Thanks to all who turned out to support our AGM which was a well attended and described by one visitor as "the best AGM in Scotland". Congratulations to course participants Luis, Alec, Fraser, Simon and Liam who who were awarded their tool kits and certificates by Maxwell MacLeod who gave a colourful account of his recent trip from Dunvegan on Skye to Iona which he rowed single-handedly in the celebration of his Clann ancestors. Many thanks also to the volunteers who helped convert the workshop into a suitable venue for the event and a special mention for Pops Sloey for the top class cuisine. As ususal we had a wonderful purvey of native Scottish scran including venison which was skinned and butchered by the GalGael posse in our workshop. A report on 2008 will be available soon online.
Thursday, 11 December 2008
Thanks to all who turned out to support our AGM which was a well attended and described by one visitor as "the best AGM in Scotland". Congratulations to course participants Luis, Alec, Fraser, Simon and Liam who who were awarded their tool kits and certificates by Maxwell MacLeod who gave a colourful account of his recent trip from Dunvegan on Skye to Iona which he rowed single-handedly in the celebration of his Clann ancestors. Many thanks also to the volunteers who helped convert the workshop into a suitable venue for the event and a special mention for Pops Sloey for the top class cuisine. As ususal we had a wonderful purvey of native Scottish scran including venison which was skinned and butchered by the GalGael posse in our workshop. A report on 2008 will be available soon online.
Friday, 21 November 2008
Sgioba Luaidh at Galgael
http://www.geocities.com/luadh/
Thursday, 13 November 2008
Wednesday, 22 October 2008
Appin. 7th October 2008
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Caught in the act. Alastair on the mini bus to Appin ogling Susan Sontag's body (of work) on page three of the Sun.
Monday, 6 October 2008
Summer 2008
Another wet summer, but it didn't deter the Voyaging Team from getting Orcuan back in action again. The intention was to sail her down the Clyde, up Loch Fyne, attend the Crinan Classic Boat Festival and then out to Mull and Iona. However, the canal was closed off due to some damage on the banks and the crew sailed her down to Cumbrae for some sailing on the firth of Clyde. The team had a few good trips and got the trainees and volunteers well involved. The German exchange group had a memorable time too and we will be getting the boat back up the Clyde during the Autumn.
Events
The main event this year was once again the Glasgow River Festival where we put on a great show which recieved a great response from the public. Saturday September 6th saw us at full stretch with three events on the same day. The Voyaging Team attended the Viking Festival in Largs (representing the victorious Scots of course). Some friendly Vikings had a sail on orcuan however just to show we don't hold a grudge. Another of our teams attended the Dundee Flower Show, putting on demonstrations of wood milling, carving and story telling. Rosie, Gehan, Oran & Tam tended the Govan Green Zone stall in Elder Park where Galgael and other community groups helped to send out Govans message about protecting the environment.
Nicola Sturgeon Visit
Deputy Scottish Minister Nicola Sturgeon was given a special welcome by Jimi the Pyper when she visited GalGael on the 5th of September. The MSP for Govan had been looking forward to the visit as she had heard much about our work with people in her constituency. Good sport that she is, she proved to be adept with a mallet and chisel and at tying a bowline. Thanks to all who put on a good show for the visit and to Nicola for her kind words and support.
Tuesday, 16 September 2008
A Birlinn full of Berliners
For three weeks in August and September GalGael recieved twelve German visitors from Berlin. The group consisted of young unemployed men from Projekt PiA and and young single mothers from Projekt L.I.S.A. along with some staff from both organisations. The young guys were stationed up in Argyll and carried out some work on the track at Barmaddy Farm and built a bridge across the burn next to the house. They fell in love with the scenery and history so much they didn't want to do the Glasgow half of the visit. Luckily, the LISA girls loved Glasgow too, and were quite happy to carry on at the GalGael workshop. They put in a great shift making a mast for our boat "Elizabeth" and got a chance to do some carving, felting and welding too.
On the last day of their visit we held a wee ceilidh in the front shop and the Berliners did a mean "strip the willow" that any Scot would be proud of. They also got to meet the Deputy First Minister and celebrate the birthdays of Gehan and Tartan Heather.
They were a lovely bunch of people and great fun too. A few would have been happy to stay and they will always be welcome if they would like to come back. Hopefully, we will be able to send a few Govanites to Berlin in the near future.
