The Blindboy Podcast - Fairy Forts, Anthrax, Dubai Chocolate bars and Seagulls are all intimately connected and flow as one in the cognitive ether

Episode Date: April 22, 2025

Fairy Forts, Anthrax, Dubai Chocolate bars and Segulls are all intimately connected  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Kiss the bin man's wrinkle you handstand Antonis. Welcome to the Blind Boy podcast. Can you hear that noise? That's the sound of rain. As you know, I moved into a new office, a new office where I record this podcast, and I moved in here a couple of months ago.
Starting point is 00:00:22 And I did this because my previous office, it was just getting too busy. cast and I moved in here a couple of months ago and I did this because my previous office it was just getting too busy it was too busy in the corridors there were people slamming doors talking and I needed a quieter space so I moved to a different floor on the building and this floor it's got less humans but what I didn't account for is I'm up at the very top and the fucking roof is made out of tin. So my podcast studio has a tin roof.
Starting point is 00:00:54 So when it rains, you can hear it. Now rain isn't the most unpleasant sound in the world. There's a calming static to it. I quite enjoy the sound of rain. But because of the way that audio works, I don't want to try and mask the sound of rain. And what I mean by that is, normally when there's ambient background noise, like rain or a fan, what you do is you turn on what's called a gate and what a gate does is it quietens down background noise but when you put on, when you put a gate on
Starting point is 00:01:33 when it comes to rainfall you get a very strange effect. I'll do it right now. Now you can hear me talking. There's no sound in between. But when I do speak, when you hear my voice, you also hear the sound of the rain only when I speak, which sounds a little bit too percussive. It's strange and it's not natural. So I think we're better off with this. If we speak this way, then we're better off with this. If we speak this way then we're okay. Who gives a fuck about the sound of rain? It's a natural sound.
Starting point is 00:02:12 What you don't want are car alarms, or you don't want human voices. Human voice... There might be nothing I can do about that. There's a man next door and he might take a phone call. And if that happens, I'm gonna have to stop recording when that cunt is on the phone. Actually, that's not fair to call him a cunt, he's only doing his own job. What I have to worry about is getting distracted by the sound of rain, because it is quite beautiful just to listen to it. You can't go wrong with the sound of rain
Starting point is 00:02:47 pattering on a tin roof. So I'd ask please that, let's just say the rain is a podcast guest this week. The rain is joining us this week on the podcast. The rain might raise its voice it might lower its voice it might get angry that's what rain does might have a little shout but we're gonna acknowledge and welcome the rain rather than pretend it doesn't exist also unfortunately so here here's the conundrum I'm in. Also on my roof are some nesting seagulls. They only started nesting about a week ago. They make very strange noises. So those seagulls, they're on the roof of my building right above my head and they're
Starting point is 00:03:41 nesting. And right now they're quiet. They're saying fuck all now because it's raining. But as soon as it stops raining, unfortunately, the seagulls are gonna start chatting and they make quair noises. I've learned that over the past week that when seagulls think that they're in the privacy
Starting point is 00:04:04 of their nest and they don't know that humans are listening or... why would they be worried about a human at the top of a fucking building? When seagulls don't know they're being listened to, they've got a very different way of talking. It sounds...it sounds halfway between laughter and group sex. So as well as the pitter patter of rain on this week's podcast, we may have to welcome some seagulls
Starting point is 00:04:33 onto this podcast as a guest too. And I'm okay with that also. The rain is quieting down a bit there now, but the reason I have to bring the rain on as a guest this week is... I know fucking rain. I'm very... When you live in Ireland you become very intimately familiar with rain. And I know this type of rain. This isn't... We're not gonna get showers here.
Starting point is 00:05:03 There's a man having a little... I don't know what the fuck that was. Cleared his throat but it sounded like he came. Ah great, there's some fucking sirens getting involved there. Wonderful. Okay. So the rain's getting quiet, it's gone down to a gentle patter. And so the rain actually appears to be...
Starting point is 00:05:33 Yeah, the rain has gone very quiet now, it's a gentle drizzle, so because of that, I'm gonna put my gate back on now, and now we've got no background noise whatsoever we just have my voice so if that gentleman in the office beside me wants to have another wanking cough then he's welcome to do so and me and you won't hear it it won't be part of this podcast but when the rain comes back and it's heavy we're gonna have to listen to it again but like I said it's gonna the rain this week is gonna be like a guest, a guest who's got some opinions to offer. And the sound of rain is a lot more interesting than some people's opinions,
Starting point is 00:06:13 to tell you the truth. So the rain's gone down to, it's barely perceivable now, so I've got my gate is back on, so now you can't hear any background noises whatsoever. The rain's gone to the toilet but it will be back. It will be back very shortly. And the reason I know this and the reason I have to bring the rain on as a guest this week is because if you live in Ireland, if you've lived here a long time, you get to know an awful lot about rain, about its patterns, about its behavior, and you can predict it.
Starting point is 00:06:46 And this current rain that we're experiencing right now, it's what I call summer retribution rain. I've mentioned it many times before. It's a bit early for it. You don't usually get it in April. I'd associate this more with June and particularly July. July and most of August. But in Ireland, if you get a hot dry spell for we say 10 days,
Starting point is 00:07:14 good weather, good fucking the sun is out. It's dry. We've had that in Ireland for the past two weeks. The weather has been fucking fantastic. And the thing is, when that happens in Ireland, you know that nature is going to get its revenge. We have a revenge-based weather pattern. Our weather pattern is based on retribution. What goes up must come down. And this retribution rain, it doesn't let off. There's a tiny little lull right now, but it's coming back. It's coming back. And it's gonna be like this,
Starting point is 00:07:52 I would say for the next, for the next five days, it's just gonna rain. It's gonna rain day and night. And all you're gonna get are different tones of that rain. So I know there's no point fighting it. There's no point fighting this rain. We're just going to have to bring it onto the podcast as a guest. Ireland is a, we're a temperate rain forest. The forest bit is gone,
Starting point is 00:08:16 but we're a temperate rain forest. And what happens is, so we're an island in the Atlantic Ocean. We've got these prevailing westerly winds coming from the west of the Atlantic, okay? When there's a hot spell, when there's a hot dry spell here in Ireland, the ground dries out.
Starting point is 00:08:38 When the ground dries out from the sun, there's less moisture in the fucking ground. So now the ground heats up. The ground heats up a lot quicker because there's less moisture in the fucking ground. So now the ground heats up. The ground heats up a lot quicker because there's no moisture in it. So this is, let's just say day five, day five or six, into steady hot dry weather in Ireland. The ground is dry and hot and this acts, acts like a radiator, like a heat plate. So not the ground is heating the air, but as the ground heats the air, after about a week, that hot air rises up and then it meets those prevailing westerly winds in from the Atlantic. The word prevailing there is very important. You hear that
Starting point is 00:09:21 on the weather all the time. If you're looking at the fucking weather forecast, they talk about prevailing winds. Prevailing means they prevail. They're dominant. The one thing you can be certain about, you can be fucking sure about this, Ireland is an island in the Atlantic and wet winds from the west prevail. They're always there. Wet winds from the west prevail. They're always there. So when we get a fucking hot spell, you've got this hot plate on the ground, this dry air rises up and it meets the prevailing westerly winds that are full of water and are colder.
