You're doing your country a great service by documenting these skills and traditions. Also realised my understanding of the Irish accent is one million times better than UA-cam captions, its translations were hysterical!
As a Newfoundlander, our accents and cultures are so similar I’ve had Irish mistake me for being Irish. I understand everyone here perfectly, even the mason himself (who may be the hardest to understand for people).
When you see men at work, you really appreciate how hard they work to maintain our world. I'm sure your Dad loves that you appreciate his work.. sadly, this type of construction is fading out to ugly, modern buildings.. in my opinion anyway..
It is always wonderful to see a trade that some consider outdated being carried on, My own father was a mason here in the states and his father and grandfather were masons before him. My great great grandfather was a stonemason in wales where we originate from. This was a great video to watch and thank you for sharing it with us,
It is fitting that your pic is a pigeon, because you surely are, but you just parrot what the video said because that is about how smart you are. I guess you could also be a monkey, but that might be pushing it.
Probably harder done than said, but more of this kind of content from you would be great, Eoin! Keep sharing and spreading awareness of skilled Irish tradespeople!
Much respect for Paul. As an apprentice myself not much older than Mikey (not in stonemasonry) I know the value of having teachers and mentors that prioritize a good relationship with their apprentice and take great interest in passing on what they know.
My great grandfather was a stone mason from Cork and settled in Syracuse NY. He help build the university and cathedral. Along with the Hughes family they help build that city. All creative hard working Irish men from Cork
I worked with a stone mason for a while, it always blew my mind how good they were at selecting stones. Take a bunch of random shaped rocks into a beautiful wall, nuts.
I’m from Kentucky in the USA and the stonemason’s trade is alive and well here building dry stone walls. Doesn’t hurt that field stone is there for the picking. True that nowadays they’ll run it through a rock crusher to make gravel when they used to make a wall out of it, but the old pikes outside of lexington are lined with rock wall for miles.
It's great to see a young fella learning the trade. As a teenager several decades ago I used to spend a lot of time with the old fellas talking with them and learning about their old trades. As a result I learnt about shingle cutting, blacksmithing, dry stone walling and several other old 'lost trades' and have put them into practice throughout the course of my life. I really enjoy when I come across other folk that are keeping old trades alive and passing their knowledge onto people from the younger generations that are keen to learn and practice. I am hoping that my Grandchildren will want to learn some of what I've learnt over time, when they're old enough to start, which won't be long now. Thank you for documenting these old skills and trades.
Im jist happy to see a craftsman who loves and believes in his apprentice, none of this egotism or putting down, just a love and reverence for the preservation of an artform.
So many of us work with our minds, shuffling imaginary 1’s and 0’s into spreadsheets and databases and other things that don’t really matter and barely last until lunchtime. But when you build with a mind that your work will still stand 300 years in the future it clearly evokes something special deep in your soul.
I've been learning welding in some off time, since I have my dad's old torch and mask. Watching this makes me really feel like the last hundred or so years have been a terrible terrible mistake.
My people, the McGarveys from Cork built walls and stone buildings all over our farm in Woodford County in Kentucky. If you have a chance to come to central Kentucky, take a drive along Old Frankfort road Ky 1681. It's lined with stone walls and is a national scenic highway.
I really do find it intriguing and quite enjoyable how everyone featured in this channel has such an eye, respect, and hope for traditional methods. The fact that every face you see on this channel feels a little sad when they have to use modern tools/methods, but the fact that they also respect the pros of the newer methodology. it makes me happy people like this are still around
I am so glad to see traditional trades are being passed on. I sew and am learning to spin and weave. It is hard to find teachers, so I am grateful for people like you on youtube. And this video was so well done and very professional I loved it!
This brings back happy memories for me. I renovated an old run down farm house and out buildings in a lovely spot close to Dungarvan. I often think of that lovely peaceful place and wish I was back there.
My Da and our upstairs neighbour were the last two dry stone walkers back in the Island I grew up on. My Da (and his workmate) is a long time passed now but the walls are still standing and no doubt will be long after I’m gone. Lovely job on this wall 👍🏼 Pat and Adam would have gave you the nod of approval no doubt.
