CEUT Reflections 5

Le Gordon Wells

Here’s the fifth of our series of blogposts by Mary Morrison, in which she reflects on the Aire Air Sunnd project led by Comann Eachdraidh Uibhist a Tuath. As with her previous posts, comments are welcome!

blogpost 5 picture croppedDrawing by John from the AAS Caraidean Uibhist workshops

Mary writes:

Professor Stewart Angus.  ‘Coastal Changes on North Uist.’  

‘You might be able to do more than I can’.

On the evening of July 10th, as part of our Heritage, Gaelic and Wellbeing project, ‘Aire Air Sunnd’, a packed room of members of Comann Eachdraidh Uibhist a Tuath were privileged to have an evening visit from Professor Stewart Angus. He gave us an impressive talk about his extensive, longitudinal research into ‘Coastal Changes in North Uist’, using a comprehensive array of historical sources, photographs, maps and diagrams to illustrate his points. Since he has worked across the Long Island, comparisons were offered to his own and others’ collections of data from along the Hebridean coasts, including references to Lewis, Harris, Benbecula and South Uist.

Professor Angus encouraged the audience to use research findings and make their community voices heard in governmental and environmental circles. He seemed to feel that, as a community, we have a significant role to play here, both alongside the scientific data, as well as in the promotion of the research recommendations these have generated. He reiterated throughout the evening that he felt the community voice might persuade those in power to listen to and to pay attention to the scientific data?

(One of the most strongly voiced concerns the ‘AAS’ project’s community members’ survey in 2023 had raised was that local voices were not being heard at local or national levels.) We think, as a project, and as a seemingly small band of electors, these findings will need to be central to our project on-line conference early in October, ‘Making our Voices Heard’.

Professor Angus stressed the importance of ‘lived’ local knowledge, such as the finds of saddle querns amongst the shingle banks made by lobster fishermen, the relevance of coastal or rock placenames, some even referring to attempts in the past to build sluice gates to prevent the sea waters entering the freshwater lochs. One reef, Sgeir Husabost, is all that remains today of an ancient township, mentioned in The Charter of Inchaffrey, but lost to the sea. This lay close to Baleshare, or Baile Sear, (Eastern Township), whose name itself implies that maybe it was once two, separated townships.

Some of the key points Professor Angus made are summarised as follows, (with my apologies as a mere citizen scientist for any misinterpretations):

  • Global warming does not always mean the same as local warming.
  • Uist has the highest rate of relative sea level rise in relation to land in Scotland.
  • Winter rain is predicted to rise by 45%. Even the levels of low tides are rising.
  • The land is also rising, although, because of rainfall here, and our topology, the mainland of Scotland is sinking faster, by 6mm a year.
  • Moving dunes have a key role to play in adaptation to these rising sea levels; preserving the integrity of their ridges and the breadth of these are very important.
  • The coast and dunes move on every tide; they provide a natural structure for warding off the ocean. Evidence shows the dunes work better than any built structure in dampening the effects of high tides and storms – not losing sand but redepositing it, often in useful ways, since sand absorbs wave energy well.
  • The wider the dune structure, the more protection it provides. The scale of the impact is determined by the height of the waves, which in turn is the result of atmospheric pressure, astronomical pressure, the nature of the weather and the tide.
  • Built structures, such as walls, tend to be less useful: it may be better to work with respect for the ways the environment works itself and avoid building walls?
  • It may also be important that no rubbish of any kind should be buried within the dunes. Whatever is buried will be released back onto the shore at some stage – there is some alarming evidence that this is still happening today.
  • It is also important that we try to avoid saltwater getting into the freshwater lochs through breaches in the dunes. In two lochs, North Uist has the highest national score for protected organisms, (such as a very rare kind of cockle or the birds nest stonewort), boasting seven out of the eight rarest species.
  • There are other important ways of dampening wave energy, such as North Uist’s extensive kelp fields, our extended shallow horizontal seabed, our shingle bank deposits and seaweed on the shore.
  • Those who collect our ‘truly wonderful’ seaweed are advised to take this from as low down the beach as possible. Leaving a ridge of seaweed high on the shore encourages the very fertile insect and beetle life to propagate rapidly in the heat of its decay, providing essential food for wading birds.
  • The seeds within the tangle higher up the beach will also be nurtured, having time to bed themselves into the sand, thus trapping it and preventing it from blowing. This ridge of seaweed should be allowed to rest, ideally, for at least two years.

