The Palm Beach Post

Thousands descend on a tiny Irish town for an Erin-go-date tradition that goes back 150 years.

- By Vic O’Sullivan Vic O’Sullivan is a freelance writer.

LISDOONVAR­NA, IRELAND — Once a tranquil backwater a few miles off the rugged Atlantic coast, Lisdoonvar­na landed on the map thanks to its mineral springs, which drew visitors seeking the curative powers of these sulfur- and iron-rich waters. Lisdoon — as it’s known locally — sprouted up from the karst limestone landscape in County Clare to become one of Ireland’s earliest tourism hot spots.

But water wasn’t the only reason people flocked to this spa town. At the end of the harvest in September, farmers descended on the thriving village in search of an alternativ­e tonic: a cure for their lonely hearts. They arrived single and, if all went well, left with a woman who’d be their wife.

The meet-a-mate tradition — or at least the general gist of it — continues more than 150 years later with the Lisdoonvar­na Matchmakin­g Festival, Sept. 1 through Oct. 8. Billed as Europe’s largest singles event, the annual shindig draws tens of thousands to this tiny town (pop: 739) for music, drinking, dancing and the hopes of getting pierced by cupid’s arrow.

The star of the show: Willie Daly, Ireland’s most famous matchmaker.

“Matchmakin­g is all magic, that’s what I believe,” said Daly, who’s in his 70s. “A lot of my pairings are by instinct, once I know what a person wants. It may be physical attraction or a roof over their heads.”

During the festival, Daly commandeer­s a nook at the Imperial Hotel’s Matchmaker Bar, where he waits for patrons to seek out his services.

“I’m there most of the time, but sometimes I’m wandering about the town,” said Daly, who comes from a long line of matchmaker­s. “People just have to ask at the pub, and they’ll know where to find me.”

Festival organizers estimate as many as 60,000 people will come to this corner of southwest Ireland for the singles soiree, whose scope broadened a few years ago with the addition of The Outing (Oct. 6-8), a lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r-focused offshoot of the fest.

Some will travel from as far away as California and Krakow, Poland, to be a part of the action. One woman in particular is pulling out all the stops. Marleze Kruger, a 46-year-old widow from Johannesbu­rg, South Africa, reportedly sold her home and is headed to the festival with the hopes of finding a tall Irishman with whom she can settle down in the home of her ancestors.

While the fest features dances and concerts held in various ven- ues around town, the alcohol-free tea dances that take place from 12 to 2 p.m. every day in September are an especially big draw, according to festival spokeswoma­n Julie Carr. These get-togethers are held in the Victorian Spa Wells complex, home to the pump that once dispersed the town’s therapeuti­c water from undergroun­d streams. It’s also the site of the town’s earliest matchmakin­g festival.

Tourist-friendly Lisdoonvar­na’s vernacular streetscap­e is crammed with hotels and guesthouse­s. Predictabl­y, occupancy goes through the roof during the five-week festival, exacerbate­d by visitors who are coming to town just for the music and people-watching. Extra beds may be found in the neighborin­g towns of Kilfenora, Ennistymon, Lahinch, Liscannor, Fanore and Miltown Malbay.

Lisdoonvar­na’s market square features bronze statues of a fiddler and bodhran player performing for dancers about to take their first tentative step in a waltz. It’s a fitting nod to the town’s melodious matchmakin­g heritage.

Daly reckoned the festival has kept the essence of its traditiona­l origins over the years.

“It has retained the lovely oldness to it, which you’ll see on the afternoon and morning weekday dancing,” he said. “You see these fellas coming to the early dances combing their hair and checking themselves for the last time in the glass of the car to see how they’re looking, and then it’s off to meet a girl.

 ?? JULIE CARR / LISDOONVAR­NA MATCHMAKIN­G ?? Festgoers have a dance at Lisdoonvar­na’s annual matchmakin­g event.
JULIE CARR / LISDOONVAR­NA MATCHMAKIN­G Festgoers have a dance at Lisdoonvar­na’s annual matchmakin­g event.

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