Episode 6 Holiday of My Lifetime with Len Goodman


Episode 6

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We all love childhood holidays, don't we?

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Fun in the sun, sandcastles, swimming in the sea -

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can't beat them.

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So, in this series, I'm going to be reliving those wonderful times

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with some much-loved famous faces.

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Everyone a winner!

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Come on, hook a duck!

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And some of the most surprising guests

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have the most fascinating holidays.

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-You could do a night here.

-You could!

-Yeah.

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However, I think that's long enough for me.

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THEY LAUGH

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We'll relive the fun... TRAIN WHISTLE BLOWS

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Oh, oh, oh!

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..the games... Oh!

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..and the food of years gone by...

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That is a little taste of childhood right there.

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..to find out how those holidays around the UK

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helped shape the people we know so well today.

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I'm giving you a standing ovation.

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So, buckle up for a Holiday Of My Lifetime.

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Can you come on all my holidays?

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Irish eyes are smiling today,

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as my holiday guest is a worldwide megastar,

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who has been wowing audiences

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with his velvety voice for over 30 years.

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# When Irish eyes are... # You know the rest.

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He was born in Donegal in 1961.

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Oh, look at him in them shorts.

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He's got stardom written over both his kneecaps. Oh, yes!

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He released his first single in the early 1980s

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when you could wear a pullover like that! Do you know what? I like it!

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I think it would suit me.

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In 1992, he just wanted to "dance with you". Well, I tell you,

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if he wants to dance with ME, I'm going to lead.

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Oh, yes, I'm the oldest!

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Have you got it yet? Of course you have.

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Today's guest is the Irish superstar Daniel O'Donnell.

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Oh, Danny boy!

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# Oh, Danny boy, the pipes... #

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I'm on my way to pick him up

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for a Holiday Of My Lifetime of a different kind.

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Because today, we're headed to a beautiful, but remote, spot

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that no-one's actually lived in since the late '70s.

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Full steam ahead, captain.

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BOAT ENGINE REVS

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Daniel O'Donnell grew up

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in the small seaside village of Kincasslagh,

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with a population of around 40 people.

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Among them were his four brothers and sisters,

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his dad, Francis, who passed away when Daniel was six,

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and his mum, Julia, who had to raise her five children on her own.

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Now, believe it or not, Daniel released his first single,

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My Donegal Shore, back in 1983,

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which he paid for and even sold himself.

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Since then, he's not only gone on to sell more than 10 million albums,

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he's also had an impressive 16 Top 40 singles

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and become the first singer

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to have an album in the British charts 25 years in a row.

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All that, and the ladies absolutely love him!

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But sorry, girls, today, he's all mine,

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and thanks to Captain Dan and Darcy here,

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I'm collecting Mr O'Donnell from the shores of his childhood home.

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-Daniel.

-Hi, there. Welcome, welcome to Kincasslagh.

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-How are you doing, sir?

-I'm great.

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-How good of you to come and visit us here.

-No. Watch out.

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-Look I'm being helped out of a boat by one of my heroes.

-Why not?

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-Thank you.

-Really good to see you.

-I'm starstruck, honestly.

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-Well, how do you think

-I

-am?

-No! No, it's all one way!

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So, we've got the boat. Where are we off to?

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We're going to visit two islands - Owey Island

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and Arranmore Island, just off the coast.

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-Yes, take us back a bit in time.

-Are they buzzy, plenty going on?

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Well, Owey Island has nobody living on it permanently.

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That's where my mother came from, my grandparents.

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But Arranmore Island is quite a happening island,

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a lot of people living there.

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-Well, you know I am a sort of happening sort of guy.

-Well..

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I live in the fast lane.

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Well, we'll have to make it as fast as we can today.

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-What's the year that we're going back to?

-We're going back to 1968.

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That's when the film Yellow Submarine came out. Oh, yes!

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And while that also would have been the perfect transport for us,

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back in the day, the family would have rowed the three miles

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-to Owey island on this wee thing. Blimey!

-It's called a curragh.

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So, what do you do? Just sit on the floor?

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Yeah, but sit up the front and they have the paddle

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and they do it this way.

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'Well, much as I like to recreate the original holiday experience,

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'you'd have to be Steve Redgrave to get across the water in that.

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'So, instead, I've done what every other tourist has to do -

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'hire a professional.' We've got this gorgeous launch.

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-I'm going to call it a launch.

-We're going to travel in style.

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-Travel in style, indeed.

-Nothing but the best.

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'Oh, yes, indeedy!'

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Casting off from Kincasslagh in the northwest of Donegal,

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we're heading to Owey and Arranmore,

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two of the county's eight main islands,

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which about three centuries back,

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used to be under the control of a certain O'Donnell clan.

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So, fittingly, Daniel and I are going to relive

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some of his earliest memories of those places.

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'We'll feast on the finest seafood money can buy.' It's fantastic.

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-Not gorgeous?

-It's better than gorgeous.

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We'll dance like there's no tomorrow

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and, of course, we'll even find time for a singsong.

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# ..Donegal. #

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I'm giving you a standing ovation.

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In other words, this holiday's going to be...

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100% a 10 from Len!

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CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

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Every holiday begins with a journey and, apparently, even in 1968,

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getting to Owey Island was an absolute Daniel O'Doddle!

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Every house on the island had a special spot on the mainland,

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so we would go and stand in my uncle's spot

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and they would know that there was somebody coming to visit them,

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-so they would get into their curragh and come out and pick us up.

-Right.

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And every house was the same and they all knew...

