Good Life living in East Cork: Period Ballynona Lodge with woodland gardens for sale

Ballynona Lodge also has stone outbuildings, barn, two glasshouses and 2.5 acres, with orchard and gardens. Pictures: Lyne Media
Ballynona, Dungourney, Midleton |
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€585,000 |
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Size |
2,560 sq ft on 2.5 acres |
Bedrooms |
5 |
Bathrooms |
3 |
BER |
D2 |
REMEMBER the charming 1970s British sitcom The Good Life, charting the move of a couple, Tom and Barbara Good, towards a life of self-sufficiency?


A long list of names has been associated with Ballynona Lodge over its 200 years of history: Catholic and Protestant, military and land-owning, likely to have been built originally by the Wigmore family who’d been in East Cork since the 17th century.

The family had owned the original Ballynona House, and various estate lodges and cottages, with the Wigmore name recalled of late, as the replacement 1890s Ballynona House came for sale (guiding €950,000 on five acres) and Ballynona Cottage ( a pretty “cottage orné”), which recently got a price drop to €795,000; both are on several acres of ground and hold rustic, rooted rural life promises.

Ms Hegarty has fallen for its understated but undoubted charms and upgraded comforts, with a navy Aga in a cosy kitchen next to a quirky corner-set old bread proving oven.

It wasn’t always carrying this name.

“It was originally called Ballynona Cottage, but a previous owner who moved into it couldn’t bring himself to say he lived in a cottage, so he change its name to ‘lodge’,” says vendor Barbara Hassey with a smile.

Lucky whomever gets to buy it, though, as it’s one of those rare buys of period property that is very easily managed, in great condition, never over-restored but still well-invested in, so that any further spend should be discretionary, while the maturity of the woodland and garden is a boon — enough to do to provide joy, but not so much that it’s a burden.

And, oh, that courtyard behind, with one of the lodge’s two glasshouses, its field-fed trough, the Hasseys’ two lolling dogs Rollo and Myrtle navigating the steps up to it (one wall has traditionally been whitewashed for a touch of Crete on sunny day) the old stone barn and buildings, roofed and dry, with masses of storage and holding timber from the land for years’ worth of stove use to keep the home fires burning.

Inside, the main drawing room to the left with broad internal arch has a wood-burning stove in a pitch pine surround, with coved ceiling, and deep-set window in a front wall several feet thick.
A dining room across the hall has an original — or at least quite grand — white marble fireplace with an open fire in a cast iron surround, a gleaming old pine floor, and a door to the side leads to a home office with a further marble chimneypiece.

Also at ground is a store/utility with shelving for wines (a van run to France for vin, via the N25 and Rosslare ferry anyone?), a bedroom or space for other uses, a guest WC and a sewing room/art room/ den.

A mid-ships staircase with slender spindles gently leads to a first floor with four bedrooms — one with en suite bathroom, the other with a lovely stone fireplace — laid out off two landings.
