The words to the Halloween song, Ginny the Witch, as related by Mona are correct as I remember them, there is of course the other seasonal song, traditionally aired on St Stephens day, "Hunt the wren" the words of which I recollect as:
"We'll hunt the wren says Richie the Robin,
We'll hunt the Wren says Robin the Bobbin,
we'll hunt the wren says Jack o' the land,
we'll hunt the wren says everyone."
What the wren had done to merit such treatment I don't know, but to this day locals still carry out the tradition.
I have never actually seen the words written before and this is only my recollection of them, I seem to recall that there was some association with the Whiteboys. I believe that there is presently a local group known as the Mollag band.
Mollags and Spithags. A mollag was made from a dog or seal skin, used as a float on fishermans nets. The two species were specifically chosen for the lack of pores in their skin (i.e. dogs do not perspire) which meant that the finished item held air and excluded water. The skin was removed in one piece and the relevant apertures tied. The one remaining aperture had a cork inserted and secured and a small hole through the cork permitted inflation, finally the hole in the cork was sealed with a spithag (a small wooden peg)to keep the air in. My Grandmother, being from a fishing family, often referred to people as mollags or spithags, presumably someone who she thought a mollag was a person full of wind and she often referred to a child or small animal as a spithag.
Snotty Bridge was always known thus and was built to carry the railway line over the roadway, certainly the "snots" are still there.