Many thanks to Jimi the Pyper playing his "doodlesack" for the occasion, to Anneruth for translating, and to Daniel in Kruezburg for sorting things out at the Berlin end.
http://www.empowermint.de/datein/ausbildung/lisa.html
Friday, 8 August 2008
Tribute from a Scottish Maori
by Makere Stewart-Harawira.
There’s an edginess to Glasgow they say, and from the vantage point of Starbucks on the corner of West Nile and Sauchiehall Streets, I’d agree. In fact from the vantage point of three or four short visit over the last 10 years, and for all the place in my heart that Edinburgh will forever hold, I’d still agree.
Downtown Sauchiehall Street is not only a far cry from Princess Street’s tat in Edinburgh, its cleaner too. Remnants of the once thriving slave trade on the River Clyde are hard to find, at least on the surface. The workers of the 21st century are tucked safely into their tenement buildings living, its hoped, productive lives as ‘good citizens’, which in today’s lingo means contributing to the economy by holding a job.
Bustling with culture high and low, Glasgow prides itself on being ‘down to earth’, a place in which you don’t need to change your clothes to bring in the milk bottles. Contradictory, cultured, pragmatic, edgy Glasgow.
Its history appals.
400,000 people cleared from the lands and crammed into tenements in all four corners of Glasgow.
Land for the gentry, poverty and squalor for the masses.
You’ve come along way, Glasgow. Yet – one in four are diagnosed with mental illness, according to the mental health foundation worker who stopped me in the street. Did I know anything about mental health illness, he asked? About depression? Do I know anyone who suffers from depression? We are trying to develop alternatives to medication and anti-depressants, he explained. So many people are on anti-depressants. Some will be on them all their lives.
It happened that I did. It happened that I had just come from a return visit to Govan, Govan whose hidden heart and quietly shining light is a place he’d never heard of. A place in the tradition of the Reverend George MacLeod who dedicated himself to Govan’s poor, homeless and dispossessed before founding the Iona Community. A place where love abounds, where questions are not asked, where people are not categorised, where trust is manifest. A place with which I’d joyfully renewed my earlier brief acquaintance from two years previous, where visitors are made as welcome as those for home The Galgael Trust exists, the dispossessed, the sad, the hopeless, the unemployed – and yes, you and me and community. A warm and safe and trusting community, Govan’s shining light and Glasgow’s secret heart.
The founder of The Galgael Trust was also a Macleod – Colin with the enormous vision and even more enormous heart. Colin who loved people. Colin who loved trees, and land, and community. Colin from Lewis, Colin the Gael. Who came to Govan and, seeing the dispossession and oppression of people, put the woodworking skills he learned from the Lakota to the service of Govan’s people and brought together people with traditional skills and a disused building and created an astonishing community built on the values and traditions of the best of Gaeldom.
The story of the community of The Galgael Trust in Govan is inspiring and good reading, and it’s all on their website. So are stories of the traditional sailing ship that they sail on the River Clyde. And the astonishing story of Colin, the Gael whom I never met. Incredibly, Colin’s enormous heart gave out the year before my first chance visit, when he was only 39.
Today The Galgael Trust is carried on in exactly the same way by those whom Colin gathered around him. And I hold them high amongst those who inspire my own life.
The Galgael Trust in Govan. Its worth a visit. Its worth getting to know.
Its Glasgow. Its community. It’s a new economy. And its built on love.
Tuesday, 8 July 2008
GalGael at the Govan Fair
Remember- GalGael will be at this year's Glasgow River Festival on 19th 20th July next to the Science Centre.
Check out http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tB_56AI4X_0 to see us rockin' in Govan.
West Highland Heroes May - June
Monday, 7 July 2008
Crinan Classic Boat Festival 3rd - 6th July
races instead.
The weather was still not that great on the Saturday but the crew decided to get the boat out of the basin and into the loch . They managed to get in some sailing and also do a bit of rowing though they ended up sailing backwards when they attempted a tricky tacking manoeuvre. They managed however, to get back on track soon enough for the evening ceilidh.
We will keep you posted on her progress when she heads for Mull and Iona.
Thanks to Alec Howie, Mike Dalgliesh and Ross Ryan for all their help and support.
Photos:
Top- Orcuan being lifted onto the Clyde
Bottom- Base camp at Crinan Canal