Holy well, Imphrick, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Holy Sites & Wells
Tucked into a small field on the western side of a road in Imphrick, north Cork, this modest rectangular well has been drawing visitors for long enough that the bush overhanging it is heavy with rags.
The practice of tying strips of cloth, sometimes called clooties, to a tree or shrub beside a holy well is one of the older expressions of folk devotion in Ireland, the idea being that a prayer or intention is bound into the fabric and left in the care of the sacred place. Here, the rags share space with votive offerings arranged around the stone surround, a low enclosure that partially covers the water itself.
The well appears on the Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1842 under the name Tobernadeecla, a placename that preserves the Irish word tobar, meaning well or spring. That mid-nineteenth-century record suggests the site was already well established and locally recognised before the surveyors arrived to commit it to paper. The rectangular stone surround, enclosing and partly sheltering the water, is a form common to venerated wells across Munster, a practical structure that also marks the water as set apart from ordinary use.
Access is straightforward enough. A gate from the road leads into the field, and a stile gives passage through to the well itself. The offerings and adorned bush indicate the site remains in active use, so anyone visiting would be arriving at a place that is still, in some quiet sense, in the middle of its own ongoing life rather than simply awaiting inspection.