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You know, if somebody saw a person on my uncle's "mark",

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as they called it, they would go to the house and say,

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"There's somebody coming to visit you.

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-"You need to go and pick them up."

-Right.

-Isn't that amazing?

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It's amazing, yeah. That would be the only way,

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cos there's no telephone or no other way of communicating.

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No, that was the only way to get the point across.

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And we would go out there then

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-and you would just be...as free as a bird.

-Yeah.

-It was fantastic.

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And having your grandmother there too.

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My grandmother lived to be 93 and in the end, she came to live with us.

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But on her 90th birthday, she donned her wellington boots and walked down

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and got into the curragh and went to the island on her 90th birthday.

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-Oh, fantastic!

-Yeah.

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But island life, for Daniel,

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wasn't just about the freedom or visiting his dear old granny.

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It was also about the music.

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I can remember sitting on the steps of the school,

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listening to people singing, which was... It's a memory I have...

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I remember one guy singing Peggy Gordon,

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-if you know Peggy Gordon.

-I'm not sure I do.

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# Oh, Peggy Gordon

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# You are my darling

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# Come sit ye down upon my knee... #

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-It's a lovely old ballad.

-I love...

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-I love Percy French.

-Oh, yes, great songs.

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-All those Percy French songs were...

-# Oh, Mary...

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# This London's a wonderful sight

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# With the people here working

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# By day and by night

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# They don't sow potatoes

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# Nor barley nor wheat

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# But there's gangs of them digging

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# For gold in the street. #

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Thank you! Yes, I'm here all week.

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Now, while Daniel was being inspired by the locals on Owey,

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here's what else was going on in the world, back in 1968.

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It was the year we saw the arrival of the MK1 Ford Escort,

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an absolute classic, which sold in record numbers - two million plus!

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Also making their first appearance in Britain, decimal coins,

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confusing many a shopper

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and even requiring some retail giants to retrain their staff.

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Meanwhile, the notorious Kray twins were finally arrested for murder,

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after what had been a successful run

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of assaults, arson and armed robbery.

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Debuting on the box, the fabulous Dad's Army,

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which gave its 18 million fans the unforgettable catchphrases,

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"You stupid boy" and "They don't like it up 'em!"

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As for music, well, does this ring a bell?

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# Jesus loves you more than you will know

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# Whoa, whoa, whoa

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# God bless you Please, Mrs Robinson... #

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Oh, yes, Simon and Garfunkel's Mrs Robinson,

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which topped the American chart, reached number four on ours

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and went on to win two Grammys.

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Of course, 1968 was also the first time

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a young Daniel O'Donnell got to spend a summer

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on the rugged beautiful Owey Island.

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-This is exciting, Daniel.

-Absolutely.

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-Can you manage?

-No bother.

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'Although, before we go anywhere,

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'we need to consult the legendary Owey Weather Stone.'

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So, the Owey Weather Stone condition and forecast. "Stone wet - rain.

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"Stone dry - not raining.

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"Stone warm - sunny.

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"Can't see stone - foggy.

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"Swinging stone - windy. Ice on stone - frost.

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-"Stone gone - tornado."

-Tornado. Perfect.

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# As the raindrops are falling

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# I can hear your voice calling... #

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Luckily for us, the weather and the outlook really couldn't be better.

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I tell you, what a place!

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# But now I'm coming home... #

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So, there you are. You're a wee nipper,

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six or seven or whatever, over you come.

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It must have been so exciting

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-cos you had the free run of the whole island.

-Absolutely.

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And then your grandparents are just... You can do no wrong.

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So, I was just a wee lad coming

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and she would have the arms open wide to greet you

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and you were just free, as you say, to do whatever.

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And there was another few more young children my age,

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so we just ran wild and we went a way out that road out there

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and you'd maybe be looking after cows

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-or playing, you know, cowboys and Indians...

-Yeah.

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It was ideal, really, I suppose, when you look back.

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Yeah, it was quite a place.

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-I suppose, as a child, everyone knew everyone.

-Oh, everybody.

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And as a kid, you could run into anyone's house..

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In fact, you were related to most of them.

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I think there was only two families on the island

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-that we weren't related to.

-So, this was your island!

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Everybody was related here.

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Back then, Owey had a small tightknit community,

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though, by the mid-'70s,

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the last of the islanders had moved to the mainland.

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You know, coming here,

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I can't imagine anyone who was brought up here wanting to move.

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I know. You know, it broke their heart and when the last people left,

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they left their houses with everything intact -

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the dressers with...the tea sets, their cookers, their beds,

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everything was left. In their head, they were always coming back.

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And it was really a necessity for them to move

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cos the younger people emigrated, saw an easier life on the mainland,

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or wherever they might have gone to, and seen the difficulty

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of living on an island with no electricity, no running water.

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-Yeah.

-It was just...

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It was no harder than it was 50 years before,

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-but the mainland had got easier.

-Yeah.

-And that's what happened.

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The older people then couldn't survive

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and this, my grandmother's house and my uncle's,

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they left about, probably, '73.

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And the last people left for good about 1977.

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While the island remained uninhabited, these days,

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many of the cottages have been restored and used as holiday homes -

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among them, the one that used to belong to Daniel's gran,

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which is still in the family.

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Look at what they were looking out at here. Isn't it just lovely?

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-It's just... Well, everywhere you go, you see fantastic views.

-Yeah.

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-So, here we are, Len.

-Oh, this is lovely.

-Isn't it lovely?

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It's better than that. It's beautiful. And the open fire.

