Kieran Mongan lives with his wife and children in Letterkenny but he spent much of his youth travelling up and down England and Scotland.
"From the outside looking in, it probably looks like a pretty hectic way to live your life but it's not," he says. "Until you're part of that community you don't understand. There's something freeing about it, you're with your own, everybody looks after each other. You decide where you're going to be that night [ . . .] you can control your own life, that's a great feeling."
Ackey McGinley, who lives in Ramelton, spent his early years on the road. He's lived in houses since he married more than forty years ago, but still misses the road. "Very badly till this present day. I would go back to the old times again if I was young," he says, though he reckons you wouldn't find a camping place along the road these days.
Hugh Friel, who works with the Donegal Travellers Project, was brought up in a house in Killybegs and now lives in Ballyarr near Ramelton. He keeps horses, and reckons that life with horses on the road has something to teach the modern world. "People can slow down time because I think everything's going too fast [ . .]
Speaking in her home in Ballyshannon, Bridget McDonagh thinks living life in the open air was healthier for Travellers. But she believes that life for Travellers is moving off the road. "My opinion today is that Travellers are settling down," she says, adding that this means Traveller children are getting more education than they were when she was young.
All this and much more from our Traveller speakers. There are also clips of special guest Dessie Crerand singing a song written by Master Seán McBride about a traveller, 'The Homes of Donegal'. And there's a song from Mary Josephine Ward from Manorcunningham - 'My Connemara Marble Ring', by Candy Murphy from the renowned family band The Murphys from Kerry.
Total running time - 22.27