Starting point is 00:09:58 And that weather system puts us in our place. It puts us in our place. It reminds us who is boss. The prevailing westerly wind says, I'm here all the time. I'm number one. I'm the Atlantic wind I am. You're a fucking island in a gigantic sea called the Atlantic and I'm the prevailing wind. I'm going nowhere. I'm here all the time. So when the dry hot wind comes up, it puts us in our place. It says, oh, what's the crack Ireland? Do you think you're Spanish? Do you? Think you're fucking Spanish with your hot dry weather. Are you wearing a vest?
Starting point is 00:10:40 You're wearing a vest Ireland, do you? Is that Jarts? Are you wearing Jarts and a vest? Who the fuck do you think you are? You think you're an Italian, is? You think you're from Italy or Spain or an American is that what you think you are? I'll fucking show you. That's literally what happens. The hot dry air comes up and the prevailing westerly wind puts us in our place and then it unleashes a torrent of rain. All that cold wet fucking rain comes down Because the ground has to show off That's basically it the Irish ground has to show off look at my sun tan look at me. I'm so hot and dry look at me It's like would you shut the fuck up ground be quiet Shut the fuck up and don't be telling the sky
Starting point is 00:11:27 Don't tell the sky if the if the Irish ground could just shut the fuck up and not tell the sky about how hot and dry it is, then we'd be fine. But no, it has to boast every single time. It calls the confession. The hot dry ground in Ireland after a heatwave confesses its sins to the sky and asks for penance. I'm too dry. I'm too dry. it's too warm, I don't deserve this. Punish me, cleanse me with rain. So that there, that's the literal science of Irish summer rain, that's what that is. So that's why I know this rain is going nowhere. It's gonna be back in about maybe 10 or 15 minutes, even though it's quiet right now. Like, I genuinely make the case that one of the reasons the Catholic Church took such a strong hold in Ireland is because of our weather system.
Starting point is 00:12:17 Because we have, because the environment, the environment teaches us about revenge, punishment, and penance. Our weather system has always said to us, don't enjoy yourself too much, because if you do it too much, it's gonna rain. Like, we know it, we know it. Anytime there's fucking sun, anytime there's hot, dry weather and sun in this country, a part of us is going,
Starting point is 00:12:43 oh for fuck's sake, it's gonna rain for ages. Like I prefer winter. Winter, it's cold, but it's dry, you can predict it. Fucking summer, I can't enjoy a hot summer's day because I'm thinking about the rain, the inevitable rain that's gonna happen. And Catholicism, the pope died yesterday there fair play to him. Catholicism, after he met JD Vance the devil, the fucking devil, he looks like he tried
Starting point is 00:13:15 to eat a packet of salt and vinegar potatoes with his eyes. But Catholicism places heavy emphasis on shame, sexual shame in particular. Now I've done podcasts on this. You can put that one on Saint Augustine. Saint Augustine in the third century. He was a bishop in the third century. Saint Augustine devoted his life trying to prove whether or not people could get boners in the Garden of Eden. And he's credited with introducing sexual shame to catalysis, but we really embraced
Starting point is 00:13:47 the shame, sin, the punishment, those aspects of catalysis here in Ireland. Often it gets blamed on colonialism, you know, 800 years of being overpowered and oppressed and eradicated by the British that we'd become so accustomed to being oppressed that we then chose the oppression of Catholicism and gave loads of power to the Catholic Church. But I do think the weather plays a part. Straight up, our weather tells us without fail. If you enjoy something nice such as sun, if you enjoy that there will be a price to pay guaranteed. A heavy price will be paid, heavy rain guaranteed. And I think I think we absorbed that. We absorbed that into our outlook of how life should be. So it's Conte Retribution Rain. That's
Starting point is 00:14:45 what's happening okay? It's Conte Retribution Rain this week. It's not gonna go away. So we're gonna have to invite it onto the podcast as a guest and live with it. I didn't. This fucking office is amazing. I have a beautiful big window. I didn't factor in the fucking tin roof. There's a tin roof I didn't factor it in. Also unfortunately there's nesting seagulls. There are nesting seagulls on my roof making gangbang noises and my heart goes out to those gulls because they don't belong on the roof of an office. This isn't their natural habitat. They're herring gulls,
Starting point is 00:15:28 and herring gulls are supposed to nest along rocks and cliffs. But what's happening, the past 15 years in particular, because of biodiversity collapse, like Limerick is on the River Shannon, we're on the River Shannon, and we're at is on the the River Shannon. We're on the River Shannon and we're at the mouth of the River Shannon. So the Shannon flows all the way
Starting point is 00:15:50 from the north of Ireland down here to Limerick where it opens into the Atlantic Ocean. So here in Limerick City the river meets the sea. You have this strange hybrid where some of the water is salty, and some of the water is fresh water. There was fucking dolphins. Last week there was a video of dolphins in Limerick City which we've never seen before. And it probably means the food that those dolphins eat at sea, the fish, is gone. So now they're in fucking Limerick City. Dolphins in Limerick City looking for food, but that's why there's herring gulls above me now on the roof of my office. They're trying to survive.
Starting point is 00:16:32 They're trying to survive. So those the gulls of Limerick City that live on office roofs, they've given up on fish. They don't eat fish anymore because the fish don't exist. So now they live in cities and they eat out of bins and urban seagulls they're excellent at getting into bins I've watched I've watched seagulls rip open bins and take out food and fucking destroy the streets but get a good feed but now I'm not seeing it anymore and I'm I'm very concerned about the seagulls. So what's happened in the past year is we have a scheme, I think we can hear the seagulls now can we? No. We have a scheme in Ireland called the deposit return scheme where if you buy a can of Fanta, you pay a 15 cent tax on that can of Fanta or if you buy like a 2 litre bottle, a 2 litre bottle of fizzy drink, you pay a 25 cent
Starting point is 00:17:29 deposit. But you can get this money back as cash if you bring these cans and bottles to a deposit return scheme vending machine. So now in all the shopping centres in Limer, there's queues of people with bags and bags of bottles and cans, recycling them, and then getting cash in return. But some people can't be arsed. Some people, they buy a can of Pepsi,
Starting point is 00:17:57 and they go, fuck that, I don't want my 15 cents. So they throw it in the bin, that's 15 cents. So what I've been seeing in Limerick City the past year in the city center, we've got a crack cocaine problem and we have a problem with opioids. So people who are experiencing addiction, they're going through all the public bins.