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The big fire, yeah. That fire... When we were children,

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there was a big crook on it and the pot and the kettle would hang

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and then, when the kettle would boil, they'd pull it out a bit

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-and it would be always warm, ready for the tea.

-Yeah.

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These days, you'd probably call this a one-bedroom plus study,

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but back in the summer of '68, Daniel's gran was making space

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for up to three adults and five kiddywinkles! Blimey!

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This was the bedroom here, these two beds,

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and that's recreated as it was.

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Of course, it's not the original beds,

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but that's what they were like.

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I remember I used to sleep in this bed

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and all the boys must have slept there.

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-Usually, the two boys and two girls and I would be in here, too.

-Yeah.

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-And your grandmother would...

-Granny was in the bed beside the kitchen

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and Uncle James and Peggy were in the bottom room.

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But this was a big house.

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Some of the houses were a lot smaller than this.

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Daniel, I've got to ask something. It's a bit of a concern to me.

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-Where's the toilet?

-There was no...

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Well, there's a toilet outside but at night-time,

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there was a chamber pot or a "shoveunder", they called it here.

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-Shoveunder, yeah.

-Did you call it that?

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No, we called it a "gazunder". "Gaz under" the bed.

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And you'd pull that out and it's funny, I can remember one night,

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as a wee boy, in the middle of the floor, but my aim wasn't the best...

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You peed on the floor.

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That wasn't the only hardship back in them days.

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No bathroom, no electricity, no telly - hey, no thanks!

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-What was the entertainment?

-The entertainment was...

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Well, you'd go from house to house.

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Some houses there was cards played,

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-other houses they'd tell ghost stories.

-Oh, no.

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And there'd be singsongs too. But card playing was a big part of it.

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-Yeah.

-And then listening to the older people

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-talk about years ago.

-Yeah.

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But, as for Daniel's favourite pastime,

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hands down, that was Ludo

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and, from what I hear, he was fiercely competitive.

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There was enormous rows. The whole thing would go up in the air.

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-I've done that many a time.

-Oh, for God's sake,

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when it wasn't going the right way,

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but, I mean, it was a great, great pastime.

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Now, which is your colour?

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I was always yellow because yellow was always my...

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OK, well, I don't want you to get disappointed.

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Should we let the visitor go first?

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I think it would be polite, Daniel, if I'm honest.

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You know, I am a guest. It wouldn't be right.

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-But the competitive streak in me...

-And me.

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-It's very tough for me to let you go first, but I will this time.

-OK.

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Four.

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We'll let you start but normally you'd have to get sixes to start.

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-Ah.

-But we'll not do that cos we could be here till Christmas.

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-Seven. Seven!

-Getting up there now.

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-11.

-11, that's good.

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-Did you use to cheat?

-Never cheated, no.

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-Only if it was necessary.

-I cheated all the time.

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THEY LAUGH

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Only if it was necessary!

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Oh, God! Three.

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Now, while I try to beat the Owey Island Ludo champion 1968,

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here's the first of my seven wonders of the County Donegal world.

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Starting with Glenveagh National Park,

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the legacy of wealthy landowner John Adair,

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who set about building himself a castle with his own hunting estate.

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Nice idea. These days, though,

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the animals on this huge estate are very much protected.

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Another must in this part of the world is getting yourself

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a little Donegal tweed,

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something they've been hand-weaving here for centuries -

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just ask this whippersnapper.

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I've been hand-weaving since 1956

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and I'm still at it

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after almost 59 years.

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We hand-weave the tweed

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and we have a seamstress that will make garments for us -

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waistcoats, shawls, capes, you name it.

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And while Eddie's not really one to blow his own trumpet,

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let me tell you, they say Sarah Jessica Parker from Sex And The City

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buys her tweed right here. Oh, yes!

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'As for me and Daniel, well, we're still on the Ludo.'

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So, what was six-year-old Daniel like?

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Were you naughty? Were you impish? Were you well-behaved?

0:18:230:18:26

I think I was fairly well-behaved. I think I was anyway.

0:18:260:18:29

I think I was very inquisitive, very nosy.

0:18:290:18:32

I loved older people, so the island suited me great.

0:18:320:18:36

No matter what house you went into in the daytime,

0:18:360:18:38

-there was somebody in there that would talk to you.

-Yeah.

0:18:380:18:41

-It's great.

-Isn't it great to be able to look back to that?

0:18:410:18:46

Now, I know...

0:18:470:18:49

-Your father died when you were very, very young.

-That's right.

0:18:490:18:53

-You were six, I think.

-That's right.

0:18:530:18:55

-Do you remember that or were you too young?

-I think I was too young.

0:18:550:18:58

I remember, obviously, I suppose, more about his death than his life,

0:18:580:19:02

but I do think, from my point of view,

0:19:020:19:05

I was too young to be greatly affected by it.

0:19:050:19:08

My older brothers... My next brother was ten, and from that up to 19,

0:19:080:19:13

-and they, obviously, had a great sense of loss.

-Yeah.

0:19:130:19:17

But my mother was strong.

0:19:170:19:19

She was a strong woman and, you know...

0:19:190:19:23

..I think for the first while was grief-stricken,

0:19:250:19:28

but then she just seemed to pull it together.

0:19:280:19:32

-She had the family to bring up.

-Yes, and that's what she did.

0:19:320:19:36

'And speaking of getting on with things, to win this game,

0:19:360:19:39

'I'm resorting to a move that worked a treat when I was about seven.'

0:19:390:19:44

-What about these photos up here?

-Mmm-hmm.

0:19:450:19:48

I'm afraid to turn my back!

