I’ve done the pilgrimage there twice. Unique experience. I’d highly recommend it.
RonNid on
For years, my dad worked as an AI technician (artificial insemination). So for most of the summer, when cattle are in heat, he would be working all day every day including Sunday. So as a result he couldn’t go to mass, something very important to him. Every August, when calls got quiet, he’d go to Lough Derg to „make up“ for the missed masses.
He’d come home every time and I’d be so excited to hear of the stories he’d tell. He time he really offended a woman by mentioning contraception (On this sacred island?!!). The time he met a celebrity, or relative, or saw someone do something embarrassing or funny. I grew up thinking this was a magical place of stories.
So, the summer before my leaving, I went. Myself and a gang of my friends, and my dad. We were cold. Miserable. But Jesus we laughed and giggled and were just daft. Together in our misery. I, sleep deprived, bumped I to a pillar and apologised to it during the vigil. One friend had a major panic attack and left in the middle of the night.
I went the next year with my dad again and one friend, hoping to get enough points to be a doctor. She is now. We met a priest in training, who was maybe only a few years older than I, at 19. I thought it was crazy he was committing his life to something so big so young. I liked him.
The next year, my last, I went with two friends who were a couple. I was friends with both before they got together. We went without my dad this time. This time my faith was really rocky, it had been for years. I decided to try and find it. I perused the gift shop (out of sheer boredom most people would wander in there looking for something to do). I found a book that explained why different things were considered sins and gave the passage on the bible that explained this. Beside me gift shop was a little chapel that had a massive bible to read. I spent most of my free time going over and back between the book in the shop and the bible checking this passage and that passage. Reading the passages before and after for better context. It shattered my faith, and I’m an atheist since.
But as hard as it is, and it is hard, I do look fondly back on those 9 days I spent on the hardest pilgrimage in Catholicism, and laugh that it made me an atheist.
I can answer any questions you want, not a bother.
rye_212 on
Never seen it from that angle before. Impressive. Wanted to go there but never did.
rye_212 on
Most spare space built on. In that sense, its like those islands in the pacific inhabited by thousands of people.
Flat_Web6639 on
Cool asf
conor34 on
Loch Dearg – named after the blood of the ollphéist St Partick killed while trying to bring christianity to the crowd in Donegal!
Short_Ad_5006 on
Good example of something that should be handed over to the state as part of redress
Logical_Step_7121 on
Anyone interested should read Paddy Kavanagh’s poem on the pilgrimage. He wrote it after being commisioned by the Independent to write a first hand account. Its brilliant and shows up a lot of the hypocrisy and repression of the time. Quite funny too
Legitimate_Bag8259 on
I would hate that. I’m assuming it’s a hotel, it’s rather large, and there’s absolutely nowhere to get away from them.
I absolutely hate spending time around people or being in crowded spaces.
A holiday on an island is ideal. A holiday on a tiny island surrounded by hundreds of strangers is my idea of hell.
dontsayaword123 on
Who all?
Margrave75 on
If hell were real.
This would be it for me.
BoweryBloke on
I’d say their front garden is shite.
micimore on
There are 2 Lough Derg’s in Ireland. The good, fun one. And this one. Sorry for your troubles, I’ll be thinking of you out on my canoe in the Midlands 🙂
Brokenteethmonkey on
Had some great days fishing around there
Aware_Flow1070 on
Who the fuck says who all??
OlderWhiskey on
Moat maxxing.
Secret-Swan-5521 on
I worked there. Some fond memories as well as some not so fond. Same as any workplace really!
Stringr55 on
wtf is ‚who all‘ ?
chaircardigan on
About 40 years ago, my dad took me, my little brother and my dad’s cousin out on a little rowing boat, with an outboard, on Lough Derg. We landed on the other island, where apparently St Patrick _actually went_.
My dad left me and my brother to play on the island and him and his cousin went for a sail about the loch.
The wind picked up (maybe Paddy was angry) leaving me and my brother on the island with my father unable to land the boat to get us back. My dad’s cousin was scared and wouldn’t sit at the front of the boat, to rebalance it, to rescue us.
So he and my dad had to sail back to land and get a bigger boat.
We were fine in the end.
OfficerOLeary on
During the Celtic Tiger years, yummy mummies would go there before their holidays in order to lose weight😂. The pre-Ozempic years.