Starting point is 00:18:23 They're going through all the bins at the backs of restaurants. And they're searching for bottles and cans to take them to the deposit return scheme. And there's fairly fucking decent money if you go through a giant bin. But now as a response to that, all of the bins in Limerick City, they're now not dealing with seagulls anymore, or foxes. They're dealing with human beings. Clever human beings. So now all the bins are very very heavily padlocked to keep out human beings. And the seagulls are fucked. How are seagulls
Starting point is 00:18:59 supposed to eat now when every single bin is padlocked. Seagulls that are already living on the top of office buildings because they've just given up on cliffs. They don't belong here. These seagulls don't belong in Limerick City. They belong on the coast, but now they're inland. And when I really started to notice this was... So I'm gigging in Limerick tonight. I'm doing a live podcast in Limerick tonight
Starting point is 00:19:24 in the University Concert Hall. Which, that's something I never thought was possible. It's my biggest ever Limerick gig. I think it's like 1200 people. I never ever ever thought that was possible that I'd be able to do a gig in Limerick City to that many people. I'm very humbled for two reasons my dad When my dad retired from his job in Shannon Airport When he was in retirement, he got a job with a security company. He worked as a supervisor I have to say that because my ma will kill me. My ma has internalized classism So if I say that my dad was a security guard, I have to say that he was a supervisor,
Starting point is 00:20:08 or else my ma will get very, very upset. But anyway, the building, the university concert hall, where I'm gonna be gigging tonight, my dad was a nighttime security guard there for about ten years. And every single night he'd just, he'd walk up and down the big empty theater, making sure everything was okay every single night he'd just he'd walk up and down the big empty theater making sure everything was okay every single night for about ten years and the next morning I'd be a little child the next morning he'd tell me how he'd be
Starting point is 00:20:38 the security guard in this building at night time like the only person in this giant empty cavernous theatre, and then he'd freak himself out convincing himself that he heard noises and that there were ghosts. He'd been in his late 50s at this point, so he'd convince himself that there was ghosts in the theatre. Well he wouldn't say ghosts, he'd say púca. And púca, it's the Irish word for ghosts, but Póka also means fairies. Because we don't really have ghosts, we've got fairies. And fairies in Ireland, they're not little things with wings, they're ghostly, terrifying, scary demons that are part of mythology and folklore. He's got one job, to be the only person in the building at night
Starting point is 00:21:24 time. He's convincing himself that there's ghosts and then come home the next day and tell his child. Which wasn't great for my anxiety or my imagination. I remember how he came to this conclusion. So if you're working as a night watchman in a giant empty university. You can freak yourself out. I can see how it's very easy to freak yourself out. So one night, he was walking through the university concert hall, no one around, pitch dark. And as he's walking along the corridors,
Starting point is 00:22:01 he hears a giant thud on the ground beside him and he flashes his torch and it's a belt buckle. So this belt buckle fell from a great height and nearly hit him on the head and landed beside him and thudded on the ground. And he said if it had hit him on the head and that would have killed him. It would have hit him on the head and then he'd have slowly bled to death and then someone wouldn't have found him until the next morning. This is the story he told me, this is what he was afraid of what would have happened. And then I must have been like 10 and I'm going, oh my God, do you think someone threw the belt buckle? Do you think there was someone above in the theatre and they threw the belt buckle from a
Starting point is 00:22:46 balcony? And then he went, no, there was no one else in the building. It was a poker. It was a poker. And I'm like, I'm young enough to go, it was a university, like it's the university concert hall, it could have been one of the several thousand students who were just staying late one night or they snuck into the building and maybe they thought it was funny to freak you out and drop a belt buckle. And he was like, no, it was a polka.
Starting point is 00:23:16 And I'm like, why? And he said, cause polkas make it look like an accident, which I didn't fully understand and I think, because my dad was mad, okay? Now that's not fair, I'm also fucking mad, but my dad was eccentric. So I think he thought that if the belt buckle
Starting point is 00:23:39 had hit him on the head and he died, and they found his body in the concert hall the next day that people would have believed that he killed himself by repeatedly hitting himself into the head Which is the most... Imagine this. A security guard dies in the University Concert Hall because he beat himself to death with a belt buckle. So that was his theory. This was the fairies. University concert hall is haunted. It's a haunted ground. He goes it must have been built over a white thorn tree or it must have been built over a fairy fort but the fairies are in this building and they tried to kill me with a belt buckle and they wanted to
Starting point is 00:24:40 frame it as a suicide. It's always made me want to find out if the concert hall, if the university concert hall in Nimric was actually built on a fairy fort. Those are the superstitions we have in Ireland. That you don't go near fairy forts and if you were to disturb a fairy fort and build on a fairy fort,
Starting point is 00:25:00 then terrible, terrible bad luck will befall that sight. So I'm gigging there tonight. I am gigging there tonight and I never thought that would be possible. But my dad died, my dad died. He never got to see me do anything with my career. My dad didn't really even get to see me be an adult. I was in first year of college when he died.
Starting point is 00:25:24 The one thing he said to one of my brothers before he died, he said about me even though I was young, he said, I'm not worried about him, he's gonna be fine. Which, as simple as those words are, that meant the world to me. For a father to say about his son, to my brother, I'm not worried about him, he's gonna be fine. Especially considering he was quite an anxious warrior. To hear those words, that meant an awful lot to me. That was a huge fault of confidence. But, yeah, he had no idea, my dad had no idea whatsoever that I would go on to become an artist or a writer and I know it would mean it would have meant the fucking world to him the absolute world
Starting point is 00:26:10 to him for me to be gigging in a venue where he was on duty every night as a security guard as a supervisor as a security guard as a supervisor where he was on duty every night patrolling that place for ten fucking years. I know what would have meant the world to him for me to be to be gigging in that space. And the guest, the person I'm gonna be speaking to at the live podcast, is the Shanna Key, Eddie Lenahan, who I've had on this podcast before. Eddie is, he's one of the few shanikes in Ireland, which means a lore keeper. And Eddie is an expert on fairies.
Starting point is 00:26:52 He's an expert on fairy trees, fairy forts, folklore and fairies. Eddie Lenahan is famous mainly for, in County Clare. In the late 90s, they were building the M18 motorway. This huge motorway with all this EU European money and Ireland is in the middle of the Celtic Tiger and we're trying to be this modern progressive country and we're using our EU money to develop our roads. The planned route of this motorway in Clare. It meant knocking down a fairy tree. It was a white-thorn tree called the Latune Fairy Bush. White-thorn trees in Ireland they have a
Starting point is 00:27:39 lot of superstition around them. Superstition are indigenous pagan beliefs. But you don't fuck with white thorn trees. White thorn is seen as like a magical tree and the roots of the white thorn, like I've done podcasts before about the Irish otherworld, the otherworld where the fairies live, this separate spectrum of reality. The roots of the white thorn are seen to reach into the other worlds, so you don't fuck with white thorn because then you're fucking with the fairies, you're fucking with forces that you don't understand. White thorn is in bloom right now actually. It's one of the first. The Mayflower, sometimes they call it, but it's
Starting point is 00:28:23 a raggily straggly fucking hardy looking bush that always looks windswept. You tend to see... Like... I know that white thorn grows along Yarty's couch and it grows near the University Concert Hall, but when you see white thorn on its own, by itself, in a field,
Starting point is 00:28:43 and it looks like it doesn't belong there, that tends to become a fairy tree. Those are the ones that people are scared of. Don't fuck with it. Don't fuck with that. White thorn is also planted beside pagan wells, beside holy wells, which we know are very important to our ancestors. White thorn is often planted in where land meets water, holy wells. Onigat Cave, which I've spoken about on previous podcasts, which is the entrance to the other world in Roscommon where Halloween starts. I've been down that cave just as you enter that cave. It's guarded by a white thorn bush. White thorn was also used in Ireland to mark burial sites
Starting point is 00:29:29 During the famine, during the famine particularly, where children died There was a fucking famine going on, a genocide. People didn't have gravestones. People were dying and Sometimes white thorn was used to mark a mass grave. So anyway in 1999 Ireland is building this gigantic mortar with Claire the M18. 90 million euro, well it would have been pounds at the time in 1999. A lot of fucking EU money comes in. And then Eddie Lenahan, the Shannaee, he goes to the government, to the council, to the people who are building the roads and says you can't build that road there.
