Published by broganfamily8069
We're a homeschooling family of eight - five girls and three boys. Our children are ages 20, 19, 17, 15, 12, 10, 7, and 5. We will be living in Ireland for the next six months, and then going to Tennessee! This blog is a documentation of our travels. Enjoy!! :)
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Good work, Kelly! If memory serves me, the ruins you see throughout Ireland mean that the Owners and their heirs retain that land. In Connemara, there are areas where some stones are left from houses where the residents left through death or immigration during the Famine. The land is still theirs. This law may have changed since the EU. I’m struck by the lack of sheep. I had heard that the sheep farms were constrained by EU rules, but I’m not sure that is true now either. I may research these important issues over the weeekend. 😁 Hope the calf was corralled. The chicken pot pie looks fabulous and perfect for the end of a day.
L,K
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The farmer we talked to when we pet the lambs said that in this section (Kinard) of Kerry, there are many more dairy farms than sheep farms (thus Kerrygold butter). Our road has 3 dairy farms. However, on the ride into Dingle and around Slea Head there are LOTS of sheep. I find it fascinating that they are all “free range” and not at all like farms in the US. The meat, dairy, and eggs are noticeably better. I did not know that rule about the houses. My Grandmother’s house is still standing, without the roof like the one in the picture. I am hoping to find it when we are near Mayo.
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