MaxAngmar on
Haven’t thought about Lough Derg in DECADES!
Did it thrice 🤣 Craic was good, went with uncles and cousins and bumped into friends from school. Good memories, I’m a non-believer/ humanist now though
Stegasaurus_Wrecks on
That’s what it looks like? Wow! The church really did have money to burn back in the day, didn’t they?
Along with an endless supply for willing labourers willing to work for fuck all I’m sure in return for the promise of salvation.
Imagine what that would be worth as a hotel nowadays!
Crafty-Dragonfruit57 on
The government needs to start taking action over these floods, ridiculous
chimpdoctor on
Most of our grandparents i would imagine. Im old enough to know that my parents were definitely there at one point.
spektato on
I can still taste the plain toast and black coffee!
ForbiddenToblerone on
I had no idea it was so gorgeous.
multiplesof3 on
Been there once. Was really intense. You’re supposed to fast from the morning you leave home to get there, and then get the boat over. Then you start doing all these rosaries over and over again. Walking around on stones barefoot or kneeling on concrete. You don’t really know what you’re doing at first but you pick it up. Eventually it gets to 10pm and you go into the basilica and there’s a service. The priest announces that your 24h of no food and no sleep will begin now. And it will end for those who started 24h prior. It’s hilarious the division in the group between those who are fresh and starting their 24h and the zombies who are just finishing theirs. The next 24h are a bit mad. You’re barefoot the whole time. Dead silent. In your own head just praying. You’re given tea with no milk, water, and at one point you get oat cakes and/or dry toast. We would take boiling water and pour it on the ground and stand on it just to warm our feet up. That sleep at the end of the 24h (really 36h) is magical. You do a few more rounds of praying the next morning and get the boat back. There’s a chance here and there to chat to others around you but not much. It’s a special place and a special thing to do. Wouldn’t be rushing back. Though I did sit for a meal recently with 3 elderly Christian brothers and when I dropped that I had done Lough Derg at age 16 their respect jumped up a few notches. Was very funny. People are all the same no matter what you’re into.
Boogyoogywoogy on
My current partner worked their for a summer serving teas and coffees, she used to had to get a boat to a from work everyday
Whilst she liked it she said it was cold and then people who ran it were generally cold towards her. So much so that she refuses to work in hospitality again because of it
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38 Kommentare
Haven’t yet but I’d like to go.
some kind of monastery?
Go home now Yank.
I’ve been, not worth it
Looks like its hovering in the sky….
Looks incredible.
Been there bro
Never knew that’s what it looks like
Lough Derg – Donegal. St Patrick’s Monastery.
That looks like it will be lost to water
I’ve done the pilgrimage there twice. Unique experience. I’d highly recommend it.
For years, my dad worked as an AI technician (artificial insemination). So for most of the summer, when cattle are in heat, he would be working all day every day including Sunday. So as a result he couldn’t go to mass, something very important to him. Every August, when calls got quiet, he’d go to Lough Derg to „make up“ for the missed masses.
He’d come home every time and I’d be so excited to hear of the stories he’d tell. He time he really offended a woman by mentioning contraception (On this sacred island?!!). The time he met a celebrity, or relative, or saw someone do something embarrassing or funny. I grew up thinking this was a magical place of stories.
So, the summer before my leaving, I went. Myself and a gang of my friends, and my dad. We were cold. Miserable. But Jesus we laughed and giggled and were just daft. Together in our misery. I, sleep deprived, bumped I to a pillar and apologised to it during the vigil. One friend had a major panic attack and left in the middle of the night.
I went the next year with my dad again and one friend, hoping to get enough points to be a doctor. She is now. We met a priest in training, who was maybe only a few years older than I, at 19. I thought it was crazy he was committing his life to something so big so young. I liked him.
The next year, my last, I went with two friends who were a couple. I was friends with both before they got together. We went without my dad this time. This time my faith was really rocky, it had been for years. I decided to try and find it. I perused the gift shop (out of sheer boredom most people would wander in there looking for something to do). I found a book that explained why different things were considered sins and gave the passage on the bible that explained this. Beside me gift shop was a little chapel that had a massive bible to read. I spent most of my free time going over and back between the book in the shop and the bible checking this passage and that passage. Reading the passages before and after for better context. It shattered my faith, and I’m an atheist since.