Starting point is 00:30:12 There's a very important fairy tree. There's a fairy tree right there and that's where the monster fairies and the connacht fairies meet and you cannot fuck with that fairy tree. Now, Eddie Lenahan is a Shanakhi, which means that Eddie would collect the stories of the old people, the old people of the land. Eddie collects all of their stories orally and carries on this oral tradition of the Shanakhi. So when Eddie says this
Starting point is 00:30:46 here is a very significant fairy tree then he's basing that on the stories of the old people from the land. And what happened? They didn't build them out they didn't knock the fairy tree. And what makes this so powerful is this wasn't about a heritage site, a protected site, there were no legal issues raised, this wasn't a site of archaeological significance, experts weren't brought in. Eddie Lenahan's, the shanakee, Eddie Lenahan's story of that's the fairy tree, do not knock it to build a motorway the story was enough the superstition the fear of the unknown was enough for the
Starting point is 00:31:33 government for the developers to go yeah fuck it let's not knock the fairy tree let's build around it the story enough that that that that was powerful enough for a motorway an EU motorway to get diverted people believed it if you divert a 90 million motorway around one tree because a man is saying that this tree is a meeting point for fairies if you divert your motorway around that for that reason even if you think it's bullshit, you believe it. You believe it on some level. Something greater than money and progress is at play now.
Starting point is 00:32:12 And the tree is still there today. People were afraid of road debts. Eddie said to the developers, if you knock a fairy tree, if you knock a fucking fairy tree and build a motorway, people will die on that stretch of road. The fairies, the fairies will find a way. They'll make it look like an accident, but don't build a road on that fairy tree and it fucking worked. And it's a very culturally
Starting point is 00:32:36 important moment that, because it's that bridge between old Ireland and new Ireland. Old Ireland, where we have that mix of Catholicism and then indigenous pagan folk belief that's thousands of years old. And then new Ireland, which is the Celtic tiger and EU money, and being part of the developed world. But it fills me with great pride. It does fill me with great pride that we didn't knock a fairy tree to build a motorway based on pure superstition alone.
Starting point is 00:33:18 It's quite decolonial. And fairy trees and fairy forts in particular are decolonial because I'll speak about fairy forts in a bit more detail in a few minutes but some fairy forts are thousands of years old. All fairy forts are hundreds of years old. Our pagan wells and holy wells that are guarded by white-thorn trees Some of them are thousands of years old. We were colonized by the British Even the British who murdered us eradicated language culture everything the British even the fucking British Left our fairy forts alone and left our holy wells alone because we were so good at telling the stories. Oh I wouldn't go near that fairy fort now. You wouldn't know what would happen if you went near that fairy fort. Terrible things could happen. Even the colonizer left these things alone. The colonizer
Starting point is 00:34:17 was afraid. I don't know what the fuck Paddy is talking about but he's freaking me out. Just leave it alone. Don't cut down the tree. Just leave it alone. Cut down another one. And what I love about the Latune Fairy Bush in Clare and rerouting the motorway around it in 1999, it's the behavior of an uncolonized mind. Capitalism, progress, roadways, infrastructure. These things must stop because there's indigenous beliefs connected to the land, connected to a tree, connected to a fairy tree. There are indigenous beliefs with superstitions surrounding them and maybe these things are more important than a road. Do I believe in fairy trees? No I don't. But I
Starting point is 00:35:01 do believe that indigenous folklore exists to keep us humans in line with systems of biodiversity. And I'm very happy that a tree wasn't destroyed, an ecosystem wasn't destroyed for a mortal way. So Eddie, Eddie Lennon did that. I had him, I had him on the podcast before and I interviewed Eddie in Ennis and when I had Eddie on the podcast, that gig was what introduced COVID-19 to Ireland. I don't know if you remember that at the time.
Starting point is 00:35:34 We can laugh at it now. But yeah, the first outbreak of COVID-19 happened at my gig in Ennis at the Glouir Theatre in 2020 when I was interviewing Eddie Lenahan about Superstation and bad luck. And the insanity of COVID made me think, did I intrude too much? Did I ask too many questions about the fairies? And then they caused an outbreak of the first outbreak in Ireland of COVID at my gig because I asked Eddie too many questions about the fairies and then they caused an outbreak of the first outbreak in Ireland of COVID at my gig because I asked Eddie too many questions about the fairies. The paranoia got the better of me just like my dad thought that the fairies were gonna make him beat himself to death with a belt buckle.
Starting point is 00:36:21 But that's that's why Eddie Lenahan is my guest at the University Concert Hall, Limerick, because my dad was convinced that it was built on a fairy tree or a fairy fort and that there was some type of fairy magic that brought bad luck to the building. And it's very plausible, like I said, just beside the University Concert Hall you have Yachty's Couch, where the otters live. And when you walk along that path, there are white-thorn trees. There's three, I think. So it is possible that the University Concert Hall was built on a white-thorn tree. You know, I speak about planting native, you know, proper native Irish wildflower.
Starting point is 00:37:09 Making seed bombs and specifically planting native Irish wildflower in derelict properties. Properties that are derelict, vandalism for the rich in the middle of a housing crisis. Plant some fucking white thorn man plant white thorn in your local derelict property bring back some fairy magic but white thorn it's an indigenous tree and again it's it's like I say what any of the what any of these any stories about trees that are indigenous to the land
Starting point is 00:37:47 that could be thousands of years old, there's always a reason. It's always connected with biodiversity. The role that white thorn has in the ecosystem is it's a protector. Like, so now is white thorns time, okay? White thorn blooms in April and May. White thorn is one of the, when we're going from winter into spring, one of the first native flowers that blooms is white thorn. It's the first bit of color. Well, it's white, but it's the first
Starting point is 00:38:33 bit of life that you see. Even before the trees start to go green, the white thorn blooms come out. And you know who that benefits? The fucking queen bee. The queen bee who is establishing her colony. She needs to feed on the flowers of the white thorn, the only fucking flower that's in bloom. Honey bees, bumblebees, solitary bees. Sure remember, one queen creates a hive. So that queen, she gets her food from the white thorn. Then she goes and creates her hive, and that's where you get all the bees that will pollinate everything all summer.
Starting point is 00:39:07 And if you think of our ancestors, you know, they've chosen this one tree here. This one, this one's connected to the other world. The roots of this white thorn, that goes to the other world. And I'm guessing it's, that's the tree of life. If that's the first tree to flower, and the queens eat from that, and then the queen has the hive which pollinates everything, then that's the most important fucking tree.
Starting point is 00:39:33 That's the earliest one. Do not cut that down. That's very important to biodiversity. Mess with those and there's crap failure. Another beautiful thing about the white thorn is, so it's covered in these white flowers, but once a bee has visited those, like we're talking thousands of flowers on one bush, once a bee has visited one of those flowers and successfully patinated it, it eventually turns pink. So the white thorn tree goes from white to pink when the bees
Starting point is 00:40:04 have visited it and patinated it. And the honey from white thorn tree goes from white to pink when the bees have visited it and pollinated it. And the honey from white thorn was considered an absolute delicacy. The white thorn grows in hedge rows too, so little birds have their nests inside there and they're protected by all the thorns. So little birds nest inside the white thorn tree. It's a mother tree. It's a tree for the birds and the bees and it gives birth to the life of summer and that's its role in the ecosystem. So am I a believer in superstitions about white thorn trees and that they belong to the fairies and bad luck will happen to you? No, I don't believe that stuff but I consider it hugely important.
