murphy, Lismore's very own world-renowned travel writer. That she allowed a film crew to shadow her for some time is indeed quite a coup, as she is media-shy and leads a quiet life in Lismore between her travelling. This is going to look at her life and interviews with Rachel, her daughter who lives in Italy will be included, among others.

Dervla follows in the tradition of the great women explorers of the Victorian and Edwardian era, of the Freya Stark and Mary Kingsley mould, where she heads into the great unknown and eschews modern means of transport as much as possible to enable her to see and engage with the local people and see the country in depth. This usually means by bicycle, though she has had adventures with mules and horses, and even buses and trucks, where the bike didn't make it or she had to abandon it through injury, as happened in Laos, when she injured her foot and had to go by bus to Luang Prabang. Hence the title One Foot in Laos. She met a number of our old friends and former colleagues, and it is lovely that we still have contact with the self-same friends thanks to the wonders of Facebook and email. Some progress you just have to love!

Jan Morris, who wrote for the Guardian and is a prolific historian and travel writer, will speak at a new venue, Fortwilliam House, outside Lismore. This is a private big house not normally open to the public so it's a rare opportunity to visit and admire its fabulous location near the River Blackwater close to Glencairn Cistercian Abbey.
Two new names for me, Pico Iyer and Damien Lewis will speak at the festival - Pico on the Friday night and Damien at the literary breakfast. This is one of the best-loved events at Immrama and the thought of getting out of the scratcher early on a Sunday to face the full Irish in Ballyrafter House Hotel at 8.30am doesn't seem to be a deterrent at all.

I feel I am getting to be quite a regular in Lismore Castle, between the Sotheby's Irish sales preview and the launch of the summer exhibition last Friday (not more of which anon as it just baffled and bewildered me to the point where I couldn't possibly blog about it, but I am sure it has merit for those into video installation art form. It just didn't float my boat, and a blacked out gallery devoted to looped videos of obscure subject matter with a recurrently minimalist theme just had me wondering what it was all about. It evidently brought out my inner philistine, much to the despair of all you art aficionados out there.

The launch was held in the Pugin Room which you will have seen on my Devonshire day posts here and there, as well as last year's post on the launch. It was attended by various dignitaries and officials, and was launched by Waterford's County Manager. There was a tension-mounting PowerPoint slideshow revealing slowly the various speakers and presenters coming to Immrama, with the unveiling of the keynote speakers left till last. As ever, there was a collective gasp of astonishment from the gathered audience as people who didn't know from Adam who was coming realised what a terrific treat was in store for the punters at Immrama 2010 in Lismore this June.

We all enjoyed cheese and wine or apple juice (the best ever made in Cappoquin and called Crinnaughton after the townland where the apples grow, it's an artisan local product and is not that widely available, but worth the search!). Some of us then repaired to Foley's on the Mall for further celebration of our good fortune at being involved in one of the best boutique festivals in Ireland - if the Irish Times calls it that then it's good enough for us!

Bookings have been flying in since the launch, just over a day ago, and it looks like some events will sell out fast. The national press has featured Immrama already, as in this article from today's Examiner. Watch this space in June for the posts on the festival itself, and if you're on Facebook, sign up to the Immrama fan page for live updates and news!

The Photos show the Launch - from the top:


  • Slide of Keynote Speakers

  • Jan and me

  • Jane Jermyn (ceramic artist) and me

  • Edward Lynch, Garrett Daly, the producer of Dervla's documentary from Mixed Bag Media, and Bernard Leddy, Mayor of Lismore & Immrama chairman

  • Mary Houlihan (Immrama PRO) presenting launch

  • Helen Leddy and me

  • MC Edward

  • Castle Courtyard (with WLRFM Beetle!)

  • Presenters of children's workshop at Immrama Pippa Sweeney and Alan Murphy, with Jane Jermyn

  • Peter Dowd, Immrama president