The talk then followed the North Uist coastline in considerable detail revealing how differently the shorelines were responding to local wave energy and tidal forces, such as refraction, accretion and storms. There are some puzzling results here, especially at Sollas, where the sand appears to be moving west and at Griminish, where the movement appears to be to the east! Although Baleshare has the highest ground elevation on North Uist, it lacks a dune ridge, making it more susceptible to flooding.

(Once we have transcribed the talk in full, we hope to profile more of the individual detail alongside the talk’s valuable slides on the CEUT website.)

Professor Angus also referred to the importance of a wide range of local historical written resources, some reaching back to mediaeval times; these can provide critical evidence for the shifts in our North Uist coastline over time. One of the earliest Gaelic sources he mentioned was John MacCodrum, born in Ard na Runair, and Alaistair mac Mhaighstir Alasdair, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alasdair_mac_Mhaighstir_Alasdair both writing eloquently about the machair, although, in the case of MacCodrum, as an official bard, he may have been susceptible to poetic licence and the need to please Sir James Macdonald of Sleat.

A recent paper by himself and Dr Hanson was referred to, and the recommendations in this are probably those we should be using to inform ourselves when we raise our concerns more widely in Aire air Sunnd’s final on-line conference early in October. Professor Stewart’s final message reiterated

  • Respect the ability of the dunes to move freely
  • Protect the vast kelp bed lying west of North Uist
  • Encourage the height of the dunes – maximise the natural function of the coast
  • Try to keep the grazing animals away from the edges of the dunes.

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Tadhail air Island Voices – Guthan nan Eilean

AAS: Wellbeing, Stories, and Gaelic

Le Gordon Wells

AASYouTubemontage1

Gordon Wells talks about his view of the importance of stories and the place for Gaelic to the Wellbeing group in the Aire air Sunnd project led by Comann Eachdraidh Uibhist a Tuath (North Uist Historical Society). He has recorded English and Gaelic versions of this talk. Click on any link below to get to the YouTube video.

Wellbeing, stories & Gaelic (in English) – full talk
Wellbeing, stories & Gaelic (in Gaelic) – full talk

Both English and Gaelic talks can also be viewed in two parts each. In part 1 Gordon recounts a story about his uncle, Norman Maclellan, supplemented with some family photos. In part 2 he offers some general thoughts and reflections, particularly in relation to language, arising from this family story. The Gaelic parts are accompanied by optional YouTube subtitles, which can further be auto-translated into the language of your choice through the YouTube settings wheel.

Wellbeing, stories & Gaelic (in English) – Part 1
Wellbeing, stories & Gaelic (in English) – Part 2
Wellbeing, stories & Gaelic (in Gaelic) – Part 1 (subtitled)
Wellbeing, stories & Gaelic (in Gaelic) – Part 2 (subtitled)

The original Gaelic version of Anna Sheonaidh’s article in An t-Uibhisteach, referred to in the first part of Gordon’s talk, and an English translation are available here: https://gordonwellsuist.wordpress.com/2011/04/09/ban-uibhisteach-ann-an-india/

Access to the articles referred to in the second part of Gordon’s talk is freely available here: https://guthan.wordpress.com/research/

More information on the Island Voices contribution to Aire air Sunnd is available here: https://guthan.wordpress.com/aire-air-sunnd/

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Tadhail air Island Voices – Guthan nan Eilean

AAS: Phase 2 Launch Video

Le Gordon Wells

LaunchingAAS2

A series of short videos is planned for public release by the Aire Air Sunnd (AAS) Wellbeing Group. These record aspects of a series of sessions (physical and virtual) held in Phase Two of the project. Island Voices is happy to provide the online platform for these through our YouTube channel.

In the first video, Jessica Wood, CEUT‘s co-researcher from Aberdeen University, describes how the Wellbeing Workshops were shaped, sharing some of the important findings from the co-created 2023 community survey. “These in turn informed the follow-on community-led research, demonstrating how community members can become researchers themselves through learning from working alongside professional researchers.”

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Taisce Bheo: Galway Voices

Le Gordon Wells

Galway Voices JPGWe’re pleased to play online host for six new Irish voices on the Taisce Bheo na nGael/Stòras Beò nan Gàidheal project run by the UHI Language Sciences Institute, with support from CIALL. These recordings were all co-ordinated by Brian Ó Curnáin of the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies.