Starting point is 00:40:43 Very, very important. And this is what I love about folklore, this is what I love about mythology and ancient stories. On the one hand, it's ridiculous. That tree over there, that tree over there has roots that go into an alternate dimension, where a supernatural race called the fairies live. And if you mess with that tree, bad things will happen to you. Ridiculous, harsh shit. And then you ask science, and science says, that tree over there is a keystone species to the ecosystem of Ireland. And the crops and food that you eat depend on that tree. Depend on that tree over there. It's very, very important. So don't cut that down. That'd be a terrible idea. Evidence-based science is saying the same
Starting point is 00:41:29 thing that the folklore is saying just in a very different way. But then we move on to fairy forts. And fairy forts are man-made structures. And again, a fairy fort is way more scary than a fairy tree. No one's going to cut down a fairy tree. But some people won't even walk into a fairy fort. A fairy fort takes the form of an ancient stone circle in a field and there's lots of them all over Ireland. I visited a fairy fort this weekend and I visited it because I'm going to be speaking to the Schenneke
Starting point is 00:42:05 Eddie Lenahan. Actually this is a good story so let me do an ocarina pause now before I continue with the story about the Fairy Fort that I visited. I'm going to blow into this bottle, this plastic bottle here because I don't have my ocarina and you're going to hear an advert for some bullshit. That was the ocarina pause, the bottle blowing pause. The rain hasn't come back. I misjudged the rain. There's no pitter patter. Support for this podcast comes from you the listener via the Patreon page, patreon.com forward slash the blind boy podcast. If this
Starting point is 00:42:53 podcast brings you mirth, merriment, entertainment, distraction, joy, whatever has you listening to this podcast, even if you just turned it on to go to sleep, whatever has you listening to this podcast, please consider becoming a patron. This podcast is my full-time job, it's how I earn a living. It's the only thing I do to earn a living. It's how I rent out my office, it's how I pay all my bills. I adore making this podcast, I absolutely love it. I love making this podcast. I absolutely love it. I love making this podcast. I adore that it's my job, but it's only possible because of listener funding.
Starting point is 00:43:30 That's why this podcast exists. I'm not beholden to advertisers I can tell them to fuck off. I can do a podcast about fairy forts, about fairy trees. I can do a podcast about whatever the fuck I want. I'm not worried about how many listeners I have. about whatever the fuck I want. I'm not worried about how many listeners I have. I don't give a shit about that. I want to speak about what I'm genuinely passionate about each week. That is only possible because of listener funding. All I'm looking for is the price of a pint or a cup of coffee once a month. That's it. Okay? And if you can't afford that, don't worry about it. You can listen for free. Because the person who is paying
Starting point is 00:44:08 is paying for you to listen for free. So everybody gets the exact same podcast I get to earn a living, right? So that's patreon.com forward slash the Blind Boy podcast. If you wanna sign up and give me a couple of quid. And also, if you are signing up, don't sign up on the iPhone app, because Apple will take 30% of whatever money that you give me so fuck that. Sign up on
Starting point is 00:44:32 a browser. And don't sign up as a free patron, because you're just giving Patreon your data, and this podcast doesn't receive any funding. Okay? I'm trying to avoid introducing a tiered payment. I don't wanna have a, the only way I can get rid of the free option is if I have tiers of payment, and I don't want that because I want someone to contribute whatever they like. I wanna keep it like that if I can,
Starting point is 00:45:01 and everyone gets the exact same podcast regardless of whether you pay or not patreon.com forward slash the blind by podcast do I have some upcoming gigs I'm sure I do I think the only thing that there's tickets going for now is that fucking the tour of Scotland and England right that's happening in June um starting from the 1st of June, I mean, I mean, Bristol, is that June the 6th? Yeah. Bristol, Cornwall, Sheffield, Manchester, Edinburgh, Glasgow, York, London, East Sussex, and Norwich. It's a big tour in June. It's mostly sold out. But please come along to those gigs. They're gonna be wonderful they're
Starting point is 00:45:45 gonna be really nice intimate gigs I'm gonna have cracking guests speaking of this shit like I know over in England in particular you don't have the type of knowledge about your indigenous folklore that we have in Ireland I think a contributing factor to that was the Industrial Revolution. So when English people moved from the countryside to the city, you lost this stuff. But in any of the places I've listed out there,
Starting point is 00:46:17 if you know any decent local folklorists or historians who could tell me about English folklore, I would love to learn about that. Like I know that Wales are pretty good for it. I know that white thorn grows in England too, and you might have beliefs about white thorn, but I'd love to learn this stuff, because it's, I'm very lucky in that it's easy to find out the Irish stuff, but I know fuck all English folklore and I'd love to know more because let's be honest. That's the interest in history The history of the regular people the beliefs and superstitions and the knowledge of the regular everyday people That's what interesting not fucking Prince fuckface did this the King fuckface give a fuck about that shit
Starting point is 00:47:08 stupid English royal shit Rich people making a bullshit about each other Oh, did you know that King Henry the 8 actually wrote that song green sleeves? Did he fuck the stupid bollocks? Give a shit about that. I want learn about the stories of the regular people, the peasants, that's what's interesting. Right, what have I got after that? I'm in Derry on the 19th of September,
Starting point is 00:47:34 come along to that in the Derry Millennium Theater. And then I have a Vicar Street gig in Dublin on Tuesday the 23rd, why the fuck did I book a gig on a Tuesday there now? Tuesday's when I usually finish the podcast. Sure it's September, I'll figure something out. And anyway, lovely little quiet midweek gigs. All right, back to the podcast,
Starting point is 00:47:55 I wanna tell you about Ringforts. So I'm gonna be gigging a University Concert Hall in Limerick tonight, and I'm gonna be speaking to the Sean Key, Eddie Linehan, tonight. Because because I'm doing that I wanted to visit a fairy fort in Limerick so I went to one called the Grange Stone Circle in Lochgar in Limerick near Kilmalloch which was about about 20 minute drive out from Limerick City and this is this is a very powerful fucking fairy fort it's it's beautiful it's an ancient very large ancient stone circle perfect circle
Starting point is 00:48:33 with all these old stones that were put there by somebody and sticking out of one of the stones is this gnarly old fucking white-thorn fairy tree. So I didn't, again, I didn't step into the fucking... I didn't step into the circle. It's huge. I didn't step into it. Again, superstition. I say I don't believe this shit, but I'm not stepping into the zone circle because it's not what you do.
