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Thanks, it's my fifth trip to Éire. Big fan of Guiness. No other dark beers are even half as good.
Cheers on that.
Give them all a fidget spinner then back out slowly.
rando says
My only fear is the Irish custom that every man buy his round for the group. The volume one is required to drink gets problematic in groups larger than 10.
OMG, the amount of fidget spinners you will have pushed on you in Europe will astound you.
https://www.edelweisslodgeandresort.com/
The last time I was in Germany. Beautiful area.
First going to work on my Irish Gaelic in Ireland for two weeks, then will check out Scandinavia.
Don't forget to visit the wonderful mosques in Scandinavia. There's one on every corner.
much ancient and well-documented intolerance have the Scandinavians imported in the name of tolerance?
I hear malmo is nice this time of year, as long as you hide the women and children
Don't forget your MAGA hat and loud Bermuda shorts.
I would LOVE to hear honest feedback from Europeans about Trump and the state of US politics. Please wear your MAGA hat in a pub and make some friends/frenemies.
Don't forget the Alps. You can take a train to Grindlewald and hike numerous trails from there. And they have hotels with restaurants that serve alcohol as well as food up in the Alps in the most unexpected places so you can reward yourself with a nice beer and decent food at the end of a long hike.
Thanks, it's my fifth trip to Éire. Big fan of Guiness. No other dark beers are even half as good.
You my friend, have not been to Belgium, think Trappist.
The Swedish Bikini Team now has a camel in a thong on their team.
The only part of a camel that would be acceptable is the toe. :-)
By quitting.
Send your ex employer a postcard from Ireland and tell them how much you miss your old job.
We're planning to stay in the Bay Area for now, since our rent is reasonable for the area, and my wife has a job she likes. I plan to get a job when I get back from this trip.
It does sound like fun to live somewhere really different while we're young enough though. Good suggestion. That will now percolate in my brain.
Congrats, Pat, for taking the step and enjoying yourself. Memories you just can't pay for later if you don't do it now.
We got 4 weeks after 20 years and 5 after 25 years and I didn't think long vacations were in the perk packages for IT types in the Bay Area so now I understand.
Good thing you don't live in one of those awful socialist countries with 6-8 weeks off a year.
Going to spend some of the money I saved by renting all this time and take a month long trip to Europe.
Now THIS is living.
I have no car here, which is fine. I'm now in my Irish Gaelic class on Inis OÃrr, a little island off the west coast. Don't need a car here anyway.
Have to say the food in Ireland is excellent in its raw state (great milk, butter, fish, etc) but they don't generally prepare things all that well.
There's a joke that Irish food is just like English food, but not so spicy.
Ah, being in-between jobs makes for the best vacations doesn't it?
Yes, I just don't care or think about work at all at the moment.
What started out as peasant food can be well regarded. Not sure about Ireland. Good bacon? Any decent local cheese? I want to eat my way through Eastern Europe.
I've had the "full Irish" breakfast several times, and can't say the ham or bacon was any different. Didn't run across local cheese yet.
The one very well-reviewed restaurant I tried to go to was closed, no explanation, in contradiction of the stated opening days and hours.
Did have one excellent culinary experience: the seafood chowder at the place I'm staying on Inis OÃrr was amazing. Maybe best I ever had. But then it was cream and seafood, stuff from right here.
I had already read that the police can be called in via boat (half hour from the mainland) to force the bars to close, but I didn't realize that it was the locals keeping them open and not the tourists!
So who turns them in? Turns out that it's a favorite hobby of the old ladies in town to call the police to force the bars to close at 1am, to make their families come home, or just to be contrary if they don't have families. Police have to get a boat and come all the way out, lol.
Hey Patrick, did you kiss the blarney stone? FYI, the locals pee on it.
I have no car here, which is fine. I'm now in my Irish Gaelic class on Inis OÃrr, a little island off the west coast. Don't need a car here anyway.
Yeah, my idea of a vacation doesn't include driving much or at all. That's why I like going places like Atlantic City, where you don't need a car.
Had a wonderful tour of Inis Meán today with my class, and could understand almost all of what the tour guide was saying in Irish. I know she was speaking slowly and simply for us, but still, it's a great feeling to start to get the hang of this very weird old language.
Photo I took there today:
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Going to spend some of the money I saved by renting all this time and take a month long trip to Europe.
First going to work on my Irish Gaelic in Ireland for two weeks, then will check out Scandinavia.