Out of Africa: Waterford woman's travels inspired dream home renovation

Margaret Flanagan making friends with Mathiba in Livingstone, Zambia.
This was the early 80s, and the young Margaret was embarking on the adventure of a lifetime. âI solo travelled, carrying a red sleeping bag, toothbrush and a change of clothes,â she says.

You could say it was the rondavels, or traditional thatched dwellings, often built of stone, that were to inspire the second, more recent chapter of Margaretâs life saga, which started to unfold in the early noughties.

Margaret was working in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, when she spotted a thatched complex for sale in Dungarvan, Co Waterford, on a trip home to Ireland, she says. âHow could I resist? I was used to development work in Africa, not self-employment in Ireland, yet I wanted to return to Ireland for my three boys.

Now Champagne Cottage is part of a complex of three award-winning vernacular heritage buildings, called Coole Cottages, where Margaret also holds open days with thatching demonstrations, storytelling and photography and art exhibitions. âWe still live, work and play here happily on the banks of the Colligan River â 25 years later,â adds Margaret.

âYou could say we were almost joined at the hip by the time the years of (not-always-successful!) DIY were completed. Jobs still call and sing out when winter time arrives. By now, my boys are fit heritage apprentices when these tricky tasks summon us.

My old armchairâs deep contours comfort me as it groans and creaks to my moves, despite losing some stuffing in the oddest of places. Its sounds compete with the soothing tick-tock from my clock. Bellowing chimes happen on the hour, drifting in musical echoes throughout my home. Twelve oâclock is my favourite.

Rows of frayed books line my rough walls, providing me with extravagant and flamboyant thoughts on adventures, risky encounters and entertainment, until the dead of night, midnight to be exact, I have company.
Not just any old company, as you might immediately imagine, as she appears familiar and is welcome while floating through thick walls, upstairs, downstairs, drifting by, observing what new moves I have made about the place. She is curious to see if new paintings, rugs, books or lights have been added to the room, which might cast shadows over her gliding movements. She is quite convivial, actually, which is why I call her Viv for short. We are on first-name terms after all. Viv often inspires me as I sit here to write and wonder what moves she would have made in my place.
How would Viv move if she were a character in this book? What brave actions would she take? How would she use her charm, resources, power, wealth or skills, I wondered? Ink glides and drifts across the pages, inspiration flows, mostly synchronising with my own thoughts. Novel ideas solve difficult plots, action flows through my veins, courage springs to the fore, revealing heroes or villains in the same chapter as the story jumps off the page, exploding with dramatic episodes, incidents and outcomes. I often wonder who is writing the story?
Guests to my house have reported fuzzy images floating through the stone walls, in the same house, in the same room, at the same time. No one is ever frightened, alarmed or rushes about screaming. Nothing eerie or unpleasant is ever felt.
It is rather more like that of an old friend who occasionally returns for a look at her own home, to see how it has developed without her. Perhaps to investigate its new tenantsâ style, ways and tastes. Rather like I feel I might be entitled to return here myself one day after all the energy I have invested in my old home, painting walls, fixing roofs, replacing floorboards, sneezing its dust, while also living with wildlife roaming in unwanted places, enduring freezing winter temperatures and all just because I love this place so much. It sings its own unique orchestral sounds to me, choosing drumming rhythms or softer flute notes depending on its moods. Music races up and down the attic beams through creaking floorboards, whistling winds, scratching rhythms, even onto stubborn doors with squeaking handles.
My overwhelming feeling is that here is where I belong, yes, right here under all this rhythm and jazz. Here is where I hang my feathery hat, where music is spontaneous, company is chilled, and life is jolly.
Nowhere is this more evident than when I am stretching on my ladder over the stairs balcony to paint the furthest corner point. I hope against all odds that this whole pile of soft, spongy wooden floor under my ladder will not crumble or fall this time. I promise never to use them again once this last stretch of painting is done.
I love the rough walls collecting dust patterns over my fireplace, the crows cawing through the chimney, the wind blowing through the rafters after centuries, as the big old slates have finally become loose, allowing the rattling ivy to have its way.
A lazy log finally summons forth a blaze showing off its colourful drama as pulsing embers shine bright against my sooty chimney. I simply cannot resist winding, stirring and spinning the bellows wheel, gaining extravagant flames as the fire spits, crackles and blasts into a whizz of energy, guaranteed to get my dreamy attention.
Rough walls tell a story of the winterâs past. Paint peels from the walls, fluttering shadows across the room as hundreds of paint colours peep through under its gaps. Retro paint techniques creep along the walls, all on their own? I do wonder. A crackle and glaze paint style adorns my walls, depending on the weatherâs temperament, or even a unique marbling effect can materialise after a particularly damp spell of weather. Occasionally, the paint rolls, sways and trembles in the breeze, bringing another piece of spontaneous entertainment to my ancient home. All this appears to happen without my interventions or precarious efforts, which is amazing, really, but I know better. I am sure the walls have some assistance to perform creative wall murals besides the weather or me.
A fog settles on the windows. Water droplets race down the glass, all wishing to be the first to make it onto the flaking wooden frame. I feel a chill. Sunlight beams flow through the windowpane, revealing intricately woven cobwebs. Spiders are always busy here.
My whistling kettle is calling me as I rush to the kitchen.
It is safe to say I am no kitchen diva as I always speed my way through the scullery. My only disappointment with Viv so far is that she has failed to come to my rescue with dishes, pots or pans. A task I am quite willing to share. Bowls, platters, and glasses sit there patiently awaiting a sparkle, shine or more likely an enthusiastic scrub with some abrasive equipment to restore a former twinkle. An activity I find is more suited to a long, wet, dreary day, wearing tall, elegant elbow gloves as bubbles roll off the sink while doing their tricks.
Anyway, I am ever patient in this department as I favour creativity and sharing my affable company over dishes any time. Ever confident of our mutual friendship, as I know if I speak of this domestic glitch, my floating house guest will strive to resolve it.
Time to pour my fizzing drink and one for Viv too, after all, we live together as she occasionally joins me for an evening soiree of imagined laughter, entertainment, kicking up heels, enriching tales to be told as secrets unfold, all within the safety of time and ancient stone walls. Sometimes I could tell her how she formed and guided the heroines in my novel, even if occasionally floundering into unsavoury situations.
I sip my glass of bubbles and the one I poured for Viv to enjoy before she returns to her own secret place. I wonder where she lodges when not floating through my house? Where does she reside? Does she have company down the cellars until her next visit? I wish she could stop for longer than a short foggy vision through my walls.
Now what is that rattling on my door? I hear it again. Somebody is eager to join me by my fire for heat, a rest or company. Well, now it is simply too late.
The fire crackles. A drama of twirls and flames suddenly shot up the chimney. I should know by now, as this event always happens before the 12th strike.
The door rattles again. As loud as I possibly can, I clip along the stone-flagged floor in my dancing heels, to alert any intruders to the ferocious inhabitants dwelling within these walls, both seen and unseen. A longer-than-necessary âmeowâ sound echoes as I open the door. My cat rushes in against my feet. A floating shadow of freezing air follows him, making straight for my sofa, fireplace and glass of bubbles.
The night begins.