Starting point is 00:49:01 Not one that's guarded by a fairy tree. I was just thinking, nah, why bother? Just don't bother. Don't need to. And just respect the beliefs. So I stayed outside the stone circle. And this particular grand stone circle in Loch Ger in Limerick, archaeologists have looked at it. It's... It dates from 3000 BC. It's 5000 years old. So this is 5000 years old. For 5000 years, nobody fucked with that. It's just some stones. Very, very, very old looking stones. Large boulders, clearly placed there deliberately in a perfect circle. That's all it is. And then one of those stones has got a...it's been split
Starting point is 00:49:51 open by a fairy tree. And the fact that it's undisturbed, again it tells us people were afraid of this. This was considered powerful, superstitious, whatever the fuck, nobody fucked with this thing for 5,000 years ordered in the pyramids and now here I am beside it and what has me mentioned in the seagulls this week who've been quiet they haven't interrupted the podcast what has me mentioned in the seagulls this week is while I was there in awe of this stone circle in Loughgar a fucking seagull shows up with a seagull who had a Dubai chocolate bar wrapper in his mouth. Which was bizarre and sad. So number
Starting point is 00:50:38 one, seagulls have no business in Kilmalock. Out by Locker. This is this is quite inland. Very very inland. I know there's a big lake, Locker. Seagulls don't belong there. So seagulls are flying that far inland to try and find food. Maybe they're going to the lake to get fish, but seagulls don't belong this inland. And it had a Dubai, a Dubai chocolate bear wrapper in its mouth, which it left behind. I went over and looked at it and saw it was a bit of a Dubai chocolate bear wrapper,
Starting point is 00:51:15 which I'm assuming it had taken out of a bin. And the first thing I thought was, I wonder if some bad luck about the befall Dubai chocolate bars, because Dubai chocolate bars are mad. I'm sure you're aware of them. I've never seen anything like it. It's a viral online trend that manufacturing can't keep up with. There are these chocolate bars, and on the inside is this really gooey sweet pistachio filling. They looked delicious,
Starting point is 00:51:47 I've tasted one, it wasn't worth what I spent on it. But two months ago they just went mad viral on TikTok and everyone wanted a Dubai chocolate bar but you could not get your hands on them. And in Limerick there was one shop and there was queues around the corner for homemade Dubai chocolate bars. They were making chocolate in empty Chinese food containers and filling them with pistachio cream and charging people, I think it was like 30 quid, it was nearly the same price as drugs. Demand for these chocolate bars was so great
Starting point is 00:52:26 that people were selling homemade versions because you couldn't get the real thing. And now two months on the market is saturated. You can buy Dubai chocolate bars in fucking Lidl. There's one shop in Limerick and when you go in, instead of cigarettes behind the counter, they have a full rack of different Dubai chocolate bars. So we've gone past peak Dubai chocolate bar now. They're no longer expensive. And now they're like three for one. There's so many Dubai chocolate bars that I went to an isolated, 5,000 year old, fairy fort in Loch Gar and a fucking seagull
Starting point is 00:53:06 lands and drops a Dubai chocolate bar wrapper in its mouth. They're selling them in Kilmalock. And I'll be honest, the first thing I thought, the first thing I fucking thought, when that seagull dropped the wrapper was, I wonder is some bad luck gonna befall Dubai chocolate now? was I wonder is some bad luck gonna befall Dubai chocolate now so I took out my phone and googled it for the crack and yeah there's a world pistachio shortage right now there is a world pistachio shortage because Dubai chocolate bars are gone too popular and we do have that association in
Starting point is 00:53:41 Ireland people have knocked fairy forts and built businesses on them. The most famous one would be, do you know that car? This is another little connection I made but this is just autism. Do you know that car, to the future. It was a 1980s sports car and the doors opened up like wings. And specifically those doors were called gull wings. Literally the doors on a DeLorean car are called gull wings. And that's what had me connecting the Seagull with the DeLorean. But anyway, the DeLorean sports car, they were built by a fella called John DeLorean in the 80s who would have been a bit of a like an Elon Musk in his day,
Starting point is 00:54:34 an eccentric car maker. John DeLorean used to, he was a yank, used to work for General Motors and he publicly, his plan in the late 70s was I'm gonna make this amazing affordable ethical sports car and it's gonna look incredible it's gonna look amazing and it's gonna be a huge success and everyone's gonna own one and that's and this car is gonna be the most futuristic car you've ever seen that's how it ended up in back to the future. Look at the car in Back to the Future. That's called a DeLorean. It's one of these cars, right? That's Simpson's episode. There's an early Simpson's episode where Homer finds a long-lost brother, and then Homer designs
Starting point is 00:55:16 a car for his brother, and it's a huge flop. That's based on the DeLorean. The DeLorean car is one of the greatest flops ever. And no one, no one knew how it happened. They were like, this was supposed to, of course I want the DeLorean, an affordable sports car with incredible doors that open outwards. Of course I want one of them, give me one now, and it's affordable. Wow. So what happened? So John DeLorean, the American, is like, okay, I want to build my factory. I wanna build my factory to make these futuristic cars, but I wanna make them affordable. These need to be affordable.
Starting point is 00:55:54 How am I gonna make these futuristic cars and also make them affordable? So the British government approached John DeLorean and said, we're gonna give you 100 million. We'll give you 100 million pounds of free money, right, if you build your DeLorean in Belfast. Now Belfast in the north of Ireland, right, this was like the late 70s, early 80s. There was a war. There was a war. There was a sectarian war. The IRA. The period known as the Troubles. Bombs, shootings, murders. The British Army colonizing every single day.
Starting point is 00:56:33 The IRA, the UVF. A war zone is...it's not a...war zones aren't great for economic prosperity. So the British government were thinking fuck it maybe if we bring a giant international car company to West Belfast and just build this giant plant and provide tons of employment maybe that will ease working-class tensions and nobody will want to join the IRA because they've got a job in the DeLorean factory. So John DeLorean says will ease working class tensions, and nobody will want to join the IRA because they've got a job in the DeLorean factory. So John DeLorean says,
Starting point is 00:57:09 Great plan, and I'll take that 100 million of free money from you, UK government, and this will allow me to build these affordable cars. Did it go to plan? No. You can't build a car factory while there's a war going on in the middle of a
Starting point is 00:57:25 war zone. Only about 9,000 cars were made. The DeLorean business fell apart. It was seen as a spectacular, spectacular failure of this futuristic car. It was a terrible failure. Two years later, John DeLorean ended up in such debt that he got caught smuggling cocaine and in an FBI sting. The FBI set him up. He was so in debt that he ended up trying to finance cocaine smuggling and got caught. He went from being a billionaire with a futuristic car that was gonna change the world to smuggling coke and getting caught with in about three fucking years. Which nobody also did. He bulldozed, he personally
Starting point is 00:58:16 bulldozed a ferry fort, he personally bulldozed a fairy fort to build the DeLorean factory and Everybody said to him even the IRA the fucking IRA went to him and said Listen where the IRA No, no, no, it's it's nothing. We don't want money. No, no, no, no, no look. No, it's not about that either Nothing to do with the Brits. No, no, no, what we're we don't even have guns. We don't even have guns on us It's not about that either. Nothing to do with the Brits. No, no, no. We don't even have guns. We don't even have guns on us. It's not about that. Please don't bulldoze the Fairy Fort. We appreciate that you're building a factory.
Starting point is 00:58:55 Fair play to you. Don't bulldoze the Fairy Fort, please. Because very, very bad things are going to happen to you if you bulldoze that Fairy Fort. And John Delorey and the Yank, he doesn't understand it he's not listening he's not listening to the community so he bulldozes an ancient fairy fort himself personally in a bulldozer and then two or three years later his business is gone and he gets caught smuggling cocaine in Waterford there's a
Starting point is 00:59:24 pharmaceutical company called West Pharmaceutical. They also, they bulldozed a fucking... They bulldozed a fairy fort to build their plant. And if Trump has his way, that place is gonna get shut down. But my point is, in Ireland we take fairy forts very seriously. And you know know that story there with DeLorean there's loads and loads of... look he built... I know the Brits are giving you a hundred million quid but don't build a car factory in
Starting point is 00:59:56 Belfast at the height of the troubles alright that's not gonna work out for you but we will retroactively make that a boat. No, no, it's not because of that. You got bad luck from bulldozing a fairy fort. So, like, I promise you, there's a fairy fort near you. I guarantee you, if you live in Ireland, there is a fairy fort near you. And an enjoyable thing to do is, when you find the name of your local fairy fort, go to ducas.ie, D-U-C-H-A-S, which is the national folklore collection. Type in the name of your local fairy fort, and you'll find all the folklore
Starting point is 01:00:32 and superstitions and stories that are attached to your local fairy fort. Like the fairy fort in Lac Gar, where the seagull had the Dubai chocolate bar. Like one story associated with that fort and this story was written down in the 1920s. I got it from Dukas.ie One story is that it says It's locally known as Leos Mor because there's two other smaller forts in the opposite field. They're circular in shape forts in the opposite field. They're circular in shape. It's surrounded by an earthen mound. Inside the mound is a circle of stones and the ground is level like a saucer. It is thought that they were made by the Fair Bulgs and used by
Starting point is 01:01:15 them as a place of worship. So a Fair Bulg, fairies but the Fair Bulg were in mythology a race of people on the island of Ireland that were defeated by humans and driven underground to the other world. They became a begrudging demonic race. So this story, this folklore is saying that this particular stone circle in La Garh was a place of worship for demon fairies and the story attached is it says a man named Patrick Keane who lived in Raheen went one day to Limerick to buy a flute and in those days he had to walk so it was very late when he was passing by the fort it's thought that the fairies took him in and
Starting point is 01:02:03 kept him there after five days he found himself outside the fort, as if he'd slept there for some time. He never told anybody where he'd been or what befell him for the five days that he'd been missing. But after he went missing, when he played the flute, which he wasn't very good at playing, after he went missing in this fairy fort, when he played the flute, it he wasn't very good at playing, after he went missing in this fairy fort. When he played the flute, it was the sweetest music that anyone ever heard. And people said that he was taught by the fairies.