Jimí and Pádraig discuss and recount anecdotes about their ancestors and their life in the upland small arable areas of Cois Fharraige, west Co. Galway. The first to come to the area was Micil Chearra, and his wife Peigí Ní Dhonnchú from Baile na mBrobhach. They went to live in Clochar (na) Lára on a holding owned by a landlord by the name of Common. They were expelled from their holding, due to a falling out with the Blakes over hare hunting and the little black hound of Micil Uí Chearra. The story of the fairy hare remained in family lore. Jimí remembers Séamas Mhicil, his grandfather. He had a story about a man from Glenicmurrin who got lost in mist on the hills but came to the Cearra home in Clochar Locha, and was grateful to have made it there safely. Both relate incidents involving the poitín distilling. Jimí explains the supernatural origin of the saying ‘I’ll make you change your smile, like Máirtín Mhaitiú did to the ghost.’ Jimí heard his grandmother talking about milking the milk cow and saying prayers that Jimí acquired from her. And he says three of them, including finally the renowned An Mharainn Phádraig.

The Word-linked transcript is available here: https://multidict.net/cs/12092

In Muireann Ní Churnáin agus Brian Ó Curnáin (1) Muireann tells us about her current school life in fifth year at Coláiste an Eachréidh, Athenry, Co. Galway: the school subjects and her academic interests: history and art. She has great praise for the school staff. She talks to her brother Brian about their life in Ros Muc, in the west of Co.Galway, and the move to the Galltacht (English speaking area) in the east of the county, and how she quickly learned English. She also changed her Irish so that she would be better understood in Gaelscoil Riada. It was after the move that she was able to learn ballet in a ballet school in Galway city. She really likes ballet and would like to practice professionally as a teacher. She tells about her travels, especially about her visit to the USA.

The Word-linked transcript is available here: https://multidict.net/cs/12090

In Muireann Ní Churnáin agus Brian Ó Curnáin (2) Muireann tells about the family ski holidays: the hard and easy pistes, the beauty of the mountains and the surroundings, ski accidents and dangers of skiing, as well as safety in groups, and the craziness of the après-ski and even an interesting comparison to ballet. Muireann and Brian went to visit their brother, Dara, when he was working and skiing in Val d’Isère in France fo a season, but Muireann thinks that such a long stay would be too much for her. Brian then turns the conversation to school life and study. Muireann thinks that students now have many advantages because of the information revolution. She then discusses various problems that teenagers are thought to have in their lives. She is very interested in live music, in the likes of Tyle the Creator and Brockhampton. Brian and Muireann follow the rappers Kneecap, although Muireann is not impressed by the drug culture she thinks they are associated with. Both of them discuss the Irish Revival in the context of music fashion and the media.

The Word-linked transcript is available here: https://multidict.net/cs/12091

With Dara Ó Curnáin, Seán Concanonn describes his childhood, his working life, his relations and life in Montiagh (South), Claregalway, Co. Galway. He discusses sports: hurling and football. He describes dairy farming, raising piglets, farm horses, thatching, and of course sowing and spraying spuds! Chicken eggs and young roosters were brought to Galway and sold to shopkeepers. Pigs were killed and eaten at home. Seán also describes the high rates of emigration during his youth in the 1950s and its toll on hurling teams. He spent a short spell working in England with his brother and a while in hospital in Galway with a diagnosis of tuberculosis.

The Word-linked transcript is available here: https://multidict.net/cs/12089

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Tadhail air Island Voices – Guthan nan Eilean

A Faculdade Gaélica da Escócia

Le Gordon Wells

Faculdade GaelicoWe were delighted to receive another Portuguese contribution from our new collaborator Marina Yazbek Dias Peres, to add to the Children’s Parliament in Benbecula film she’s already done for us. This time, Marina chose to do a Portuguese version of our film about Sabhal Mòr Ostaig, the Gaelic college on the Isle of Skye.

A wordlinked transcript with the video embedded is available here: https://multidict.net/cs/12087

Marina promises more is yet to come. Muito obrigado, Marina!

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Tadhail air Island Voices – Guthan nan Eilean

Half a Million Hits & Other News

Le Gordon Wells

Six months after our “Island Voices make sense” Hogmanay post we can now note a midsummer milestone and a couple of other updates!