0:19:480:19:50

THEY LAUGH

0:19:500:19:52

'Oh, well, worth trying!'

0:19:520:19:54

-Three. Oh, no, no.

-One, two, three.

-Why would that happen?

0:19:550:19:59

-The luck of the Irish!

-Yes!

0:19:590:20:01

And I didn't even check to see

0:20:020:20:04

which one was down and which one was up.

0:20:040:20:07

-We'll have to shake. Good for you. Pleasure was all mine.

-One away.

0:20:070:20:12

-And the honour was yours.

-Yeah.

0:20:120:20:14

'Right, I've had enough of these holiday games. Time for some grub.'

0:20:160:20:20

Food is a big part of any holiday.

0:20:220:20:25

In Daniel's case, all the hard work was done by his gran

0:20:250:20:28

and the favourite dish was crab toes and dulse -

0:20:280:20:31

something I know as seaweed.

0:20:310:20:34

This is just to die for.

0:20:340:20:36

What we used to do is just put it in on the fire...

0:20:360:20:40

..and get them to roast up.

0:20:410:20:44

We used to do this with crumpets as a child, but never with a crab toe!

0:20:460:20:51

'Still, nothing quite beats a local delicacy.'

0:20:510:20:55

May I have mine medium rare?

0:20:550:20:58

Yes, you could have it medium rare and you could have it well done.

0:20:580:21:02

It just will be sort of the luck of the draw.

0:21:020:21:05

-Yeah.

-Since I've been lucky at the Ludo,

0:21:050:21:08

-you'll probably be lucky with the cooking of the food.

-I hope so.

0:21:080:21:11

-Can you smell it, Len?

-Can I smell it?!

0:21:110:21:14

-Look at that coming out of there now.

-Yep.

0:21:140:21:16

-Oh, look. Shall we go in the garden?

-I think we will.

0:21:190:21:21

-We'll let them cool down a wee bit before we have them.

-Yeah.

0:21:210:21:24

'And just like that, we've got crab toe and dulse for two

0:21:240:21:27

'and we're going alfresco.' Oh, this is heaven!

0:21:270:21:31

Wonderful island, marvellous views, out in the sunshine,

0:21:310:21:36

eating crab toes.

0:21:360:21:38

I hope there's no seaweed lurking about... Ssh...

0:21:380:21:41

'Mind you, when in Rome...or even Owey!' Is this dulse?

0:21:430:21:47

That's the dulse, but you said you didn't really like dulse.

0:21:470:21:50

Well, I wasn't a fan, but I'm prepared...

0:21:500:21:53

-I think it's an acquired taste.

-Well...

0:21:530:21:56

Mmm.

0:21:580:22:00

-It just tastes of salt.

-Mmm.

-Very salty.

-Lots of salt.

0:22:000:22:04

'And while that's an acquired taste I'm not really acquiring,

0:22:040:22:09

-'I can't wait for the main event.'

-Have a go with that, Len.

-I will.

0:22:090:22:13

-How are they tasting?

-They taste fantastic!

0:22:160:22:18

-Isn't that gorgeous?

-It's better than gorgeous.

0:22:180:22:21

If this was in Gordon Ramsay's kitchen or Jamie Oliver,

0:22:210:22:24

-there'd be a price tag on it that you could nearly not afford.

-Yeah.

0:22:240:22:28

And here we are, sitting out in the wide, open space,

0:22:280:22:32

-overlooking the bay.

-Oh, this is heaven.

0:22:320:22:36

-Doesn't it taste lovely?

-Oh!

0:22:360:22:39

And would this be, like, on a special occasion,

0:22:390:22:42

-this sort of thing?

-No, these would be just at the drop of a hat.

-Yeah.

0:22:420:22:47

You'd nearly take this for granted years ago.

0:22:470:22:51

What was it like growing up in Ireland...

0:22:510:22:54

..in, really, a small village?

0:22:550:22:58

I suppose the nicest thing about it was the interaction with everybody.

0:22:590:23:03

-Mmm.

-Everybody knew everybody, everybody's door was open...

0:23:030:23:08

..so you were never on your own.

0:23:090:23:11

And especially when there was some kind of tragedy -

0:23:110:23:16

or in our case, it was when my father died -

0:23:160:23:20

to see people rally around

0:23:200:23:22

and almost lift those in need up, it was quite incredible.

0:23:220:23:28

# There's a moon over Ireland

0:23:280:23:33

# Comes in from the sea... #

0:23:330:23:37

Let me say, your voice is a bit like here.

0:23:370:23:40

-It's got a gentleness about it and a warmth.

-Ah, thank you.

0:23:410:23:45

And I think that's like the community that you came from.

0:23:450:23:48

Well, I always loved singing. It was always there.

0:23:480:23:52

When did you first find out that you...?

0:23:520:23:54

-I can't remember not singing...

-Really?

-..as the smallest child.

0:23:540:23:58

Yeah, but nor can I, but I didn't turn out like you.

0:23:580:24:02

I sang from when I was little.

0:24:020:24:04

I used to stand in - not when the fire was on -

0:24:040:24:08

but I'd stand in the fireplace

0:24:080:24:10

and I'd do one of the Beverley Sisters' numbers

0:24:100:24:14

or Frankie Laine, I Believe, one of those, and I'd...

0:24:140:24:19

-Give it all.

-..give it my all, but I never turned out...

-Yeah.

0:24:190:24:24

You've got the most lyrical voice.

0:24:240:24:27

I really have been blessed, I suppose, to have whatever talent

0:24:270:24:31

that I was given and been able to...

