| The Playbank |
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(by Gerry Moss, from IMC Newsletter Spring 1998) A little crag in Co. Cavan, the charming local people, and the effects of rural depopulation. 'They are going, going, going, from the valleys and the hills, they are leaving, far behind them, heathery moors and mountain rills, all the wealth of hawthorn hedges, where the brown thrush sways and trills.' I first visited The Playbank nearly twenty years ago, while on a cycling trip in the area with my wife. We left our bikes at the first cottage in the lane and rambled on up the long boreen towards the McNiff farm. As luck would have it Mrs. McNiff was at the farm-gate, surveying the countryside spread out before her, while her sons hovered protectively in the background. A tiny woman, with lively eyes and a light step that belied her eighty-odd years of age, then, as every other time I met her, she was wearing a navy blue pinafore dotted with white florettes, the sleeves of her cardigan rolled up, the hair tied back neatly in a bun, the epitome of the rural woman-of -the-house of byegone days. Within minutes of meeting her we were invited up to the house for a cup of tea, the first of many such invitations. The house was small, snug and well-kept. A fire was burning brightly on the hearth and a black kettle, quietly singing, hung from a crook in the chimney-nook. This ever-ready kettle was the hall-mark of the McNiff household, for they were all inveterate tea-drinkers. In latter years they scorned the use of a tea-pot, the tea-leaves being spooned directly into a mug, followed by water from the boiling kettle. We were never allowed pass by the door at the end of a day's climbing without an invitation to come in for a mug of this refreshing brew and, as often as not, would come away carrying armfuls of freshly-cut rhubarb as a parting gift. At first sight it would seem that the route to the crag, which ran through their farmyard, was an invasion of their privacy but, rather than resenting our intrusion, they welcomed it. They showed great interest in all that was happening at the crag and in all visitors to it. During the mid-eighties we held several week-end meets to The Playbank, camping on a little site at the top of the hill-field, courtesy of the McNiffs.
After a lapse of several years I visited the crag again in 1992, in the company of Liam,
who been there previously, and Emily and Frank, for whom it was a first visit.
Outwardly things in Moneenterriff looked the same : the pillars of the farm-gate
had received their annual coat of whitewash, the cottage roof had been newly painted
and the two dogs came forward as usual to greet us (it was always two: one old, one
young; one all tail-wagging and welcoming, one all bark and bluster). But there had
been changes. Mrs. McNiff had died, God rest her and, with her passing, the sons had
scattered. Only one remained now, a quiet, easy spoken man, he had returned from
twenty years of working in Cricklewood to nurse his mother through her last years.
He chided us gently for not bringing the car into the yard, then, throwing on a jacket,
stepped out along the path with us. Before parting from us he extracted a promise that
we would call in for a drop of tea on our way out.
"I'll leave you to do the honours, Emily, for you'll have the woman's touch" he said,
with all the naive innocence of your rural bachelor, "the tea-caddy and biscuits are
on the dresser and the spoons are in the drawer."
Bliss.
"The next time I come up here I'm going to buy that man a bloody tea-pot" she fumed, as
I eased the car down the boreen.
Four years were to pass before I returned again, this time with Sean. They had not been
good years for Moneenterriff. The first cottage inside the gate was unoccupied now and
already showing visible signs of decay. The second house, which had been abandoned a few
years earlier, was little more than a ruin, the chimneys sporting whimsical bonnets of
leafy fern; the sagging doorway a gaping wound; the blank windows gazing sadly,
reproachfully, out over Glengevlin. The gate-pillars of the McNiff farm had lost
their pristine whiteness, no smoke issued from the chimney and, ominously, no dogs
came to meet us, as we approached the house with growing apprehension. All the curtains
were drawn; there was no answer to my hesitant knocking, no sign of life. Crestfallen,
we moved on.
"Where are the country people gone? Where are the sun-dark faces now?
The picture is the same all over the up-lands of Cavan, Leitrim and Sligo; the little
hill-farms are being abandoned and whole communities, a whole way of life, is
disappearing as the old people die off and the young people opt out of the struggle
to wrest a living from poor, marginal land. And, as the hill-folk retreat, the trees
advance. Everywhere, on all sides, stands of Sitka Spruce and Lodgepole Pine creep
relentlessly forward, enveloping the little fields, the low stone walls, the old
dwellings, the ancient trackways. Smothering whole town-lands under a carpet of green,
like a latter-day blanket bog.
All the buzz, all the enthusiasm, had gone out of the day. It was difficult to contemplate doing anything, to shake off the feeling of despondency and settle down to the climbing. But coping with rock is a bit like coping with a spoiled child - it will not be satisfied with anything less than one's full attention. Slowly, imperceptibly, we were drawn into things and became absorbed in the climbing as the day passed. In the heel of the hunt we had a good day, repeating some of the older lines and even managing to put up one new one, a spunky little HVS. I was delighted, as we descended, to see a thin spiral of smoke rising from the chimney of the house. With quickening step we approached the front door, which was half ajar. The room was in semi-darkness, the only light coming from some embers glowing in the grate, the remains of a handful of kindling. A chair was pulled up close to the fire and a figure was slumped in it, fast asleep, a cap pulled down over his eyes. Perhaps it was a combination of poor light and faulty memory, but he seemed older, smaller, than any of the brothers as I recalled them. I knocked loudly on the open door; he slumbered on. I advanced boldly into the room and rapped sharply on the table; his sleep continued, undisturbed. I shook him gently by the shoulder; there was no interruption in his deep, easy breathing. I stood there, shuffling from one foot to the other, undecided as to what to do. I was convinced he had been sitting there awaiting our return and to go without exchanging greetings would seem churlish and unkind. But he seemed so vulnerable, so child-like, wrapped in this deep slumber, that I was reluctant to startle him by waking him abruptly. I wish I could say that I dealt with the situation decisively, resolved it satisfactorily but, in truth, I did what I usually do when on unsure ground - took the line of least resistance, left him to his dreams and tip-toed uneasily away, closing the door softly, regretfully, behind me.
I have not been back since. Somehow, conditions just never seemed right, during 1997,
for a quick raid North. I am determined to return this year, however, come rain, come
shine. There is much to bring one back. Almost a mile of the crag is, as yet, untouched,
with many possibilities beckoning. It is unlikely that any of the routes here will ever
make the headlines, but the scope for hours of climbing pleasure is enormous. Aside from
all of this, I would dearly love to know how goes the world with the McNiffs. For they
are as much part and parcel of The Playbank experience as the rock itself.
The climbs described: Full details of this gritstone crag can be found in 'Rock climbs in Sligo, Leitrim, Cavan and Fermanagh'. A snip at a fiver, it contains details of such esoteric gems as Monastir Sink, Tormore and Rosskeeragh Point. We concentrated our attention on the extreme right-hand end of the crag. See sketch below.
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