Firstly, we passed the half-million mark of hits on the YouTube channel on June 26th:

HalfMillionViewsCropPlusEdged

Not bad for a “minority language” channel! Many thanks to all our contributors over the years!

And after extended “18th anniversary” celebrations, we’ll be taking a bit of a social media breather over the summer break, but not before also noting the June publication of an abridged version of the comprehensive account of the Island Voices project in Language Issues, the NATECLA journal: “Island voices ‐ Guthan nan Eilean ‐ Hebridean language capture and curation, 2005‐2023: an overview”

IngentaArticleScrncrop
Abstract:

This is an abridged version of an article providing a comprehensive description of the Island Voices/Guthan nan Eilean language capture and curation project as it stood in Spring 2023, available in full on the project’s website. The introduction presents information on its main features and aims, the linguistic rationale focussing on the primacy of speech and the salience of bilingualism, and the Hebridean community context in which the project operates. A shortened account of the project contents and chronology follows, divided into four separate sections or phases: Staff-led Production, Participatory Production, Multilingual Diversification, and Research Alignment. In conclusion, connections to further research and development projects and opportunities are sketched out, and some final reflections question a polarising juxtaposition of local versus global interests while pointing towards responsibilities alongside the opportunities this kind of work entails. Describing a primarily oral project through written text presents a challenge. Copious footnotes point to online samples of the materials discussed, and readers are encouraged to engage through the screen as well as the page in order to extract full benefit. The original article is bookended by a preamble and postscript, which offer written exemplification from short, transcribed extracts. It can be accessed through the following link: https://guthan.wordpress.com/2023/06/01/eighteen-years-of-island-voices/

(NB. It may be worth noting that, while it is of course great that Language Issues readers now get a chance to learn about the project through their own journal, the original – and full – article is still freely available on our research/reports page.)

CEBacplaylist1Lastly for now, we were also pleased in mid-June to add the ninth and final film in the Comann Eachdraidh Sgìre a’ Bhac playlist of excellent community-made and subtitled videos to our Clilstore collection, with CIALL support. This is foundational work which, quite apart from its Gaelic learning support function, provides standardised transcriptions of authentic speech which can be used in a number of other important applications as well. We’ve now gathered together all nine clips with their Clilstore transcripts on a single dedicated Sgìre a’ Bhac page. Thanks and congratulations to the Comann Eachdraidh!

We look forward to coming back after the summer with more exciting developments…

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Tadhail air Island Voices – Guthan nan Eilean

Vatisker Memories – Sgìre a’ Bhac

Le Gordon Wells

Vatisker Memories Clilstore

Talking to Coinneach MacÌomhair, Alexina Graham and Mal Macleod remember growing up in Vatisker.

With the support of CIALL, here’s another film from Comann Eachdraidh Sgìre a’ Bhac that has now been added to the Clilstore platform combining the YouTube video with a wordlinked transcript.

You can find the Clilstore unit here: https://clilstore.eu/cs/11981.

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Tadhail air Island Voices – Guthan nan Eilean

Shaetlan Voice in Exile

Le Gordon Wells

Christie Poster pic
Select any video clip in this landscape format, or use the phone-friendly portrait layout.

Shetlander Christie Williamson is the focus of this third “poets in exile” collection in our experimental extension of the Island Voices “capture and curation” model into new contexts and languages. This follows on from Jamaican in Wales with Audrey West, and Gaelic in Shetland with Donald S Murray, all supported by CIALL.

As the documentary reveals, while Christie has been a resident of Glasgow for over twenty years, he has also travelled extensively to present his poems around the world, while keeping a firm grip on his Shetland roots from which he derives so much inspiration. The documentary also presents snatches from his poetry and a conversation with Chris Stout. Lengthier examples are presented in additional video clips.

In the first poetry clip, Christie recites a selection of his Shetlandic poems from his collection “Oo an Feddirs”. In the second clip he reads from “Doors tae Naewye”. The third clip features contributions to the collections “Break in Case of Silence”, and “What Winter Wants”.

The examples of unscripted speech are from a conversation in which Christie talks to fellow Shetlander Chris Stout, who is also now a Glasgow resident.

In Part 1 the topics covered include Shetland schooldays and hostel living, ferry journeys to the mainland in student days, and what living in Glasgow is like for Shetlanders.