There is an outdoor museum in New Brunswick that documents the history of the Acadians going back hundreds of years with a collection of different houses, and I always found it fascinating how the construction of these homes changed with the introduction of the Irish. The earliest homes from the 1600’s were basic log homes, often single room where every nook and crazy serves a purpose, and entire families shared a bed. Further we go, the houses got more intricate, multiple bedrooms added, and second floors built. Wells went from being outdoor, to indoor to keep them from freezing in the winters, to becoming hand pumps instead of buckets. After the Irish came, suddenly all these wooden structures started to incorporate a lot more stonework. Large stone fireplaces, stone walls and flooring, and wood being reserved more for the second floor. It always highlighted to me the benefits of working together. 🇨🇦🇮🇪🏴🇫🇷🇬🇧
First stone wall as a 16 year old was from round rocks discarded at the edge of a farmers field. The basement of our new family house was dug out smack in the middle of the wood line full of rocks. Round rocks were everywhere, too many to count and more.. So my plan was set, make a wall external large rocks for the face and small rocks for inner wall fill. I was not trained but it made sense to me.
Great to see true craftsmen at work. That young apprentice will have work the rest of his life. God bless all those keeping traditional trades and methods alive.
My great-grandmother (born in 1847) grew up in a home very much like this one on the Limerick/Kerry border. It was fascinating to see how those walls were built! (Now I know how the house survived that long!)
It's great that this method of building allows you to reuse the same materials potentially many times over. As thick as the walls are, I'm sure it's well insulated, too
Brilliant video, top fellas. You can just tell that Paul would be a decent boss to apprentice under. Knowledgeable but laid back, that young lad has truly struck gold, learning a trade from a guy like that. Good luck to em both.
Great you have this documented. My relatives house in Achill Island is hundreds of years old and the walls are thick thick stone. The surrounding area has all these old stone buildings lying in ruin which were built by the settlers. Been very interesting watching how these homes are traditionally built. Thank you, from fans in Scotland who love your content!
Your a pretty cool dude, found your channel yesterday and I have now watched everyone single one of your videos and am thinking of getting into the craft as a hobby 😂
I fellin love with stonemasonry about 7 years ago and I found out that my great great grandfather was a stonemason and his father before him. I guess it’s in my blood and I’m teaching my 3 young sons masonry to preserve the art of stonemasonry.
Right. Well done. “…the future… is rock solid…” wah haha! Excellent work. Good work imbues an aesthetic that, if nothing else, reminds us to do good work.
Paul and Mikey it's fantastic seeing the work of a IRISH stonemason, I can just imagine my 3rd great grandmother Elizabeth Rourke with your Irish accent (here in Australia) thanks again for posting.
Great narration, Eoin. Great story. In the age of AI it is fantastic to see that stone masonry skills are needed and essential as ever. Fair play to you for covering this subject.
A very interesting and entertaining video. It is great to see these skills in action and excellent to see a young lad starting his apprenticeship. Keep up the great work.
I live in Ohio, in the US, and I’ve been watching a lot of your videos. I don’t restore tools or build but I’ve spent a lot of time watching it happen. Definitely subbing.
When I was learning in college, my lecturer told me stone work was a sub skill of brickwork, but after seeing them work and dabbling myself you can tell its a trade that requires nothing less than dedication to the craft
That makes no sense.your lecturer is ignorant. The whole purpose of bricks was to have a uniform building material to remove the need to have skilled labor to know how to strategically place rough cut stone. If it were so easy, why have bricks replaced masonry…because it requires less skill
@@Menuki Less skill maybe it a degree but brickwork in itself takes its own skill, its not about one being better than the others its them both being two sides of one trade in an essence. the mason
Paul here . Very true. I was lucky enough to serve my time at both . But to b honest I . Brickwork is a job . Like most others . To b good at stone u have to love it and in turn u love going to work every day.
Any monkey can do brickwork, have you seen the state of the lads on building sites, everythings uniform. Stone work is an art form, making structures from random shaped bits of stone!
Everything here at our place is built the same - with a smattering of old brick included here & there in the rubble-fill walls. Great to see the old skills being kept alive.
Imagine three hundred stone masons with their labourers that would be a hell of a sight ! God bless you men with mercy and peace health and happiness Amen ✨✝️💫
What a beautiful trade. Truly a marvelous art that needs to be preserved. 500 years from now - structures they built will still be standing, not many can claim such a thing. Thank you for sharing!