Starting point is 01:02:34 What's beautiful about that story is it's so similar to UFO abduction stories. Like that story there was written down in the 1920s and it's probably could be a hundred that story could be 200 years old could be longer could be several hundred years old but it's so similar to UFO abduction stories people who get abducted by aliens what happens aliens come these beings take them away and then they have a sense of missing time they don't know how long they've been away from. But also what you get there is the Irish Otherworld. I did a podcast about this,
Starting point is 01:03:10 few podcasts back where I compared beliefs about the Irish Otherworld with quantum physics. The Irish Otherworld, it's not about linear time. The Otherworld is an alternate reality, where time does not exist, it's not a concept and anyone who is able to visit the other world where the fairies live, they don't experience time. Things operate differently there. So this fella who went into the fairy fort, the fairies abducted him. He doesn't know how long he's been away but when he arrived back in our world, it was five years. And when he arrived back, he had the ability to play the flute magnificently.
Starting point is 01:03:50 So what's being implied there is, how long does it take to learn how to play the flute brilliantly? Multiple years, I'd say. So he went off to the world of the fairies when he entered this fairy fort, the one that the fucking, the seagull brought to the boy chocolate to me. This cunt went into the fairy fort and the fairies took him away for several years and then they taught him how to play the flute brilliantly. Now this belief system that also has parallels with African-American belief systems like now you know Irish and African American people they mixed in America
Starting point is 01:04:27 so blues players blues players in Mississippi right 1920s 1910 Robert Johnson is the is the best example Robert Johnson is one of the most important blues players of all time he was an African American fellow from Mississippi and they used to say about Robert Johnson, Robert Johnson was so good at playing guitar that one night he met the devil at the crossroads and the devil showed him how to play guitar like that in exchange for his soul. That same story, I'm reading that same story here in local folklore in Limerick about a fucking stone circle. A flute player went into this circle, the fairies took him away, and then he could play the flute wonderfully. But what's being implied, because the fairies are evil, is what did he exchange? What terrible bad thing is gonna happen to this man, this wonderful flute player?
Starting point is 01:05:25 What bad thing is gonna happen? Because nothing good ever happens to anyone who walks into a fairy fort. But I want to finish the podcast by speaking about what fairy forts are, and why are we terrified of them? Why is there so much superstition around these stone circles, these old stone circles that can be untouched for thousands of years? Why are people so afraid of them?
Starting point is 01:05:52 So... There's between 40,000 and 60,000 fairy forts or stone circles in Ireland. That's loads. That's a lot. That's why I said to you, you've got a local fairy fort. Just find it. So what were they? So a fairy fort usually is, it's a circular mound in a field. Most of the time it has ancient stones and What they were was Like castles or forts People lived there
Starting point is 01:06:34 But most likely to Cattle cattle lived there. So you go back several hundred years. I'm talking pre-christian. All right a Thousand years two thousand years, whatever you want There was people living in Ireland, what did they live in? They would have built like permanent wooden camps. So they'd have built mounds and mounds of earth to defend. And then a load of timber in this circular shape Defensive and moths, right? So think of this circle with mounds of earth and then underneath the mounds of earth you have
Starting point is 01:07:16 depression in the ground. So this is a defensive structure It's very difficult to get in there if you're attacking and And then they'd have stuck a lot of wood and on the inside they would have had some houses inside there. And this is where people lived. Any place in Ireland that has Rath in it, or Lees in it, L-I-S, it means that there was one of these ring forts. They were called ring forts. It meant that there was one of these ring forts where people lived. If you want to see an example of what they would have looked like, go to a place called Craiganone. Craiganone is a... I think it's in Clare.
Starting point is 01:07:51 It's not Limerick, it's in Clare. Craiganone is a reconstruction of one of these ring forts, and you can walk around it. If a place in Ireland has Rathlias, Dune, Ca, Cásill, then all of those places had a ringfort. Rathmines, Lis Mór, Rath Farnham, Dun Leary, Cásill. These names, these names tell us this place once had a ringfort. These circular mounds with timber where people lived but also cattle. Now I'm going to simplify this. So before Christianity, before 500, we didn't have towns or cities in Ireland.
Starting point is 01:08:37 Very strange, but instead what we had were tons and tons of these ring forts and people were pastoral. Cattle was hugely hugely important. We cleared loads of forests and Ireland before Christianity was a cattle-based economy. We can see this from from the records of how valuable cattle was. Everything was... All value was traded against cattle. The most powerful person was the person who had the most cattle, the most cows. One of our most famous stories, the Tain Bó Chulna, right, this epic piece of mythology, it's about a cattle raid.
Starting point is 01:09:24 It's about a queen and a king fighting over who's the most powerful, who has the most cattle. Whoever had the most cattle was the most powerful. And people used to raid. Cattle raiding was a huge thing. People used to steal entire hordes of cattle. So all of these different ring forts were at war with each other, stealing each other of cattle. So all of these different ringforts were at war with each other, stealing each other's cattle. So holding cattle inside a ringfort, keeping your herd safe, was very very important. You were protecting from raids. Like I mentioned earlier, the Irish weather is revenge based. If you've got a sunny period, you're guaranteed the retribution of the rain. That's what the weather tells us. The weather, the weather ingrains retribution and revenge
Starting point is 01:10:14 into us as people if we live on this land. Well, some historians have said that Ireland before Christianity was a particularly, not Christianity, but Ireland before monasteries and towns. Ireland, when it was just a lot of ring forts and people moving with cattle, was very revenge and retribution based because the entirety of society was based around stealing cattle. This family, the O'Neill's, they steal fucking cattle from the O'Brien's and then a war starts and then someone is kidnapped and then there's, I'm gonna kidnap your sons for ransom and then you're gonna give me the cattle back, I'm gonna steal that bull. Consistent continual feuding and retribution based around cattle raids and violence and fighting and then needing to have
Starting point is 01:11:08 thousands and thousands of these ring forts, these secure ring forts that you keep your cattle inside. Well, I read a beautiful paper, an academic paper by a historian called Patrick McCafferty this week with an incredible theory about Irish ring forts. You see, these ring forts became the fairy forts. These...like, you're talking about beliefs about a place across hundreds of years, even thousands, and the average person didn't have writing, they just had stories. So what was once, what was a ring fort a thousand years ago? This place where humans or cattle lived that was a structure made of wood. Once that becomes abandoned,
Starting point is 01:11:53 the wood rots away and all you're left with is this circle, this mound, this strange unexplained mound that you don't know what it does or what it's for and maybe stones if stones were used. So the Ringforts, they become fairy forts. The people of Ireland, hundreds of years pass, you can't remember what that thing was for or what it was called, so people just go, I don't know what that fucking structure is, I don't know who built it, it must be the fairies because no one knows and it was there before I was born, I don't know what that fucking structure is. I don't know who built it. It must be the fairies, cause no one knows, and it was there before I was born.
