Fairy Fort Farm

Fairy Fort Farm Breathe the fresh country air, relax, and unwind. Traditional style Irish country farm self catering accommodation. Fairy Fort. Make Wishes !

Self catering accommodation on traditional Irish farm Come and enjoy farm walks through the fields and meadows and along, by streams.A haven for wildlife and biodiversity. Swearing Stone, Swear your oath or Make pledges and promises. Animals; lambs, hens, donkey, pony, horse, rabbits etc.

20/05/2026
20/05/2026
Great information here about nesting birds and why we leave our hedgerows largely untouched.
20/05/2026

Great information here about nesting birds and why we leave our hedgerows largely untouched.

It is mid-May. The hedge looks like it has got completely out of hand.

It is also the worst possible time of year to do it.

And May is not a neutral point in the nesting calendar. It is the peak.

Active nests in a typical garden hedge right now:

Blackbird (Turdus merula) — the first brood may have only just fledged, and the pair will have begun their second clutch in the same hedge, often in the same fork. Up to three broods are possible before late July.

Wren (Troglodytes troglodytes) — its domed moss nest sits at the base of the hedge in dense cover. First-brood chicks may still be in the nest or have only just left. A second nest may already be under construction in the same section.

Blackcap (Sylvia atricapilla) — arrived from migration in April and will have laid immediately. In May its eggs are incubating or its first chicks are in the nest at one to two metres height — exactly where a trimmer blade runs first.

Robin (Erithacus rubecula) — nests within 50 cm of the ground in the densest cover. A second brood is often underway in May. The nest is found almost exclusively by destroying it.

Dunnock (Prunella modularis) — two broods between April and July, moss nest in low scrub. Its turquoise-blue eggs are among the most beautiful and least visible in a garden hedge.

May is the moment when the hedge looks most in need of cutting — and the moment when active nest density is highest across the entire year.

20/05/2026
08/05/2026
Thank you The Celtic Cottage for such lovely words. It's always a pleasure to welcome your family.  Looking forward to y...
31/01/2026

Thank you The Celtic Cottage for such lovely words. It's always a pleasure to welcome your family. Looking forward to your next visit.

29/01/2026

Funding call for proposals for Agri-Food Tourism Initiatives.

Agri-food tourism is broadly the practice of offering an activity or activities as part of a visit to areas of well-known agricultural produce and to sample and taste the local or regional cuisine or specialties. Agri-food tourism includes a wide variety of activities that involve the links between agriculture and the food produced at the local or regional level. It may involve staying on farm or touring food trails and events, participation in agricultural endeavours or buying produce direct from a farm or market. Agri-food tourism also encompasses local food, farmer and artisan market schemes that support and are paired with local and seasonal food producers and artisan crafts.

See full details here: https://grantsandfunding.ie/funding-call-for-proposals-for-agri-food-tourism-initiatives/

Address

Curraghgraigue
Thurles
COTIPPERARY

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