This is so great! Thank you for making it - Paul and Mickey make it look easy...and have done a fantastic job so far - lopok forward to parts 2 - 10 to see the completed refurb!
I love seeing the old trades being carried on. Thank you for sharing this. It's very interesting watching & hearing about it. I love that they used new methods as well as the old so that the wall will stay standing straight for many generations.
The line which got to me was when he confidently said "The wall will stand for another four to five hundred years." How many of us have ever made something that will last that long?
I knew an Irish stonemason a few years back. He worked in France for a while. Eventually, he’d come to the States because his wife was American. When he got here, he became a brickmason because there wasn’t enough demand for traditional stonework. He always said he would move back to Europe eventually and do more stonemasonry.
It is interesting in the US "masons" include everything from block to brick a nod to tradition, whereas in Europe those are "layers". Bricklayer can earn decent money, a blocklayer is generally. more average ernings.
Sorry bud but I worked in London for years and half of the brickies I met over ter could not lay bricks properly let alone blocks. Would hate to c ter stone work . Not been nasty here . The good brickies I worked wit wer amazing but never seen them lay stone
Watching a master of his craft (and his apprentice) is always fun, and the end result looks beautiful! Imagine building something like this, and 10 - 15 generations later, people are still using it!
You're doing your country a great service by documenting these skills and traditions.
Also realised my understanding of the Irish accent is one million times better than UA-cam captions, its translations were hysterical!
Honestly, Im Irish and i struggled to understand what they were saying most of the time haha
I struggled with the accents but I didn't even try the captions 😅 I have no faith in auto captioning
There were captions??
@@elsvaughn7959 Yes, choose cc
As a Newfoundlander, our accents and cultures are so similar I’ve had Irish mistake me for being Irish. I understand everyone here perfectly, even the mason himself (who may be the hardest to understand for people).
I’m very proud of my Dad Paul, they all did an amazing job it turned out amazing!!
No
@@adrenalinetoothless2530no what?
Alannah, your dad is a very talented man!
I appreciate the people who still invest their time in skills such as these. You are the real OGs
When you see men at work, you really appreciate how hard they work to maintain our world. I'm sure your Dad loves that you appreciate his work.. sadly, this type of construction is fading out to ugly, modern buildings.. in my opinion anyway..
It is always wonderful to see a trade that some consider outdated being carried on, My own father was a mason here in the states and his father and grandfather were masons before him. My great great grandfather was a stonemason in wales where we originate from. This was a great video to watch and thank you for sharing it with us,
I pray you've been learning from your father
This is awesome. Stone masonry is a profession that requires so much dedication that I never noticed until now. Very interesting.
It is fitting that your pic is a pigeon, because you surely are, but you just parrot what the video said because that is about how smart you are. I guess you could also be a monkey, but that might be pushing it.
@@HollywoodCreeper my pfp is a seagull bro 👍
@@lordoftheseagulls6096True.
Probably harder done than said, but more of this kind of content from you would be great, Eoin! Keep sharing and spreading awareness of skilled Irish tradespeople!
Much respect for Paul. As an apprentice myself not much older than Mikey (not in stonemasonry) I know the value of having teachers and mentors that prioritize a good relationship with their apprentice and take great interest in passing on what they know.
Thank you . From paul
You're very welcome@@user-nv6ri7me4j
My great grandfather was a stone mason from Cork and settled in Syracuse NY. He help build the university and cathedral. Along with the Hughes family they help build that city. All creative hard working Irish men from Cork
I worked with a stone mason for a while, it always blew my mind how good they were at selecting stones. Take a bunch of random shaped rocks into a beautiful wall, nuts.
I’m from Kentucky in the USA and the stonemason’s trade is alive and well here building dry stone walls. Doesn’t hurt that field stone is there for the picking. True that nowadays they’ll run it through a rock crusher to make gravel when they used to make a wall out of it, but the old pikes outside of lexington are lined with rock wall for miles.
It's great to see a young fella learning the trade. As a teenager several decades ago I used to spend a lot of time with the old fellas talking with them and learning about their old trades. As a result I learnt about shingle cutting, blacksmithing, dry stone walling and several other old 'lost trades' and have put them into practice throughout the course of my life. I really enjoy when I come across other folk that are keeping old trades alive and passing their knowledge onto people from the younger generations that are keen to learn and practice. I am hoping that my Grandchildren will want to learn some of what I've learnt over time, when they're old enough to start, which won't be long now. Thank you for documenting these old skills and trades.
