I give examples here of three of his posters, all of which are available for purchase. Roger has done over sixty sea and harbour lights around the coast and they are available as a poster of 16 or singly. If your ancestor was a lighthouse keeper, or if you hail from a particular coastal part of Ireland, or if you simply like the vivid colour of the posters, they'd be a great purchase, particularly at this time of the year. I should point out that Roger's work is not limited to lighthouses but encompasses many cultural areas of Irish life.
A blog about Irish Lighthouses past and present and other selected maritime beacons and buoys of interest. If anybody has any corrections or additional info on any post, please use the comment section or the email address on the right.
Saturday, November 19, 2016
Lighthouse Posters
Roger Reilly has spent the last year or so illustrating the lighthouses around the coast of Ireland. The body of work that he has produced is quite amazing and the results of his work can be found here and here. When I think that my blog involves finding the lighthouses and then taking a few quick amateur snaps, the months of effort that must have gone into the design and production of these posters is truly amazing
Sunday, November 6, 2016
Irish Postage Stamps
Don't know if anyone has seen the latest set of postage stamps from an Post, the Irish Postal Service. The set illustrates the many facets of the work of the Commissioner of Irish Lights. The stamps show (from top left working clockwise) CIL working on a buoy; a helicopter at Fanad Head lighthouse; the CIL HQ in Dun Laoghaire; and the CIL service vessel Granuaille steaming past a lighthouse. I've actually been trying to figure out which lighthouse it is. Rotten Island? Dingle? Looks west of Ireland anyway.
Tuesday, November 1, 2016
Kilcredaune Head
I actually bagged Kilcredaune Head Lighthouse
before the two at Corlis Point (previous two posts) but because
lighthouse-spotting has probably come to an end for the winter, I preferred to
leave this more aesthetically pleasing lighthouse up on my home page, rather
than a concrete hut or skeletal tower.
To find the lighthouse, it would depend if you are
coming from Kilkee or Loop Head. From Kilkee, take the road for Carrigaholt. Go
through this village and keep going out the other side. After about one mile,
the road bends around to the right, while a smaller road goes straight on. You
need to go straight on.
From Loop Head, when you get to Kilbaha, leave the
R487 and branch left onto the L2002 to Carrigaholt. About a mile from the
latter, the road bends around to the left, but you need to take the smaller
road to the right.
Okay, we're both on the same road. The road gets
smaller and grassier. Eventually you come to a closed red gate. I suppose you
could open up the gate and drive up but I parked up and walked it. its about
300 yards to the lighthouse.
There was a Corsa parked outside so I assumed
there was somebody in the keeper's cottage but though I rang and knocked, I got
no reply. Your view of the tower is somewhat obscured by outhouses but if you
wander around the cottage it will bring you out to the front, where a good
photograph can be had. Its a bit squat but a nice looking lighthouse
nonetheless. The outhouses are in poor nick. The front door of the cottage
looks well worn but apart from that, everything looks okay. The light was
deactivated on 3rd March 2011.
The lighthouse here was established in 1827 and
is 13 meters high. It became unwatched in 1929 and fully automatic in 1991. It
had a white light flashing one second in six. The white tower is 43 feet high
(about 14 meters)
Sat nav - 52° 34.8´ N 9° 42.6´ W
Presumably this is
some kind of radar?
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