In Part 2, they talk about what it’s like to go home to Shetland for visits, and how mobile phones, particularly in the wake of Covid, have enabled Shetlanders to keep in closer contact.

All films in the collection (including additional versions of the documentary in Gaelic and English) can be accessed through the above poster in either landscape or phone-friendly portrait layout.

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Tadhail air Island Voices – Guthan nan Eilean

Tales from Local History Sites

Le Gordon Wells

Tobhtaichean montage

Tommy Macdonald tells some of the history of Clann ‘ic Mhuirich (“Clan Currie”) from the ruin of the ancestral home in Stilligarry, South Uist, and recounts some tales from other nearby sites.

In Part 1, he relates where Clann ‘ic Mhuirich came from, and when, and how they came to settle in Uist eventually. Their hereditary bardic role spanned centuries of Scottish history, before petering out with the loss of patronage, of skills, and eventually of manuscripts.

In Part 2, Tommy explains how Stilligary came to be known as “Baile nam Bàrd”. He goes on to talk about changes of the Mac Mhuirich family name. The impressive size of the ruin and some archaeological finds point to their importance in the community, and the power the family could exercise through their poetic and scholarly skills. He finishes with a short recitation.

In Tobhta Fhearchair, Tommy goes on to tell some of the history of the Beatons from the ruin of Fearchar’s home on the boundary between Tobha Mòr and Dreumasdal. He explains that the Beatons were renowned as doctors, especially in the West of Scotland, with strong connections to Skye and Islay as well as Uist. He refers to the work of Alasdair Carmichael (Carmina Gadelica) to illustrate their knowledge of plants and their uses, while acknowledging that Fearchar himself may not have been as knowledgeable as his forebears. A finishing quote from Martin Martin underlines the family’s historical association with the medical profession.

At Dùn Raghnaill, built for Clanranald, Tommy relates the story of why it was built – to protect the clan chief Mac ‘ic Ailein from his own family – in a time of sometimes bloody sea-borne raids along the Minch. According to local history, it was later used to imprison a daring sea-faring Mac Mhuirich, whose hereditary bardic skills were such that the style of his composition from within the prison walls of the song “Mulaid Prìosanach ann an Dùn Raghnaill” was sufficient for him to be recognised and identified by his own estranged father.

All four films – with optional subtitling available for learners or non-speakers of Gaelic – have been added to the taighean-tughaidh playlist. This work is supported by CIALL.

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Tadhail air Island Voices – Guthan nan Eilean

Taigh Lawrence

Le Gordon Wells

Tommy and Lawrence montage

Iochdar resident Lawrence Iain Alasdair ’ic Raghnaill (Lawrence MacEachen) recently entertained Tommy Macdonald in his home for a chat about his beautiful taigh-tughaidh (thatched house). At Island Voices we were privileged to be able to record their conversation, which we have now added to our “Taighean-tughaidh” playlist on YouTube.

As with the earlier recordings of Tommy and Betty, this conversation is presented in two alternative formats. Fluent speakers may choose simply to watch the whole thing in one go in the “omnibus” version, without any need for recourse to learning aids.

On the other hand, the full conversation has again been broken up into smaller parts, each of which is also supported by auto-translatable subtitles and a wordlinked transcript for the benefit of learners or non-speakers of Gaelic. Links to the transcripts are given in the YouTube video descriptions.

In Part 1, Tommy introduces us to Lawrence in his thatched house in Iochdar, South Uist, inherited from his aunt. Lawrence explains how it had been used as a byre for a time before he did it up again for his own use. It’s due for re-thatching again – in some respects a less arduous task than it used to be.

In Part 2, Tommy and Lawrence discuss the shaping of the roof and the corners of the traditional thatched houses to lessen the impact of the Hebridean gales, as well as the ease of use of local stone to build the thick walls. Lawrence has been told his is the only thatched house in the north of Scotland with a permanent resident, though others have been done up for holiday lets in accordance with sometimes strict planning regulations. There used to be many more of these houses in Iochdar.

In Part 3, Tommy and Laurence talk about some of the other thatched houses they remember, and discuss alternative thatching materials, including marram grass, heather, and rushes. Each has its own qualities, with different materials likely to be used in different areas. Care needs to be taken when gathering roofing materials.

These recordings have been enabled through the ongoing support of the UHI-led CIALL project.

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Tadhail air Island Voices – Guthan nan Eilean