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Follow on Google News | ![]() Irish Blackthorn Walking StickIrish Traditional Blackthorn Walking Stick Hand crafted from the blackthorn bushes in counties Cork and Kerry. They have been made using the traditional method that has been passed down through the generations.
IsThe Blackthorn Walking Stick. The shillelagh comes from the Irish and may be connected to the forest in County Wicklow of the same name famous for its fine oaks. The Shillelagh (Irish: Síol Éalaigh, meaning "descendants of Éalach") is also known as bata in Gaelic or “fighting stick.” A shillelagh is a wooden walking stick and club, or cudgel made from a thick, knotty stick with a large knob on top of Blackthorn wood (sloe) or Oak. Like Irish bacon, the piece is smeared with butter (and sometimes margarine) and placed up a chimney to be cured. The bark is left on to add to its toughness. To keep the sticks from splitting during drying they were buried in a manure piles. There are many derivations on the plain vanilla two pound shillelagh. Some are hallowed out at the heavy “hitting end” and filled with molten. This is known as a “loaded stick”. (The sticks made of Blackthorn are so heavy there was no need to “load” them as they come “preloaded”) Others are still more hardcore with heavy tops used for striking and disarming an opponent. If you have a real shillelagh, and not a knock off, it is more than likely outfitted with a wristband. Shillelagh fighting is believed to have evolved over thousands of years in Ireland from spear, staff, axe, and sword fighting. By the 19th Century Shillelagh fighting evolved into a martial art with three types of weapons: long, medium, or short sticks. Irish boys learned about the ways of the shillelagh from their father and received their own bata as a rite of manhood. (Like car keys today. Except you can’t fight with car keys) To learn the art of the shillelagh boys were taught by the Maighistir Prionnsa or “fencing master”. They also learned by sparring with others. They also learned to speak softly and carry a big shillelagh especially at social functions like the fair, wake, or pattern (Saint’s Feast Day) where rival factions would gather and be ready, willing, and able to brandish their weapons. This fighting was popular up to the 1840s. The last recorded faction fisticuffs occurred in 1887 at a fair in Co. Tipperary. Some shillelagh battles were for sport or just for fun. It was common then for a man, probably a little loopy, to drag his coat behind him and provoke the crowd at a fair by screaming “Who’ll tread on the tail of my coat?” and the ever popular “Who’ll say black is the color of my eye?” There are those that study the use of shillelagh for self defense and martial art today known as the Bataireacht. Now available for you at http://www.narrowwatergifts.com/ End
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