0:24:310:24:34

to be able to use it in the way that I did.

0:24:340:24:39

I never thought, when I was growing up,

0:24:390:24:42

that I would travel to so many places and get to do so many things.

0:24:420:24:47

'Mind you, I'm betting none of that quite compares

0:24:470:24:51

'to the pleasure of sitting here,

0:24:510:24:53

'crab toe in hand and eyeballing the view.'

0:24:530:24:56

Shouldn't we have a glass of chilled white wine?

0:24:560:24:58

Yeah, didn't we leave that? But we were going back to '68

0:24:580:25:01

-and there was no chilled white wine then.

-No, you're right.

0:25:010:25:04

-And if there was wine, it certainly wouldn't be chilled.

-No.

0:25:040:25:07

'While we clear our plates,

0:25:070:25:09

'time for a few more of my seven County Donegal dazzlers.'

0:25:090:25:13

Starting with something for all you adventurous types.

0:25:170:25:20

Oh, yes, Owey and the surrounding islands are perfect

0:25:200:25:23

for a spot of rock climbing,

0:25:230:25:25

especially if you're a fan of a sea-facing cliff.

0:25:250:25:28

Though if you fancy a gentler day out,

0:25:280:25:31

then catch a ferry from Kincasslagh to Arranmore Island.

0:25:310:25:34

Here, the bird-watching is second to none,

0:25:340:25:37

as it's so close to the Atlantic Ocean.

0:25:370:25:41

You get the birds that shouldn't,

0:25:410:25:42

and normally wouldn't, come in shore

0:25:420:25:44

and just pass by.

0:25:440:25:45

They're travelling from south to north and you can spot them

0:25:450:25:48

going through here, if the weather is suitable.

0:25:480:25:50

Oh, yes, everything from the snowy owl to the puffin

0:25:500:25:53

have passed through this island,

0:25:530:25:55

which is why the bird-watchers flock here too.

0:25:550:25:59

I believe that the birds like this place just as much as I do.

0:25:590:26:03

Arranmore, I think, is the place they talk about

0:26:030:26:06

when they're in Greenland.

0:26:060:26:09

All the more reason for us to leave the quiet shores of Owey Island

0:26:100:26:14

and travel to Arranmore as well...

0:26:140:26:16

..which is bustling, in comparison,

0:26:180:26:21

with its population of just over 500.

0:26:210:26:23

Though it does have an international claim to fame.

0:26:230:26:26

It was here, in Early's Bar, to be precise,

0:26:260:26:30

that Daniel had his big break when his sister, Margo,

0:26:300:26:33

a hugely successful country singer in her own right,

0:26:330:26:36

brought her little brother to the pub.

0:26:360:26:39

-Hey, hey.

-Well, this is memories.

0:26:390:26:42

And the man we all have to thank is the owner, Andrew Early.

0:26:420:26:46

Margo was a very popular girl all over Ireland and Britain as well.

0:26:460:26:51

-Yeah.

-And she happened to come into the bar that night

0:26:510:26:53

and there was music on.

0:26:530:26:55

So I said, when she came in the door,

0:26:550:26:58

I said, "Margot, I'd love you to sing a few songs."

0:26:580:27:00

-"No problem."

-Right.

0:27:000:27:02

And when the two songs were finished,

0:27:020:27:05

"I have a wee brother here," she said,

0:27:050:27:07

"I think he's a good singer as well. He would like to sing you a song."

0:27:070:27:10

He sang two songs.

0:27:100:27:12

I can't remember if he went to the third,

0:27:120:27:15

but I tell you one thing, I know he got a standing ovation.

0:27:150:27:18

-Yeah, I was a forward wee ten-year-old, there you are.

-Yeah.

0:27:180:27:22

And he's no stranger to the island.

0:27:220:27:24

He's come into this bar for 28 years after.

0:27:240:27:27

Looking back, from when he was ten tears old,

0:27:270:27:30

did you think then he was destined to be a star?

0:27:300:27:33

Oh, without a doubt. Without a doubt.

0:27:330:27:36

-Ha-ha.

-He says all the right things, doesn't he?

0:27:360:27:40

Let me ask you one more thing.

0:27:400:27:41

-Be honest with me.

-I will.

-Is he as nice as he seems?

-Nicer again.

0:27:420:27:47

Oh!

0:27:470:27:49

You couldn't... You couldn't touch this man.

0:27:490:27:53

He's an ambassador to Ireland,

0:27:540:27:56

he made Donegal and he also put the spot here on the map.

0:27:560:28:00

-So what more can I tell you?

-Well, it wasn't hard.

0:28:000:28:03

It seems to me that it would be a miss that you're back here,

0:28:030:28:09

the place is set, there's a stage... Could you do a song?

0:28:090:28:14

-We'll pretend we're ten years old again.

-Come on then.

0:28:140:28:17

We'll get no standing ovation today - there's nobody here!

0:28:170:28:20

'And what better song to sing than one about Donegal?

0:28:200:28:25

'Though first, we need to get one thing straight.'

0:28:250:28:28

You can do the voice and I'll be the good-looking backing singer.

0:28:280:28:31

Absolutely. Everybody needs a good-looking backing singer.

0:28:310:28:34

That's me.

