Look at the mesmerising golden eye on this handsome Tufted Duck at Castletown House, Kildare! The sunlight caught its purple sheen perfectly.

#photography #EastCoastKin #TeamPixel #TuftedDuck #Kildare #CastletownHouse #IrishWildlife #Birding #Nature #Waterfowl

#Naas Antiques & Vintage Fair, Osprey Hotel, 12pm-5:30pm, this Sunday 8th March!

Admission €2.50 with this flyer (full price €3.50). Under-16s free but must be supervised.

Eircode: W91 X40K #Kildare #VintageIreland

Just look at those incredible radiating clouds over the classical temple at Castletown House, Co. Kildare! The sunlight cast such magical shadows on the grass today. ☁️🏛️

#photography #EastCoastKin #TeamPixel #CastletownHouse #Kildare #IrishHeritage #Cloudscape #Folly #Ireland #NaturePhotography
Being a first-time TD: Aidan Farrelly' Kildare North’s newest Social Democrats TD https://jrnl.ie/6962830 #mastodaoine #speirghorm #iepol #kildare

Being a first-time TD: 'Ivan Y...
Being a first-time TD: 'Ivan Yates called me soulless and preachy, then I won a Dáil seat'

Kildare North’s newest Social Democrats TD has big ideas on how to fix the Dáil. The first: scrap the long holidays.

TheJournal.ie
Being a first-time TD: Aidan Farrelly' Kildare North’s newest Social Democrats TD https://jrnl.ie/6962830 #mastodaoine #speirghorm #iepol #kildare
Being a first-time TD: 'Ivan Yates called me soulless and preachy, then I won a Dáil seat'

Kildare North’s newest Social Democrats TD has big ideas on how to fix the Dáil. The first: scrap the long holidays.

TheJournal.ie
Made a belated pilgrimage to honour #Brigid in #Kildare today. Carried all of my friends and extended circle of good folk in my heart. Thought especially of you, @ebel and hoping that things are going well. I dipped a special cloth offering in the Holy Well and tied it to the tree there. 🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍⚧️ May all be secure in peace! #Mastodaoine
3 Feb 1537: 'Silken' Thomas Fitzgerald, 10th Earl of #Kildare & his five uncles executed at Tyburn #otd for their recent rebellion. From this point on, for almost two centuries, English government in Ireland will be led by the #English born viceroys with the odd exception.

Imbolg, St Brigid, and the Quickening of the Year

It is 1st February 2026, which means that today is Imbolc (or Imbolg in modern Irish), an ancient Gaelic festival marking the point halfway between the winter solstice and vernal equinox.  In the old pagan calendar, this day is regarded as the first day of spring, as it is roughly the time when the first spring lambs are born, daffodils etc start to appear, and the days get noticeably longer.  The name Imbolg may be derived from “i mbolg” meaning “in the belly”, referring to the pregnancy of ewes. This time corresponds to the Welsh Gŵyl Fair y Canhwyllau and is also sometimes called, rather beautifully, The Quickening of the Year.  It’s a time for rebirth and renewal after the darkness of winter.

Incidentally, in spoken Irish it is common to place an unstressed vowel sound – often schwa – between certain pairs of consonants, e.g. the name “Colm” is pronounced “Collum”. This extends to Hiberno-English: e.g. many Irish people say “fillum” for “film”. Imbolg is therefore pronounced something like “Imbollig”. In phonology this is called  anaptyxis.

In Ireland Imbolc is usually often referred to a Lá Fhéile Bríde,  St Brigid’s Day, after St Brigid of Kildare, whose feast day is today 1st February. There are events going on in Maynooth, which is in Couny Kildare, but I am not in Maynooth today so I don’t know what is going on. Incidentally, the Celts counted each day starting from sunset, so the Imbolc/St Brigid’s Day celebrations in County Kildare started last night, 31st January, but I didn’t see any of them either.

In the Northern hemisphere, in astronomical terms, the solar year is defined by the two solstices (summer, around June 21st, and winter, around December 21st) and the equinoxes (spring, around March 21st, and Autumn, around September 21st). These four events divide the year into four roughly equal parts of about 13 weeks each.

If you divide each of these intervals in two you divide the year into eight pieces of six and a bit weeks each. The dates midway between the astronomical events mentioned above are the cross-quarter days, of which Imbolc is one. They are:

  • 1st February: Imbolc (Candlemas)
  • 1st May: Beltane (Mayday)
  • 1st August: Lughnasadh (Lammas)
  • 1st November: Samhain (All Saints Day)

The names I’ve added in italics are taken from the Celtic/neo-Pagan and, in parenthesis the Christian terms, for the cross-quarter daysThese timings are rough because the dates of the equinoxes and solstices vary from year to year. Imbolc is often taken to be the 2nd of February (Groundhog Day) and Samhain is sometimes taken to be October 31st, Halloween but hopefully you get the point that although the Pagan festivals have been appropriated by the Christian church, they have much older origins. The status of St Brigid herself is particular obscure; it is not known for sure whether she was a real person or Christian appropriation of a Celtic deity, or some amalgamation of those.

Until recently there was an anomaly in that the first of these was the only one not associated with a Bank Holiday. That was changed in 2022 and tomorrow, Monday 2nd February, will be the St Brigid’s Day holiday. It would have been the first of teaching in Semester 2 had it not been a holiday; we return to teaching on Tuesday. As you may have surmised, I’ve taken the opportunity of the long weekend for a bit of a break and a trip elsewhere.

P.S. As it also happens, today is also the 8th anniversary of the very first lecture I gave in Maynooth, on Computational Physics, on 1st February 2018. I”ll be giving pretty much the same lecture again on Thursday 5th February.

#Imbolc #Imbolg #Kildare #StBrigidSDay #TheQuickeningOfTheYear