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Blessed Well, Tobar Beannaithe, Sheep’s Head

2nd March 2016 8 Comments

This well is in such a wild and remote spot. Walking down from the Goat’s Path through boggy pasture, a ridged path is discernible, flagged by large stones. This takes you down through fields towards a green plateau. The landscape first has to be admired for it is breath-taking.

The plateau is in fact part of an ancient promontory fort, its ramparts long since eroded, but what an incredible position towering above mighty cliffs (yes, look down below you) with huge views up and down Bantry Bay and across to the Beara.

Impossible to access from the north, a small neck of land meant the fort was also well defended from the south.

Turn inwards and the whole scene changes and there is the well, snugly fitting into the hillside, now roped off to protect it from the cattle and horses that sometime occupy the field.

The well is a small stone box above which are three tiers made from stone slabs, topped off with a more recent concrete niche containing a statue. The tiers are carefully made and attractive. A smattering of rather forlorn tokens – plastic flower, rusty coins, a smashed yellow vase – bear witness to occasional visitors.

The water is still plentiful, cold and fresh with a sprinkling of bright green duckweed.

Once it was much revered though and according to Evelyn Hardy in her book Summer in Another World, written during the late 1940s, young girls would visit the well to pray for future marriages. Did they sip the water too? Did the water have other healing qualities? This I must find out. *

It is a remarkable place – still another world.

Edit: Since the publication online of the Schools’ Folklore Collection at duchas.ie more  information about individual wells has become available. This entry from Gooladoo National School throws a little more light on this well. It is as Gaelige and has kindly been translated:

Blessed/Holy Well.

There is a well in the farm of Henry Lynch next to the sea. There is nothing big/much around it, except a raised area/platform (ardán) above it and flagstones in front of it. There are no tours/pilgrimages (turasanna) there, but some people come there to get cures for rheumatic ailments. There is no name on the well, or certainty that it is a holy/blessed well. One of the Lynch men, the grandfather of Henry Lynch, the man who owns the well now, had a dream, that the well had the power to cure pains in bones, toothache, rheumatics etc. It was said that people were cured there. Gooladoo National School, informant Mrs Brigid Lynch

SFC:269:0285

The Irish Tourism Association Survey describes how rounds were still being paid here in the 1940s and that the water held a cure for sore bones and toothache.

The well was revisited in September 2020 and it was looking well tended and content.

Gooladoo holy well

Revisted again in March 2021, the well has been considerably tied up and there is public access with a stile from the roadway.

The area around the well has been strimmed and slabs tided revealing more of the surrounding structure. The water is clean and fresh and the statue of the BVM ( a new one) has a bit of protective perspex in front of her.

It’s now possible to see a large stone directly in front of the well – was this once used as part of the rounds?

A good example of how a holy wells evolves and keeps up with the times. It is still important and relevant to different groups of people and is always a pleasure to visit.

  • May Day was traditionally a day to visit holy wells as they were considered to be at their most powerful. Girls were encouraged to look into holy wells on this day in the hope of seeing their future husbands reflected in the water. As this well has this tradition attached, I suspect it is a Lady’s Well and was visited on May 1.
Special thanks to Finola Finlay and Michael Plaice for their translations.
The location of the well can be found in the Gazetteer.

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Filed Under: West Cork Tagged With: Bantry Bay Bones Evelyn Hardy Goat's Path Gooladoo Irish Tourist Association Survey 1944 offerings Promontory fort Rheumatism Schools' Folklore Project Sheep's Head Toothache

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Finola says

    2nd March 2016 at 5:56 PM

    Such a charming little well – and then that scenery!

    Reply
  2. freespiral2016 says

    2nd March 2016 at 7:09 PM

    It’s a special place isn’t it – extremely muddy at the moment!

    Reply
  3. Robert says

    4th March 2016 at 10:25 AM

    I’d love to visit this one – it looks very special. Any saintly associations?

    Reply
    • freespiral2016 says

      4th March 2016 at 10:31 AM

      I’ll put it on the list 🙂 No saintly associations as far as I’ve discovered yet.

      Reply
  4. Ali Isaac says

    6th March 2016 at 8:02 AM

    What a spectacular location, a site for inspiration and reflection throughout the ages, I’m sure.

    Reply
  5. Silly_point says

    20th January 2022 at 4:48 PM

    Visited today: a cold, sunny, frosty January morning. Peaceful and heavenly, with only the faraway barking of farm dogs to disturb the silence. The only down side was the incredible quantities of fresh sheeps’ poop that attached itself to our boots! Some of the surrounding walls looked impressively ancient.

    Reply
    • Amanda Clarke says

      20th January 2022 at 6:56 PM

      It must have looked magnificent down there today. So glad you paid your respects.

      Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Lockdown Roundup says:
    9th November 2020 at 5:34 PM

    […] well, known simply as the Blessed Well, Tobar Beannaithe, was looking in fine form and  had been sympathetically tidied up since I […]

    Reply

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