0:28:340:28:36

# The lights of London

0:28:360:28:40

# Are far behind

0:28:400:28:44

# The thoughts of homeland

0:28:440:28:49

# Are crowding my mind

0:28:490:28:53

# Familiar places

0:28:530:28:58

# Come into view

0:28:580:29:02

# I see my home now

0:29:020:29:07

# Soon I'll see you

0:29:070:29:12

# This is my homeland

0:29:120:29:17

# The place I was born in

0:29:170:29:22

# No matter where I go

0:29:220:29:27

# It's in my soul

0:29:270:29:32

# My feet may wander

0:29:320:29:37

# A thousand places

0:29:370:29:42

# But my heart will lead me back home

0:29:420:29:49

# To my Donegal. #

0:29:490:29:55

I'm giving you a standing ovation.

0:29:550:29:57

I'm so glad we've come here and I'm so glad that you would sing.

0:29:570:30:02

Thank you. It's a pleasure to have you here.

0:30:020:30:04

-I'm going to say you sang for ME.

-Absolutely.

-OK, beautiful.

0:30:040:30:07

-Thank you.

-Ha-ha!

0:30:070:30:08

Back in the day, the residents of Arranmore paid rent

0:30:130:30:16

in the form of potatoes, but in the mid-1800s,

0:30:160:30:19

two events greatly affected the island's fortunes.

0:30:190:30:23

The first was the potato famine

0:30:230:30:26

and the second was the arrival of landowner Charles Beag

0:30:260:30:29

in the mid-1800s.

0:30:290:30:31

He wanted the land, so he could put more sheep grazing on it.

0:30:310:30:35

He decided to evict 168 people from the island in one day.

0:30:350:30:41

They named it emigration subsistence

0:30:410:30:44

but it was actually just a fancy word for eviction.

0:30:440:30:48

Many of his former tenants ended up emigrating

0:30:480:30:51

to a place called Beaver Island in Lake Michigan.

0:30:510:30:54

There is still a connection today,

0:30:540:30:56

as Beaver Island is twinned with Arranmore.

0:30:560:30:59

The only condition was that you cleared the land of all the trees,

0:30:590:31:03

so the fishing was good and they were logging

0:31:030:31:05

and they sent word back to their families

0:31:050:31:08

and they sent money back home to Arranmore

0:31:080:31:10

and, eventually, up to 200 families settled on Beaver Island.

0:31:100:31:14

# As I sit here sadly thinking how... #

0:31:140:31:18

But nearly a century and a half later, this story came full circle.

0:31:180:31:23

In the year 2000, Arranmore Island twinned with Beaver Island,

0:31:230:31:28

so a lot of their ancestors came back that were evicted here in 1853,

0:31:280:31:33

came back to the island for the first time.

0:31:330:31:35

Not only were they greeted by hundreds of people,

0:31:350:31:39

all singing and cheering,

0:31:390:31:41

the locals also built this memorial to mark the occasion.

0:31:410:31:44

As for me and Daniel, we're off to see

0:31:440:31:47

another of the island's landmarks - Arranmore Lighthouse.

0:31:470:31:51

Built in 1859, it's not only guided many sailors,

0:31:510:31:56

it also used to spot U-boats in World War II.

0:31:560:32:00

And, of course, travel in a straight line from here

0:32:000:32:03

and sooner or later, you'll arrive in America.

0:32:030:32:06

-You hit Boston, I believe.

-Oh, really?

0:32:060:32:09

I didn't try it yet, but maybe that's for another day.

0:32:090:32:12

That may be another holiday we can have.

0:32:120:32:15

Looking at that lighthouse, I think, in a way,

0:32:160:32:18

it's probably flashing across to Boston

0:32:180:32:21

and telling millions of Irish people,

0:32:210:32:23

-"We're still here and why don't you come home?"

-Absolutely.

0:32:230:32:28

Though, of course, that's something Daniel,

0:32:280:32:30

one of Ireland's most famous sons, has always done.

0:32:300:32:34

Was there a moment when you thought,

0:32:350:32:37

"I've made it. I've made it now. My future is..."

0:32:370:32:41

I know it's never secure, but as secure as you could hope for?

0:32:410:32:45

I can remember one night, at about 1986,

0:32:450:32:50

I'd started with a new band

0:32:500:32:52

and we came back here to do shows in Milford,

0:32:520:32:55

which is about an hour from here and, um...

0:32:550:32:59

Before the show started, we were down under the stage,

0:33:000:33:03

the dressing rooms were, and I could hear the people shouting my name

0:33:030:33:07

and I'm not sure that I thought I'd made it -

0:33:070:33:10

I was a bit afraid to come out -

0:33:100:33:12

but when I came out there was hundreds and hundreds,

0:33:120:33:16

it was just packed to capacity,

0:33:160:33:18

and I thought, "There's something happened here."

0:33:180:33:21

-Yeah, that's fantastic.

-Yeah, thank God.

-Yeah.

0:33:210:33:24

And, you know, you've toured so much.

0:33:240:33:27

Has it ever taken its toll on you?

0:33:270:33:29

Well, back now, in about 1991, '92, I got a bit exhausted,

0:33:290:33:33

I was doing too much,

0:33:330:33:35

and I think I had to re-evaluate and realise

0:33:350:33:38

that I couldn't continually do everything

0:33:380:33:41

that people wanted me to do and I did that

0:33:410:33:44

and, thank God, I've been very fortunate to have good health.

0:33:440:33:49

And I think the enjoyment I get, more than...

0:33:490:33:53

Yourself, I suppose you can appreciate it too.

0:33:530:33:55

..when you're doing something that you enjoy,

0:33:550:33:58

-it's so much easier to do it.

-Yeah.

0:33:580:34:01

And I love people, I love interacting with people

0:34:010:34:04

and what better way to do it?

0:34:040:34:06

-And to have places like this to come back to, you'll never burn out.

-No.