Starting point is 01:12:29 It must be the fairies, don't fuck with it. But Patrick McCafferty goes further. Geraldus of Wales, the fellow who wrote the original topography, Hibernica, which I've done multiple podcasts on this. If you're a perpetual Declan you know what that is. But Gerald wrote about Ireland, he was a Welsh fella, in the 1100s and in the 1100s he said that the place was littered with ring forts so Ireland was full of these ring forts, these circular
Starting point is 01:12:57 structures, but by the 1100s the Irish had pretty much abandoned the Ringfortz. So for to believe Geraldus of Wales in the 1100s, he's saying that something happened that made Irish people go, we can't live in Ringfortz anymore, get the fuck away from him. So there's a deadly bacteria called anthrax. Anthrax, you don't come across it much now. Anthrax is one of the scariest bacteria in the world because they reckon if terrorists used it in a bomb, it could kill millions of people. Anthrax is deadly. Absolutely fucking deadly. Kill an entire village in a week. And anthrax is, it's naturally occurring. It occurs in animals. It occurs in cattle.
Starting point is 01:13:51 Cattle can become infected with anthrax and die. And the humans who are in contact with this cattle, they will also die. So Patrick McCafferty has a theory. He looked at the Irish annals. So these ring forts, like I said, some of them are thousands of years old, other ones are hundreds of years old, and they were definitely circular enclosures used for cattle. So let's just say a thousand years ago, there's an outbreak of anthrax in the cattle, completely plausible, you can read the annals, there's multiple plagues happening in Ireland, people
Starting point is 01:14:35 don't know the names for the diseases but they list out the symptoms. So let's just say one ring fort, there's like 200 cattle inside there and now they all get infected with fucking anthrax. And all the people inside there get infected with anthrax. That's everybody dead. Every cow dead, every person dead. No escaping it. Anthrax is deadly. So all of these people die in the ring fort. And then their bodies rot in the Ringfort and the wood rots away and
Starting point is 01:15:12 hundreds of years pass and everything's forgotten The bones are rotted away and now you're just left with a weird mound Just a strange circle of grass in the landscape, or maybe some stones on it. So let's just say 300, 400 years past. There's no writing. And the Irish people 300 years later
Starting point is 01:15:40 are just curious about this stone circle. Or maybe they want to take the stones. They see that the stones are there, and they're pre-cut, and they want to take them. Well, McCafferty's theory is that the people who would have started digging at that spot, the anthrax bacteria
Starting point is 01:16:01 can actually stay in the soil. So it's possible that some people in Ireland started digging up ancient stone circles and then they would cause an anthrax plague in their community and hundreds of people would die. And then it's entirely possible that they planted a white thorn tree on that stone circle as a warning, as a warning. White thorn means danger, don't fuck with this. So you have these ring forts, cattle are being kept inside there, anthrax is very common
Starting point is 01:16:37 as a cattle disease, and we know it can stay in the soil and you can wake it up hundreds of years later if you disturb the soil. All it takes is a handful of those instances in Ireland with ring forts. And people don't know what, they don't know what charm theory is, they don't know what illness is. All they know is someone fucking dug up one of these ring forts and the entire village died. The cattle died, the people died, they all died. What did they do? They dug up the ring fort.
Starting point is 01:17:09 Then stay the fuck away from these ring forts. That's fairy magic. That's, when you go at these ring forts, you're obviously fucking with the other world, and the fairies will get you. Plant a white-torn tree to warn people. And Patrick McCafferty, his theory, his theory is that's why we're terrified of fairy forts and fairy trees. We've just forgotten.
Starting point is 01:17:36 You're talking about superstition and oral tradition over thousands and thousands of years warning us about the very legitimate fear of anthrax in the soil. And it was an essay I read by him and he finishes it with, no scientist, a scientist in Ireland hasn't tested ring forts or fairy forts for anthrax, but he wishes someone would. I think it's a fucking brilliant theory. I
Starting point is 01:18:05 think it's a wonderful theory and what it ties back to too. And I've done a full podcast on this I just can't remember the name of it and I'm not rehashing all content but I will bring all content up if it supports the argument that I'm making now. There's this thing called long-term nuclear warning messaging, and it's fascinating. Nuclear waste is a thing. When we make nuclear energy, we've got tons and tons of nuclear waste.
Starting point is 01:18:36 And nuclear waste is deadly, deadly poisonous. It'll give you cancer, it'll kill you. Radiation poisoning. And a nuclear waste, it doesn't stop being deadly for hundreds of thousands of years. So we have this really deadly substance that will kill people and there's nothing you can do with it. So what we do do with nuclear waste is scientists bury it deep into the earth. They go to these caves and they bury nuclear waste deep, deep into the earth. But even in 20,000 years, if someone or something was to dig that up in 20,000 years,
Starting point is 01:19:22 it would be deadly. It would kill a lot of people. It's nuclear waste. So the scientists have to imagine. If we bury all this nuclear waste here, how do we tell someone that it's dangerous in 20,000 years? 20 civilizations might have collapsed. We don't even know if humans would be on the earth. Would it be aliens? Will people speak English? How do you tell someone 20,000 years in the future? Do not dig here. Something very dangerous is in the earth. Please stay away. Because humans are curious. We love digging shit up. So lots of the solutions they had was...
Starting point is 01:20:03 They would use megalithic stones. So where nuclear waste is buried, they would get large stones that are pointy and scary looking. Scary looking stones that stick out of the earth. And they would hope that someone in 20,000 years would be freaked out by this. And they'd say stay away. To make a site of nuclear waste feel spooky or feel threatening in some way. Threatening and supernatural. Another theory was to create religions, songs and folk tales about nuclear waste that would be scary enough that it would
Starting point is 01:20:39 last thousands of years even if writing collapses. So Patrick McCafferty, when he was, he didn't bring this into his anthrax theory, this is me adding to it, but what if that's what the white-thorn tree is? When it comes to these ancient stone circles, these fairy forts, there's always, there's a white-thorn tree there. That's the bit that freaks people out the most. I don't know what this mound is, I don't know what this circle is, and why in the fuck is that gnarly scary looking tree right there in the middle? Who put it there? Why is it there? I'm freaked out, I gotta stay away. Maybe that's what the white thorn tree is. stay away. Maybe that's what the White Thorn 3 is. 600 years ago, a thousand years ago, somebody dug this up and anthrax spread and caused the plague and killed hundreds of people.
Starting point is 01:21:34 So they planted the White Thorn 3 as a warning. Stay away. This means danger. This means forces that you don't understand. And they probably genuinely believed that that was the fucking fairies. If you dig into the soil and everyone dies, and your belief is that the other world is underneath the earth, that's the fucking fairies, that's what that is. So that's all I have time for for this week's podcast. I don't know am I gonna bring up the anthrax theory with Eddie Linehan, because he genuinely believes in the fairies and I don't want to burst his bubble but I love the anthrax fairy-four theory I think it's it's fascinating alright rub a swan no don't rub a fucking swan feed
Starting point is 01:22:20 feed an urban seagull feed an urban seagull that they're getting fucked over by this this new bottle law lads. They're getting fucked over by this new battle law, lads. They're really getting fucked over. So feed an urban seagull if you see one. And don't cut down a white thorn tree. And don't walk into the middle of a fairy circle. God bless. I'm going to go ahead and turn it off...... you Thank you.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.