Im jist happy to see a craftsman who loves and believes in his apprentice, none of this egotism or putting down, just a love and reverence for the preservation of an artform.
I used to build dry stack stone walls at work, such an incredible amount of work, full time masons are tough people
So many of us work with our minds, shuffling imaginary 1’s and 0’s into spreadsheets and databases and other things that don’t really matter and barely last until lunchtime. But when you build with a mind that your work will still stand 300 years in the future it clearly evokes something special deep in your soul.
I've been learning welding in some off time, since I have my dad's old torch and mask. Watching this makes me really feel like the last hundred or so years have been a terrible terrible mistake.
My people, the McGarveys from Cork built walls and stone buildings all over our farm in Woodford County in Kentucky. If you have a chance to come to central Kentucky, take a drive along Old Frankfort road Ky 1681. It's lined with stone walls and is a national scenic highway.
Yes I'm from KY. And those walls start in Washington county and go east and north they are beautiful.
Thanks for taking your time to document such an amazing craftsman. These trades cannot be allowed to die out. Wonderful documentary.
Thank u . Paul.
I really do find it intriguing and quite enjoyable how everyone featured in this channel has such an eye, respect, and hope for traditional methods. The fact that every face you see on this channel feels a little sad when they have to use modern tools/methods, but the fact that they also respect the pros of the newer methodology. it makes me happy people like this are still around
I am so glad to see traditional trades are being passed on. I sew and am learning to spin and weave. It is hard to find teachers, so I am grateful for people like you on youtube. And this video was so well done and very professional I loved it!
Fascinating to see this done, so much care and passion in this work. This is documentary level video quality! Keep up the good work!
Thank you very much!
Thank u from Paul
This brings back happy memories for me. I renovated an old run down farm house and out buildings in a lovely spot close to Dungarvan. I often think of that lovely peaceful place and wish I was back there.
I love the charm of the ancient constructions, but I have to admire the clean lines of the new structures. Thanks for sharing.
My Da and our upstairs neighbour were the last two dry stone walkers back in the Island I grew up on.
My Da (and his workmate) is a long time passed now but the walls are still standing and no doubt will be long after I’m gone.
Lovely job on this wall 👍🏼
Pat and Adam would have gave you the nod of approval no doubt.
What was the island called?
There is an outdoor museum in New Brunswick that documents the history of the Acadians going back hundreds of years with a collection of different houses, and I always found it fascinating how the construction of these homes changed with the introduction of the Irish.
The earliest homes from the 1600’s were basic log homes, often single room where every nook and crazy serves a purpose, and entire families shared a bed.
Further we go, the houses got more intricate, multiple bedrooms added, and second floors built.
Wells went from being outdoor, to indoor to keep them from freezing in the winters, to becoming hand pumps instead of buckets.
After the Irish came, suddenly all these wooden structures started to incorporate a lot more stonework.
Large stone fireplaces, stone walls and flooring, and wood being reserved more for the second floor.
It always highlighted to me the benefits of working together.
🇨🇦🇮🇪🏴🇫🇷🇬🇧
Nothing indicates anyone worked together.
This was a brilliant watch
First stone wall as a 16 year old was from round rocks discarded at the edge of a farmers field. The basement of our new family house was dug out smack in the middle of the wood line full of rocks. Round rocks were everywhere, too many to count and more..
So my plan was set, make a wall external large rocks for the face and small rocks for inner wall fill. I was not trained but it made sense to me.
Thank you for exposing me to my family’s homeland and some culture. May the winds forever be at your back my brother. And the sun on your face.
Great to see true craftsmen at work. That young apprentice will have work the rest of his life. God bless all those keeping traditional trades and methods alive.
My great-grandmother (born in 1847) grew up in a home very much like this one on the Limerick/Kerry border. It was fascinating to see how those walls were built! (Now I know how the house survived that long!)
The quality of this is astonishing! Feels like a decent budget documentary. On par with vice short docs
No matter how much tech comes out, this is the true workings of a craftsman. I enjoy watching and learning from these gents! Respect!
Thank you . Paul.
