RSS

Category Archives: wren boys

The Wren Boys of Duckett’s Grove

The Wren Boys of Duckett’s Grove

The Return of the Wren Boys from Duckett’s Grove

Deep in the heart of County Carlow, where the Barrow River winds lazily and the fields are dotted with ancient ring forts, stands the crumbling gothic majesty of **Duckett’s Grove**. Once a grand estate with towering walls, ornate gardens, and a family cursed by bad luck (and worse fires), it’s now a romantic ruin—ivy-clinging towers, empty windows staring like ghostly eyes, and whispers of a banshee who combs her hair on stormy nights.

On St. Stephen’s Day (the proper Irish name for December 26th, when the Wren Boys traditionally roam), a ragtag group of locals from nearby Rathvilly decided to revive the old custom. Led by young Tommy “The Bold” Murphy—a farmer’s son with a fiddle and too much enthusiasm—they donned the ancient straw suits: towering masks made from hay, old sacks, and painted faces, looking like scarecrows escaped from a nightmare. Their mission? Parade through the lanes, bang bodhráns, play tunes, and collect a few euro for the pub fund, all while chanting the old rhyme: “The wren, the wren, the king of all birds…”

But this year, they took a shortcut through the forbidden grounds of Duckett’s Grove. “Sure, it’ll be grand,” said Tommy. “A bit of atmosphere for the photos!”

Big mistake.

As the Wren Boys burst into the ruined courtyard, banging drums and whooping, a cold wind howled through the arches. The ground trembled. From the shadows of the burnt-out mansion emerged… the ghosts.

First came the **Spectral Huntsman**, a towering figure in faded red coat and tricorn hat, astride a translucent horse that neighed silently. His hounds—ethereal wolfhounds with glowing eyes—bounded around the terrified Wren Boys.

Then, with a wail that rattled the ivy, appeared the **Banshee of Duckett’s Grove** herself—long silver hair flowing, eyes like midnight pools, combing her locks with bony fingers.

The Wren Boys froze. One lad dropped his bodhrán and legged it toward the gate.

But the Huntsman raised a ghostly horn to his lips (no sound, but everyone felt it in their bones) and boomed: “At last! Revelers! We’ve been waiting centuries for a proper Wren Day!”

Turns out, the ghosts weren’t angry—they were bored. Trapped in the ruins since the big fire in the 1930s, they’d missed the craic. No parades, no music, no Guinness. The Banshee floated forward: “Will ye not play for us, boys? A tune for the dead?”

Tommy, ever the bold one, struck up his fiddle with shaky hands. “The Wren Song,” of course.

Magic happened. The ghosts joined in. The Huntsman grabbed a spectral bodhrán and beat it like thunder. The Banshee’s wail turned into the most haunting harmony you’d ever hear—off-key, but pure soul. Even the hounds howled along in rhythm.

Word spread like wildfire (pun intended). Farmers arrived on tractors decked in fairy lights. Villagers poured out of pubs. The parade swelled: living Wren Boys in straw, ghostly ones in ethereal tatters, marching down the snowy lanes toward the nearest hostelry—O’Brien’s Pub in Rathvilly.

By nightfall, the pub was packed beyond belief. Ghosts phased through walls to join the céilí. The Huntsman led a set dance, his horse parked outside (clip-clopping invisibly). The Banshee sang “Fields of Athenry” and brought tears to every eye—living and dead. Pints of Guinness materialized for the specters (they drank through osmosis, apparently).

The party raged till dawn. No one got exorcised. No one got hurt. Just pure, mad Carlow craic.

And now, every St. Stephen’s Day, the Wren Boys return to Duckett’s Grove. The ghosts wait eagerly. The parade grows bigger. Tractors join. Tourists come from afar.

Because in rural Carlow, even the dead know: nothing beats a good knees-up with tunes, stout, and a bit of banshee wailing on Wren Day.

Nollaig Shona Duit—and mind the ghosts on your way home! 🎻👻🍻

 

Tags: , , ,