None of your points were pointless. Actually, they were spot on. I was in Ireland during the summer of 2022, and you touched on every topic except washcloths and top sheets. This also seems to be a big subject on the Ireland tourist info pages on Facebook. I was so traumatized by my three weeks in Ireland that I am coming back in 2025 and bringing my older sister and my son. Great video, thanks for posting!
American here and I learned very quickly that coming to Ireland means slagging that cut straight to the soul. It's the Irish love language. 😆Signs should read: "Come in for a meal, leave with a new insecurity!" It's all in good fun though lol! 🤣Also, it's a scientific fact that Irish seagulls are more airplane than bird.
@@Tinyboots_travelsI’m a dub living in Oxford - the attitude to Irish folk from 95% of English folk is very positive now. We do swear / had a c rant in Newcastle last weekend - I like you ya c$€ts. Thanking bus drivers normal here too. Irish are often friendly, to tourists, (was a dub barman) but they’re really saying - do you like us? What do think of us? 😂. Dublin is open late as England, defo in a Dublin. White pudding is ace - but try a spice burger - unique. Great vid. Ta ❤️👍🏽👍☘️
I'm from Dublin, but I live in Bangkok with my Thai wife and son. My son speaks Hiberno English, which as you rightly pointed out. is extremely colourful. Some of the Thai mothers of my son's Thai friends have complained to me for exposing their children to vulgar English. I have told them. "Don't teach me how to speak my language, and I won't teach you haw to speak your's".
A polish girl on the bus with a 5 y.o. boy said out loud that her child wasn't picking up the language. Bus went around a corner and bags went flying. "SHITE!" said the kid. Ah sure he's picking it up just fine Mrs...
When I started working in the local SuperValu we all started as bag-packers. It was like a rite of passage. If you were competent at packing bags, you could be elevated to packing shelves. (stock replenishment engineer) Some of these points we take for granted until we go abroad, or foreigners come here and highlight them... great video.
You are hilarious the way you kept apologising and doubting yourself all the way through this clip. That is SO IRISH!! 😂💚🤣 I’m from Cork and didn’t need the tips, but I’m sure that they were really informative for a lot of people. Well done! 👍
I went to Dublin a couple of years ago from the UK, loved it, but still there were very few culture shocks if any. The main differences (aside from road signs being in two languages which is similar to Wales anyway) was the traffic lights made a different noise, Tayto being the main crisp brand over Walkers (Lays) and Euros instead of Pounds. That was it really, the biggest culture shock I got was getting the bus from the airport into Dublin and having to buy a ticket from the tuck shop nearby. Everything else just felt pretty similar, obviously there are structural differences and a few different laws but by and large it wasn't all that different.
Ref swearing "absofeckinglutely " brilliant. Ref pubs. If a tourist or just visiting (as a worker or family member). We'll literally physically stop you from buying a round or paying for something. You MUST find a way to pay for something (just going to the jacks / toilets and return with a round of drinks), if not, later when youve left, we'll say ahhh he / she were lovely, great craic but a wee bit stingy / tight fisted, didn't put their fecking hand in their pocket" etc
Its more than GAA clubs that pack bags many charities do it and often bags are packed in supermarkets by staff ,did it often when i was working in a supermarket.The thing about sea gulls is probably true due a phenonemen called island gigantism where small animals become bigger on islands as a result of less competition ,whereas bigger animals do the opposite and become smaller because the resources are limited and less predators so less need to be big
Lad the no plugs in the bathrooms is the most annoying thing on the planet. Also the whole radiator thing, new build houses typically use heat pumps which use low grade heat (below 40C) so they use a mixture of underfloor heating and low temp radiators. The old high temp radiators are fairly unusual throughout Europe as they have been using low temp radiators and underfloor heating for YEARS.
I am from Latvia..as a teen visited USA and then lived in Denmark for a few years...When i came to Galway in 2001 i was surprised how it reminded me of America a little...back then even american flags were all over Galway...all i wanna say is Ireland is a place in EU where you will feel US vibes the most
My usual riposte to an American complaining about us Irish swearing is “ I think you don’t like that we put mother in front of the goddam mother word. I just love the looks on their faces.
Learned nothing but you're delightfully charming! Lovely accent - I can envisage you doing a fine recital of Ch18, Molly Bloom monologue! Swearing - Ireland 2nd rate, Mexico is numero uno! The most distressing difference USA v Ireland - Americans think when you say stuff you're speaking literally! My vocabulary is pauperized since coming to the USA.
ahaha oh nooooo my fear has been confirmed, it WAS a pointless video!! Glad ya liked the accent though :) I look forward to experience Mexican swearing at some point!
Yes that’s why irony’s lost on Americans they are so used to the spoon fed obvious 1 step 2 step artificial audience laugh machine comedy sad really except when watching the confusion on actors faces when Ricky Gervaise gets stuck in at the Oscar’s then it’s fecking hilarious 🤣 New sub 😊
My great grandparents moved from Stoke Newington in London to cork city in 1890 ..even though I'm technically English trust me im Irish through and through....i have the attitude
I once flipped a lighting cigarette end (here in Ireland) -- seagull* swooped in, took it right out of the air! Or, to use the scientific nomenclature, 'sh¡†ehawk'...
7:20 the voltage in the bathrooms for shavers is much lower 110v as opposed to our normal 240v which is way way more dangerous. In America the standard throughout the house (apart from cookers) is 110v. So it’s safer in America.
Wrong. It is an isolated / floating supply with limited power available, suitable for a shaver or toothbrush only. Most shaver socket units have outlets for 120 V and 240 V and accept US or Euro 2 pin plugs. If you try using a hairdrier they will shut down.