0:34:060:34:11

The journey, sometimes, is better than the arrival,

0:34:110:34:13

but in this case, it doesn't matter how long the journey is,

0:34:130:34:17

-the arrival is fantastic.

-Well, you know what they say?

0:34:170:34:20

The road to heaven is not easy travelled,

0:34:200:34:22

but then you get there, it's fantastic, they say,

0:34:220:34:25

so this is as close to heaven as we'll get on Earth.

0:34:250:34:28

I think you're right. Come on, we'll move on.

0:34:280:34:31

'More to do. Much more, in fact,

0:34:310:34:33

'as my final seven County Donegal wonders prove.'

0:34:330:34:36

At number three, it's the Wild Atlantic Equestrian Centre,

0:34:390:34:43

which gives you the chance to enjoy

0:34:430:34:45

the county's gorgeous scenery on horseback.

0:34:450:34:48

Be it lake, mountain or beachside, go on, giddy-up!

0:34:480:34:53

Or you could also take in these views with a golf club in hand,

0:34:530:34:56

here at the Sandfield Pitch And Putt, an 18-hole course,

0:34:560:35:00

surrounded by the breathtaking Loughros Bay

0:35:000:35:03

and those very majestic hills of Donegal.

0:35:030:35:06

But top of my list - well, it has to be a visit to The Lobster Pot

0:35:060:35:11

for a big old plate of fresh seafood.

0:35:110:35:14

After all, Donegal's famous for the stuff.

0:35:140:35:18

You have lobsters, crab, oysters, mussels,

0:35:180:35:22

and they're very prolific in this area

0:35:220:35:26

and the waters are so pristine clear.

0:35:260:35:28

You can't get that anywhere else. This just bursts with flavour.

0:35:280:35:32

I'll say! And the speciality of the house -

0:35:320:35:36

a seafood platter so big they've called it the Titanic.

0:35:360:35:39

And you can even pick out your own lobster right from the tank.

0:35:410:35:44

As for our next stop -

0:35:480:35:50

well, let's just say I've lined up a wee treat for our Daniel.

0:35:500:35:54

-Arranmore Community Centre.

-That's right, yeah. A fine place, that.

0:35:540:35:58

-Have you been in there?

-Yeah, we've been there

0:35:580:36:00

-at a few ceilidhs in our day.

-Oh, I love a ceilidh.

0:36:000:36:02

-Great pastime, the ceilidhs.

-Yeah.

0:36:020:36:04

You wouldn't need to diet if you were doing that every week.

0:36:040:36:07

-Shall we go in and see what's going on?

-We will, we will.

-Come on.

0:36:070:36:10

Look at this! CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:36:110:36:16

'Hey-hey, I love a surprise,

0:36:180:36:20

'so I've rustled up some of Daniel's fans

0:36:200:36:22

'so he can relive one of his favourite pastimes, a ceilidh.

0:36:220:36:26

'But I'm not one to take ALL the credit, oh, no!'

0:36:260:36:29

Did you arrange all this?

0:36:290:36:31

I was just going to say, "Did YOU arrange all this?"

0:36:310:36:33

-Somebody arranged it.

-Somebody arranged it.

0:36:330:36:35

'Now, before I give the band a nod, Daniel wants to say hello

0:36:350:36:39

'to each and every one of these lovely people in person.

0:36:390:36:43

'I told you - he's a popular boy!'

0:36:430:36:45

I've never known anyone have so many relatives in all my life!

0:36:450:36:48

He knows everyone.

0:36:480:36:49

I've never known anyone to get a welcome and a reaction

0:36:490:36:55

like Daniel O'Donnell, honestly. And we're going to get a bit of dancing.

0:36:550:36:59

I'm going to organise it. Wait there.

0:36:590:37:01

Here we go. It's time to get the party started.

0:37:030:37:06

Ladies and gentlemen, please make your way to the dance floor.

0:37:060:37:10

THEY PLAY CEILIDH MUSIC

0:37:100:37:12

Forget the tango or the cha-cha-cha, this really is the business.

0:37:120:37:16

Though, of course, it's not me they want to dance with.

0:37:180:37:21

Oh, no, it's Daniel.

0:37:210:37:22

But can I just say, ladies,

0:37:240:37:26

the older the fiddle, oh, yes, the sweeter the tune.

0:37:260:37:30

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:37:330:37:36

Ladies! Ladies!

0:37:360:37:39

I've been asked, I've been asked to give you a score.

0:37:390:37:44

-I have to be very, very fair.

-Craig is not here today.

0:37:440:37:49

Ha-ha, it won't be a three! Listen, I can't give you a "Seven!".

0:37:490:37:53

LAUGHTER You are 100% a ten from Len.

0:37:530:37:58

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:37:580:38:02

And you are, too.

0:38:020:38:04

-Lovely.

-Ah... Ah.

0:38:060:38:09

'As for the man of the hour, well, what else could it be?'

0:38:090:38:13

Daniel, you had fantastic posture.

0:38:140:38:17

I saw your buttocks just moving a little bit, tight and firm.

0:38:170:38:22

Oh, yes, rhythmical interpretation.

0:38:220:38:26

I've had such a great time.

0:38:260:38:28

Thank you so much. It's been lovely.

0:38:280:38:31

APPLAUSE

0:38:310:38:33

'But, do you know what? I think I've done myself a mischief.'

0:38:330:38:37

-Oh!

-What a day, Len!

0:38:370:38:40

Daniel, I tell you, it's been a fantastic day, but that...

0:38:400:38:44

-Wasn't that something?

-That was the cherry on the top.

