This video short showed up in my feed - about the Vanderbilt mansion called "The Breakers" in Rhode Island
@Homer Potvin - have you ever visited it?
@Homer Potvin - have you ever visited it?
I can't say I know too much about island-specific inducements, though I am aware that there are refurbishment grants for restoring derelict dwellings, directly attributable to our housing crisis. My wife's friends have availed of this grant in restoring a property not far from me (inland, in Co Tipperary) and, by meeting the strict criteria relating to timeframe and structural specifics, were eligible for, I think, about 80K grant assistance (it would be rude to ask if it was paid over yet, but I'll ask my wife). Here's a link to gov.ie about the scheme:here's something else that showed up in my feed this morning.
I Googled it, and indeed the Irish government is providing grants to persons willing to relocate to Irish island communities.
I didn't see anything about exactly who could apply. @Rigor Mortis - have you heard about this plan?
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Here's a link to gov.ie about the scheme:
Our Living Islands
Oh, yeah. Several times. The Newport mansions are crazy and The Breakers is like Versailles. Totally worth visiting if you're in the area.This video short showed up in my feed - about the Vanderbilt mansion called "The Breakers" in Rhode Island
@Homer Potvin - have you ever visited it?
There's hardship as well as serenity to be found on those islands. The Atlantic can be most forbidding, though maybe only for nine months of the year. It's impossible for the other three.
I'd be surprised if Canadians weren't viewed favourably if they were considering the move.
Totally worth visiting if you're in the area.
These days, writers go there to be productive. Old days, writers emerged there because there was little else to do.It sure would be an inspirational place to write.
A great hiraeth came over me
Hiraeth
It's more than a longing for home. It's a fervant, grief-tinged yearning for a home or place that no longer exists or that never existed in the first place. It's most often used in context with Wales and Welsh culture, and describes a homesickness so deep that it affects one's soul.
Sehnsucht?That reminds me of another word I once heard but I can't think of it - I think it began with an s
Bless you.Sehnsucht?