It's great that this method of building allows you to reuse the same materials potentially many times over. As thick as the walls are, I'm sure it's well insulated, too
Fantastic video....I love to see the old trades being revived...👏👏👏
I love this lad. Loving this new content that’s interesting and you learn things.
This video makes me want to visit Ireland so very much!
Loved this episode man, fascinating to watch these craftsmen at work!
That’s class, more of this content please, Eoin. If you have an opportunity to carry out recording the lads’ progress, please do!
Nothing better than good stone walling
This was very interesting to watch.
What an amazing skill and the art of working with stone. Really enjoyed this video. Take care and rock on my friend. Sorry.
Brilliant video, top fellas. You can just tell that Paul would be a decent boss to apprentice under. Knowledgeable but laid back, that young lad has truly struck gold, learning a trade from a guy like that. Good luck to em both.
Great you have this documented. My relatives house in Achill Island is hundreds of years old and the walls are thick thick stone. The surrounding area has all these old stone buildings lying in ruin which were built by the settlers. Been very interesting watching how these homes are traditionally built. Thank you, from fans in Scotland who love your content!
Achill some spot me father in law is from there
Paul here. My daughter and her husband spend 2 weeks ter every summer . Fab place ok.
The way things are going achill won’t be the same in 5 years
That is great to see.
I also love the lime wash and lime plastered walls.
My grandfather made his own house like that, very beautiful house.
You're onto something with videos like this. Showing Traditional Trades. Fair play hopefully you get to do more.
Your a pretty cool dude, found your channel yesterday and I have now watched everyone single one of your videos and am thinking of getting into the craft as a hobby 😂
Welcome aboard!
I fellin love with stonemasonry about 7 years ago and I found out that my great great grandfather was a stonemason and his father before him. I guess it’s in my blood and I’m teaching my 3 young sons masonry to preserve the art of stonemasonry.
Right. Well done. “…the future… is rock solid…” wah haha!
Excellent work. Good work imbues an aesthetic that, if nothing else, reminds us to do good work.
You have such a good production quality so early on. Keep up the good work!!
Thank you for all the great video’s my two sons and me love them! Keep up teaching the trade 👍🏻
Paul and Mikey it's fantastic seeing the work of a IRISH stonemason, I can just imagine my 3rd great grandmother Elizabeth Rourke with your Irish accent (here in Australia) thanks again for posting.
Great narration, Eoin. Great story. In the age of AI it is fantastic to see that stone masonry skills are needed and essential as ever. Fair play to you for covering this subject.
These old walls always look so nice.👍Miles better than the horrible bricks we use now.
We need some of this in old Australia. Our modern homes are hot/cold boxes that need artificial heating and cooling.
pretty darn wonderful, thanks for sharing.
Lad, I'd be hoping this is the direction your channel stays in, documenting this stuff is priceless, its like looking at an episode of Hands
Ive been delighted with the feedback on this video, will definitely continue this style of video.
A very interesting and entertaining video. It is great to see these skills in action and excellent to see a young lad starting his apprenticeship. Keep up the great work.
I love seeing crafts like this kept alive. May the island bring forth many more stonemasons! Great video, Eoin.
What is this quality all of a sudden, top notch video.
Absolutely stunning... I wish I could learn to be a stone mason and build such beautiful buildings.
This is a grand old film lads! Loved it.
banger of a video! thanks man!
Very tidy stone work wall looks class deserved a beer after that 👌👍
I live in Ohio, in the US, and I’ve been watching a lot of your videos. I don’t restore tools or build but I’ve spent a lot of time watching it happen. Definitely subbing.
Great job! An absolute art. Traditional stone masonry is wonderful, and absolutely worth the time (and money) to do it up properly.
Thank you. Paul.
When I was learning in college, my lecturer told me stone work was a sub skill of brickwork, but after seeing them work and dabbling myself you can tell its a trade that requires nothing less than dedication to the craft
That makes no sense.your lecturer is ignorant. The whole purpose of bricks was to have a uniform building material to remove the need to have skilled labor to know how to strategically place rough cut stone. If it were so easy, why have bricks replaced masonry…because it requires less skill
@@Menuki That right just jump on the first half dont read the whole comment for context
@@Menuki Less skill maybe it a degree but brickwork in itself takes its own skill, its not about one being better than the others its them both being two sides of one trade in an essence. the mason
Paul here . Very true. I was lucky enough to serve my time at both . But to b honest I . Brickwork is a job . Like most others . To b good at stone u have to love it and in turn u love going to work every day.