0:38:440:38:46

And my 10 - I'll cherish it forever.

0:38:460:38:48

You got the old ten from Len. Do you know what?

0:38:480:38:51

-We've got the ferry to catch.

-I think so.

-Come on then.

0:38:510:38:54

-We need to get going.

-Yep.

0:38:540:38:56

Without a doubt,

0:38:560:38:57

Arranmore and Owey are two of the loveliest places I've ever seen,

0:38:570:39:02

making it pretty clear why Daniel,

0:39:020:39:04

after travelling and performing all over the world,

0:39:040:39:07

always comes back to Donegal.

0:39:070:39:09

There's always a part of me that never leaves

0:39:090:39:12

and there's a completeness when I return.

0:39:120:39:15

I think the area, as we can see, the scenery,

0:39:150:39:17

-but I think, most of all, it's the people.

-Yeah.

0:39:170:39:20

I think it's the people that bring me back.

0:39:200:39:22

-Of course, you got honoured by the Queen.

-That's right.

-How was that?

0:39:220:39:26

When I got the call, I realised that it was something

0:39:260:39:30

that was requested by fans who have enjoyed the music through the years,

0:39:300:39:35

writing to the Palace or to the government

0:39:350:39:38

to see if I could be honoured.

0:39:380:39:40

And I was so thrilled and it's such a great honour.

0:39:400:39:44

We don't start out in life doing what you're doing

0:39:440:39:49

or, in my case, singing, to get the honours.

0:39:490:39:53

The singing is the joy.

0:39:530:39:56

To get the opportunity to go out and perform and sing

0:39:560:40:01

and have an audience that enjoys it - that's the real reward.

0:40:010:40:04

# Oh, I know it's not right

0:40:040:40:08

# Reminiscing tonight... #

0:40:080:40:12

For more than 30 years now,

0:40:120:40:13

Daniel's been entertaining fans across the globe.

0:40:130:40:16

But the nicest thing about his success

0:40:160:40:19

is that he's never forgotten where he's from.

0:40:190:40:21

# For the girl I dream of... #

0:40:210:40:24

Being able to show you this area that I know,

0:40:240:40:29

-that's like a hidden gem...

-Yes!

0:40:290:40:32

How unspoilt it is, how close to what it was years ago.

0:40:320:40:36

We have all the modern things that you could ever want,

0:40:360:40:39

but yet, we've still held on to the past as well

0:40:390:40:43

-and that's fantastic.

-Yeah.

0:40:430:40:46

'Daniel, sir, the pleasure's been all mine.

0:40:470:40:50

'On this holiday, I think we've discovered

0:40:500:40:52

'the real reason why Irish eyes are smiling.'

0:40:520:40:55

-You would just be... You'd be as free as a bird.

-Yeah.

0:40:550:40:59

'We've enjoyed a simpler way of life.'

0:40:590:41:01

-Oh, this is heaven.

-Doesn't it taste lovely?

-Oh!

0:41:010:41:05

'We've seen where a certain music legend got his start.'

0:41:050:41:09

I was a forward wee ten-year-old, there you are.

0:41:090:41:12

'And we've danced like no-one's watching.'

0:41:120:41:15

A ten from Len! CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:41:150:41:18

'What a holiday it's been, to be sure.'

0:41:180:41:22

I've had such a wonderful, wonderful time.

0:41:220:41:25

I hope that you will remember my one day spent with you here.

0:41:250:41:30

I'm certainly delighted you came.

0:41:300:41:32

I feel so privileged that you would take the time to come and see

0:41:320:41:36

where we're from and see what I did when I was growing up here.

0:41:360:41:40

It's fantastic.

0:41:400:41:42

Well, as we all get older, our memories fade

0:41:420:41:46

and I don't want this day to fade, so...

0:41:460:41:48

-..here is a scrapbook...

-Oh, for goodness' sake!

0:41:510:41:55

-..of our holiday together here.

-Oh, thank you very much.

0:41:550:41:59

Like I always say,

0:41:590:42:01

there's nothing like a few holiday snaps to put a smile on your face.

0:42:010:42:05

Though, naturally, that's not all I've picked up at the gift shop.

0:42:050:42:08

I know we didn't come over on one of those little boats.

0:42:080:42:12

-What are they called?

-The curraghs.

-The curraghs.

0:42:120:42:15

And in a way, I would have wished we could have both squatted down and...

0:42:150:42:19

-I don't know who would have done that.

-No, not me! Ha-ha!

0:42:210:42:24

But we didn't come across on one, so I've done the next best thing.

0:42:240:42:29

-And my name on it.

-The Daniel O'Donnell.

-Oh, that's fantastic!

0:42:290:42:34

Look at that!

0:42:340:42:36

-Perfectly formed.

-Perfectly formed.

-Oh, that's gorgeous!

0:42:360:42:41

And let me just say, the hospitality you have shown

0:42:410:42:45

and the people on both of the islands -

0:42:450:42:47

the warmth and the welcome - has just been fantastic.

0:42:470:42:52

-I've had such a great time.

-We're just so glad you came

0:42:520:42:55

and just delighted you were able to experience

0:42:550:42:58

a little bit of what I remember as a child

0:42:580:43:01

and what we have here today. Thank you so much.

0:43:010:43:04

-No, it's been my pleasure.

-Oh, the pleasure's been mine.

0:43:040:43:06

-It's been lovely having you here. Thank you.

-Thank you.

0:43:060:43:09

'And so, as we sail off into the sunset, it's tatty-bye to Donegal.'

0:43:090:43:14

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