But as hard as it is, and it is hard, I do look fondly back on those 9 days I spent on the hardest pilgrimage in Catholicism, and laugh that it made me an atheist.
I can answer any questions you want, not a bother.
Never seen it from that angle before. Impressive. Wanted to go there but never did.
Most spare space built on. In that sense, its like those islands in the pacific inhabited by thousands of people.
Cool asf
Loch Dearg – named after the blood of the ollphéist St Partick killed while trying to bring christianity to the crowd in Donegal!
Good example of something that should be handed over to the state as part of redress
Anyone interested should read Paddy Kavanagh’s poem on the pilgrimage. He wrote it after being commisioned by the Independent to write a first hand account. Its brilliant and shows up a lot of the hypocrisy and repression of the time. Quite funny too
I would hate that. I’m assuming it’s a hotel, it’s rather large, and there’s absolutely nowhere to get away from them.
I absolutely hate spending time around people or being in crowded spaces.
A holiday on an island is ideal. A holiday on a tiny island surrounded by hundreds of strangers is my idea of hell.
Who all?
If hell were real.
This would be it for me.
I’d say their front garden is shite.
There are 2 Lough Derg’s in Ireland. The good, fun one. And this one. Sorry for your troubles, I’ll be thinking of you out on my canoe in the Midlands 🙂
Had some great days fishing around there
Who the fuck says who all??
Moat maxxing.
I worked there. Some fond memories as well as some not so fond. Same as any workplace really!
wtf is ‚who all‘ ?
About 40 years ago, my dad took me, my little brother and my dad’s cousin out on a little rowing boat, with an outboard, on Lough Derg. We landed on the other island, where apparently St Patrick _actually went_.
My dad left me and my brother to play on the island and him and his cousin went for a sail about the loch.
The wind picked up (maybe Paddy was angry) leaving me and my brother on the island with my father unable to land the boat to get us back. My dad’s cousin was scared and wouldn’t sit at the front of the boat, to rebalance it, to rescue us.
So he and my dad had to sail back to land and get a bigger boat.
We were fine in the end.
During the Celtic Tiger years, yummy mummies would go there before their holidays in order to lose weight😂. The pre-Ozempic years.
Haven’t thought about Lough Derg in DECADES!
Did it thrice 🤣 Craic was good, went with uncles and cousins and bumped into friends from school. Good memories, I’m a non-believer/ humanist now though
That’s what it looks like? Wow! The church really did have money to burn back in the day, didn’t they?
Along with an endless supply for willing labourers willing to work for fuck all I’m sure in return for the promise of salvation.
Imagine what that would be worth as a hotel nowadays!
The government needs to start taking action over these floods, ridiculous
Most of our grandparents i would imagine. Im old enough to know that my parents were definitely there at one point.
I can still taste the plain toast and black coffee!
I had no idea it was so gorgeous.
Been there once. Was really intense. You’re supposed to fast from the morning you leave home to get there, and then get the boat over. Then you start doing all these rosaries over and over again. Walking around on stones barefoot or kneeling on concrete. You don’t really know what you’re doing at first but you pick it up. Eventually it gets to 10pm and you go into the basilica and there’s a service. The priest announces that your 24h of no food and no sleep will begin now. And it will end for those who started 24h prior. It’s hilarious the division in the group between those who are fresh and starting their 24h and the zombies who are just finishing theirs. The next 24h are a bit mad. You’re barefoot the whole time. Dead silent. In your own head just praying. You’re given tea with no milk, water, and at one point you get oat cakes and/or dry toast. We would take boiling water and pour it on the ground and stand on it just to warm our feet up. That sleep at the end of the 24h (really 36h) is magical. You do a few more rounds of praying the next morning and get the boat back. There’s a chance here and there to chat to others around you but not much. It’s a special place and a special thing to do. Wouldn’t be rushing back. Though I did sit for a meal recently with 3 elderly Christian brothers and when I dropped that I had done Lough Derg at age 16 their respect jumped up a few notches. Was very funny. People are all the same no matter what you’re into.
My current partner worked their for a summer serving teas and coffees, she used to had to get a boat to a from work everyday
Whilst she liked it she said it was cold and then people who ran it were generally cold towards her. So much so that she refuses to work in hospitality again because of it