Saint Peter's Well, Kilpadder, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Holy Sites & Wells
On the southern bank of the Owbeg River in County Kerry, tucked against an outcropping of rock in a wooded enclosure, two holy wells sit just thirty metres apart, dedicated respectively to Saints Peter and Paul.
What makes this site quietly unusual is not just the pairing of the wells, but the degree to which the physical infrastructure of medieval devotion remains intact and actively used. The whole arrangement, earthen bank, gated entrance, worn path, incised crosses cut into the rock face above the water, speaks to an unbroken continuity of practice that many similar sites have long since lost.
The well dedicated to Saint Peter is the larger of the two. It measures just 0.37 metres in diameter and is enclosed on three sides by upright stone slabs forming a small rectangular surround, pressed against the north face of the rock from which a natural spring steadily feeds it. Above the well, on that same rock face, three crosses have been roughly incised into the stone, and the upper surface of the outcrop holds a statue and cups left by visitors. The site sits within a roughly oval earthen enclosure of about eighty metres across, which is accessed through a gate on the western side. Inside, a path runs around the enclosure, and it is along this path that pilgrims perform the rounds, a traditional devotional circuit in which participants walk a set route, pausing at each station to pray. Here, Saint Peter's Well is the first station; Saint Paul's Well, smaller and positioned at the edge of the path some thirty metres to the east, is the second. A crucifix and statue nearby are housed in a purpose-built shelter, suggesting the site has received some organised attention without being tidied into irrelevance.
The rounds at Kilpadder are observed on the 28th and 29th of June, the feast day of Saints Peter and Paul, and by local account the practice continues to this day. Visitors who come outside that window will still find the enclosure accessible through the western gate, the crosses legible on the rock face, and the spring running as it always has.