Any monkey can do brickwork, have you seen the state of the lads on building sites, everythings uniform. Stone work is an art form, making structures from random shaped bits of stone!
Fascinating Eoin, cheers...
Just found your site, this video was amazing, truly fascinating
Brilliant workmanship loved watching this video
I’m a young stonemason of 23 years old very interesting video nice to see my trade getting some light shed on it
great! wonderful to see the trade still alive and well.
Lovely video Eoin, Love the shorts but so great to see some long form content, keep up the awesome work!
Glad that the people wanted the stone wall rebuild
Everything here at our place is built the same - with a smattering of old brick included here & there in the rubble-fill walls. Great to see the old skills being kept alive.
Imagine three hundred stone masons with their labourers that would be a hell of a sight !
God bless you men with mercy and peace health and happiness Amen
✨✝️💫
Quality content.
Great video lad, please keep us updated on its progress, ye couldnt ask for better weather whilst building stone
What a beautiful trade. Truly a marvelous art that needs to be preserved. 500 years from now - structures they built will still be standing, not many can claim such a thing. Thank you for sharing!
Well done Eoin. Great subject matter and well produced👏👏
This is so great! Thank you for making it - Paul and Mickey make it look easy...and have done a fantastic job so far - lopok forward to parts 2 - 10 to see the completed refurb!
I love seeing the old trades being carried on. Thank you for sharing this. It's very interesting watching & hearing about it. I love that they used new methods as well as the old so that the wall will stay standing straight for many generations.
Great vid
I'd be interested to see more of Paul's projects
The line which got to me was when he confidently said "The wall will stand for another four to five hundred years." How many of us have ever made something that will last that long?
talk about building a legacy
Great video Eoin, excellent content. Support for your channel 👍👍👍.
Well done. Thanks. If this stuff doesn't get documented it will certainly disappear. Jim Bell (Australia)
I knew an Irish stonemason a few years back. He worked in France for a while. Eventually, he’d come to the States because his wife was American. When he got here, he became a brickmason because there wasn’t enough demand for traditional stonework. He always said he would move back to Europe eventually and do more stonemasonry.
It is interesting in the US "masons" include everything from block to brick a nod to tradition, whereas in Europe those are "layers". Bricklayer can earn decent money, a blocklayer is generally. more average ernings.
@@paulthomas8262Most bricklayers in the UK can lay stone in all formats as well as brick/block.
Sorry bud but I worked in London for years and half of the brickies I met over ter could not lay bricks properly let alone blocks. Would hate to c ter stone work . Not been nasty here . The good brickies I worked wit wer amazing but never seen them lay stone
@@user-nv6ri7me4j I should have been more specific to my experiences, in the South West
Thank you Eoin!
Love the accent. I grew up bombarded by east coast Canada tv (and the accent can be just as intense there) and I love hearing it again. 😊
You're a good man Eoin
Eroin thank you sharing these amazing stone masons' work.
Watching a master of his craft (and his apprentice) is always fun, and the end result looks beautiful!
Imagine building something like this, and 10 - 15 generations later, people are still using it!
Thank u so much . Paul.
I really enjoyed this!!! That rock pile scavenger hunt would kill me though xD
Grueling for sure.
i love the square ratio of the video, feels like i’m watching a documentary
I was just looking at OPW stonemason apprenticeships the other day, what a beautiful craft, I've always adored it
Inspirational work that honours traditional building methods. Great to see these stone working traditions being passed on.
That wall will be there for a long time and its good to see who did it for future interested people.
Great to see a skill such as this being kept alive. The skill, patience and knowledge required are very evident on the finished section.
This was so awesome thank you for sharing with us. I love seeing traditional skills demonstrated by masters.
Love this!
Hard to imagine in this day and time the economics of it, but the end result is a beautiful thing!
Beautiful masonry! I can't wait for the English translation to come out so I can finally figure out what hes saying
The language was English, it's the accent you can't understand.
omg i loved this, amazing to see the trade being passed on
Beautiful job! Awesome trade skills
Awesome video man. Great to hear the boys experience and see them at work. Love it. 😀