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Ireland For beginers

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  • 31-08-2008 6:15pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 1,088 ✭✭✭


    * Pub etiquette

    The crucial thing here is the "round" system, in which each participant
    takes turns to "shout" an order. To the outsider, this may appear casual;
    you will not necessarily be told it's your round and other participants may
    appear only too happy to substitute for you. But make no mistake, your
    failure to "put your hand in your pocket" will be noticed. People will
    mention it the moment you leave the room. The reputation will follow you to
    the grave, where after it will attach to your offspring and possibly theirs
    as well. In some cases, it may become permanently enshrined in a family
    nickname.

    * Woolly jumpers

    Ireland produces vast quantities of woollen knitwear and, under a US/Irish
    trade agreement, American visitors may not return to the States without a
    minimum of two sweaters, of which one at least must be predominantly green.
    Airline staff may check that you have the required documentation before you
    are allowed to disembark.
    Note: under no circumstances will you see an Irish person wearing a woollen
    jumper. These jumpers are worn solely by Americans to identify them to
    muggers, thieves and knackers.

    * Irish people and the weather

    It is often said that the Irish are a Mediterranean people who only come
    into their own when the sun shines on consecutive days (which it last did
    around the time of St Patrick). For this reason, Irish people dress for
    conditions in Palermo rather than Dublin; and it is not unusual in March to
    see young people sipping cool beer outside city pubs and cafes, enjoying
    the
    air and the soft caress of hailstones on their skin. The Irish attitude to
    weather is the ultimate triumph of optimism over experience: Every time it
    rains, we look up at the sky and are shocked and betrayed. Then we go out
    and buy a new umbrella.

    * Ireland has two time-zones

    (1) Greenwich Mean Time and (2) "local" time. Local time can be anything
    between ten minutes and three days behind GMT, depending on the position of
    the earth and the whereabouts of the man with the keys to the hall. Again,
    the Irish concept of time has been influenced by the thinking of 20th
    century physicists, who hold that it can only be measured by reference to
    another body and can even be affected by factors like acceleration. For
    instance, a policeman entering a licensed premises in rural Ireland late at
    night is a good example of another body from whom it can be reliably
    inferred that it is fact closing time. When this happens, acceleration is
    the advised option. Shockingly, the relativity argument is still
    not
    accepted as a valid defence in the Irish courts.

    * Irish Dancing

    There are two main kinds of Irish dancing: (1) Riverdance, which is now
    simultaneously running in every major city in the world except Ulan Bator
    and which some economists believe is responsible for the Irish economic
    boom; and (2) real Irish dancing, in which men do not wear frilly blouses
    and you still may not express yourself, except in a written note to the
    adjudicators.

    * The wearing of the green

    Strangely enough, Irish people tend to wear everything except green, which
    is associated with too many national tragedies, including 1798, the Famine
    and the current Irish soccer team. It's possible that green just doesn't
    suit the Irish skin colour, which is generally pale blue (see Weather).

    * Gaelic games

    St Patrick's Day brings the climax of the club championships in Gaelic
    games, which combine elements of the American sports of gridiron and
    baseball but are played with an intensity more associated with Mafia turf
    wars. The two main games are "football" and "hurling", the chief difference
    being that in football, the fights are unarmed. There is also "camogie,"
    which is like hurling, except that in fights the hair may be pulled as
    well.


    * Schools rugby

    St Patrick's Day also brings the finals in schools rugby, a game based
    around the skills of wrestling, kicking, gouging, ear-biting, and assaults
    on other vulnerable body parts. The game is much prized in Ireland's better
    schools, where it's seen as an ideal grounding for careers in business and
    the law. It is well-known that St Patrick banished the snakes from Ireland.
    Less publicised is that he also banished kangaroos, polar bears and
    Vietnamese pot-bellied pigs, all of which were regarded as nuisances by the
    early Irish Christians.

    * Signposting

    In most countries, road signs are used to help motorists get from one place
    to another. In Ireland, it's not so simple. Signposting here is heavily
    influenced by Einstein's theories (either that or the other way round) of
    space/time, and works on the basis that there is no fixed reference point
    in
    the universe,or not west of Mullingar anyway. Instead, location and
    distance may be different for every observer and, frequently, for
    neighbouring road-signs. The good news is Language. Ireland is officially
    bilingual, a fact which is reflected in the road-signs. This allows you to
    get lost in both Irish and English.

    * Clothes

    Visitors to Ireland in mid-March often ask:
    What clothes should I bring? The answer is: All of them!

    * Religion

    Ireland remains a deeply religious country, with the two main denominations
    being "us" and "them". In the unlikely event you are asked which group you
    belong to, the correct answer is: "I'm an atheist, thank God". Then change
    the subject


Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,521 ✭✭✭rocky25


    Brilliant :D


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,372 ✭✭✭The Bollox


    outstanding :D the pub etiquite one is my favourite, so so true


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,529 ✭✭✭zynaps


    byrner88 wrote: »
    under no circumstances will you see an Irish person wearing a woollen
    jumper. These jumpers are worn solely by Americans to identify them to
    muggers, thieves and knackers.
    :D :eek: :)
    So true!

    I stopped in a pub while waiting to meet some friends in town recently and saw a guy in his 70's sitting down to a good meal, wearing a shiny blue full tracksuit and a beige cap, accompanied by his well-dressed, non-blackeyed wife (who wasn't drunk and didn't have her mouth hanging open and wasn't wearing gold hoop earrings). It only took a blink of an eye to notice that they were Americans here on holidays.


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