AP TELEVISION
Blacklion, Republic of Ireland - 24 May 2016
1. Farmer Hugh Maguire with a calf and cows on pasture
2. Close of calf
3. Sheep running on pasture
4. Maguire, pointing to horizon UPSOUND (English): "Right around the borderline of the mountain, right the way on, you can see parts of Southern Ireland."
5. Sheep grazing
6. SOUNDBITE (English) Hugh Maguire, farmer:
"Probably 70 percent of my income is off it, 65 to 70 percent is from the EU (European Union). We couldn't survive only for the subsidies. There is no way we could survive, especially on this land that we're farming."
7. Maguire leaving farm through gate
AP TELEVISION
Belcoo, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom (UK) - 24 May 2016
8. Bridge leading from Belcoo, Northern Ireland (UK) to Blacklion, Republic of Ireland, with sign reading (English and Gaelic) "Welcome to County Cavan"
9. Close of sign reading (English and Gaelic) "Blacklion" with speed limit in kilometres per hour
10. Bridge connecting Belcoo, Northern Ireland (UK) and Blacklion, Republic of Ireland
AP TELEVISION
Blacklion, Republic of Ireland - 24 May 2016
11. Sign of "The Market House" tourist centre and gift shop
12. Tourist administrator Helena Corcoran talking to colleague in tourist centre
13. Leprechaun puppets for sale in tourist centre
14. SOUNDBITE (English) Helena Corcoran, tourist administrator and local resident:
"We've had so much tragedy and grief along the border area, that I just feel and hope that they will stay in. My fear is, I suppose, that this border will appear and will make everyday life difficult for everybody basically, because this is the main road from North to South, from Sligo, and we get a lot of traffic, a lot of tourists, and we've already suffered enough in this area, so we don't need to suffer anymore."
15. Mug for sale with images of Ireland and reading (English) "Greetings from Ireland"
AP TELEVISION
Blacklion, Republic of Ireland - 25 May 2016
16. Top shot of bridge connecting Blacklion, Republic of Ireland and Belcoo, Northern Ireland (UK)
17. SOUNDBITE (English) John Paul Feeley, Cavan County councilman:
"Europe, and the structural funding and the peace funding have been hugely important in terms of giving areas like this the leg-up that they need to reach or to get into step with the rest of the country and progress economically."
AP TELEVISION
Belcoo, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom (UK) - 25 May 2016
18. Sign reading (English) Belcoo, with speed limit in miles per hour
19. Bartender Stephen Leonard carrying board out of pub "Jack's Bar"
20. Stephen Leonard serving guests inside pub
21. SOUNDBITE (English) Stephen Leonard, bartender:
"Behind the bar you hear both sides of the story, and you hear now a lot of things like there'll be borders back up, the police will be back out stopping and just all stuff like that, and I've never witnessed it, and I wouldn't like to witness it from what you've heard years ago."
22. Stephen Leonard talking to his father Paul Leonard
23. SOUNDBITE (English) Paul Leonard, self-employed pub owner:
"It probably would possibly enhance the economy again, maybe we'd be freer to be able to do things without the regulation of Europe, you know, so it would. At the end of the day, before the UK market ever went down to the EU, they have always had a very strong economy, they were always well able to survive. They have an identity of their own."
24. Paul Leonard pouring beer and handing glass to his son UPSOUND (English): "Hey Stephen, that's for you."
25. Stephen Leonard drinking beer in pub
26. Pan from river to bridge between Blacklion, Republic of Ireland and Belcoo, Northern Ireland (UK)
Fears of "Brexit" are stark among the inhabitants of Blacklion in the Republic of Ireland and Belcoo in Northern Ireland, UK - two border villages that could be further separated if the United Kingdom opts to leave the European Union.
Only a gurgling stream separates the two villages, but Ireland's soft border could become a hard fact of life again if the United Kingdom leaves the European Union, the sovereignty-sharing bloc that has done much to blur the 95-year-old boundary.
Should a majority of British voters reject continued EU membership in the UK's June 23 referendum, Northern Ireland's nearly 500-kilometre (310-mile) frontier with the Irish Republic would become the only British land border with the 27-nation EU.
The closely intertwined residents of Belcoo in Northern Ireland and Blacklion barely 200 metres (218 yards) away in the republic would find themselves again in two diverging lands.
While some view that prospect as an opportunity, many more express dread at the thought.
Farmer Hugh Maguire, 60, whose Blacklion home rests barely inside the republic but whose nearby farm of sheep, cattle and hens lies in Northern Ireland, said he could not survive without EU subsidies.
Both communities are heavily dependent on EU funding. Agriculture is the top employer, and farms receive 329 euros (365 US dollars) per hectare of land from the EU's Single Farm Payment subsidy scheme in place since 2003, an annual payment exceeding 80,000 euros (90,000 US dollars) for Maguire's 241-hectare farm.
Few Northern Ireland farmers are confident that the British government, long a critic of EU farm subsidies, would maintain anything close to that level of state support.
Maguire estimates that EU payments provide two-thirds of his income while most of the rest requires open market access to livestock marts in the republic, where prices for spring lamb are stronger.
Behind the bar in 'Jack's Bar' in Belcoo in Northern Ireland, owner Paul Leonard and his son Stephen look likely to cancel each other's votes. The son favors staying in the EU, while the father is eyeing the exit.