“Hi! How are you?”… it took me a while to understand that the Irish are not expecting an actual answer in return to this greeting. A reply of “Hi, how are you?” sufficed. So nobody wants to tell or know the answer to the question, “how are you?” I found it a perfunctory greeting, and often wondered why not just stop at “Hi/ Hello!” instead.
My usual answer is something like " I'm in great form, in fact, so good that I'm afraid to tell you, in case you get jealous" or sometimes "fcukin terrible, how about you"
I have a hypothesis on the Irish cultural swearing. There are very few “swear words” in Irish (Gaeilge) the language. However there are countless swear phrases (whole sentences) they are viewed as totally benign, (a granny and even a parish priest would be comfortable using them. They are akin to Shakespearean floury language. They are not really in use in modern Irish even amongst native speakers unless they are very old or academically studying them. My hypothesis is that English swear words have gradually infiltrated and replaced these phrases over the last century or more and so we don’t really view swearing as vulgar or sinful. I am not a linguist or an anthropologist but I have been alive long enough to see the progression from my grandmother to my own children.
I’m in Roscommon and I seen a bunch of massive gulls attacking a fox 🦊 😂 they ran him then flew off the other way laughing. I think he was on their feeding territory 😅 so ya I guess they are a bit mad and big here 😂 I’ve heard our sky looks lower than elsewhere in Europe even 😅 anyone ever hear someone say that?
Dear God the poor fox 😅😅 ohhh no way I've never heard that one but just reminded me that people from the US are always mind blown at how long it stays bright in summer here!!
@@Tinyboots_travels I know I felt so bad I ran downstairs and out the back as if I could do something to help him 😂😅 yes our summer days are lovely and long I do be upset if I go on holiday and the sun is setting but at home it’s still bright for hours 😂
Having moved to Co. Cork from SE England (West Sussex) over 25 years ago nothing seemed that different, a bit more friendly perhaps. One awkward moment in my local pub one night, having been in the town about 6 months, an elderly man having too much drink taken started shouting about 'you f**king English', the Landlady instantly barred him and a couple of locals escorted him out the door.
@@Lala-kc2fw Didn't pay for another pint of Beamish for the rest of the night, not that I was upset by it, developed a thick skin at school having had to transfer from boarding school to a state school.
@@tonys1636 i think i would be the same for the pint. It's a difficult thing to explain. It's not that we dislike you lot, i guess it's like touching a nerve sometimes. It's like a saying "Messing turns to crying" or something like that, a strange self loathing of sorts, especially when a drink is involved
@@lloroshastar6347 yeah 😂 pretty much, it's important though that you don't feel guilty about it as if it's a guilt trip. I've noticed some people like doing that to English/British people If we got angry it's no we trying to put you down its like an anger at ourselves in a way too
Why do people coming to Ireland, from another country for example America expect everything to be the same as in America? A different country, even though it might speak English, should not be expected to be the same. Obviously there are going to be cultural differences. The differences are not really that hard for Americans to deal with. I m sure your video will have helped some of them understand.
It's been a thing so long it's not considered cursing, they're just words. The fact that other cultures consider them as cursing or offensive is tough shit!
So just an explanation diff languages consider diff things vulgar so IN irish or gaelige .. (americans call it gaelic) swearing is just a part of talking much more so .. and you get place names like the hag's nipple or the man's balls etc and its not considered rude or vulgar. Gaelic culture still influences the way we use english .. so it comes from that .. irish can be exceptionally diplomatic it can be polite or it can be brutally violet or it can be extremely good for engineering its a much more flexible language than english and diff things are considered rude in irish .. so it just crossed over.
Eastern Ireland is good too. But from the Ulster county of Donegal in the north to the Munster county of Cork in the south, the western seaboard is a great sweep of Ireland.
Sorry to be pedantic but it's not the fast lane, it's the overtaking lane. You should only be there if you are overtaking, otherwise get back in the left lane no matter how fast you are going.
Well, you didn't curse enough - I didn't learn any new foul words to use on my upcoming Ireland trip. How about all those damn sheep on those F'n narrow country roads crowded with the big farm tractors. It scared me to even walk on the road where I was staying near Westport on the last trip as there are no shoulders to the road and often blind corners and the damn Irish drivers only drive as fast as they can... And then when you are driving and some fast Irish driver is right up your ass behind you and you go around a blind curve with vegetation creeping onto the road and what - some foolish bloke is biking on that narrow road just ahead and the driver behind you decides to pass just as your were going to give the bike rider a few inches to go around - that's when I need the new curse words... American drivers also need to be warned about the round-abouts, especially on the hiways - it's very counterintuitive for a US driver to be in the proper lane to where they want to go...
haha "learn how to swear like an irish person" video coming soon!!! Ah yes roundabouts , i forgot to mention othis one !!! Enjoy your upcoming trip though :D
You don't have to remember all the do's and don'ts for coming here. It's ridiculous. Just come and you will have a lovely time. You don't have to analyse every bloody thing! 🙄
None of your points were pointless. Actually, they were spot on. I was in Ireland during the summer of 2022, and you touched on every topic except washcloths and top sheets. This also seems to be a big subject on the Ireland tourist info pages on Facebook. I was so traumatized by my three weeks in Ireland that I am coming back in 2025 and bringing my older sister and my son. Great video, thanks for posting!
Ahhh no way I'm glad the points were all relatable! That's so excitingggggg glad to have you coming back for more 🙌🙌
@@Tinyboots_travels 239 days until then. I can’t wait!
My grandfather (first generation US) swore beautifully! I hope to visit next year so I can swear to my heart's content.
@@robertdoyle8135 Welcome anytime ❤️, very nicely put 😁 God Bless You 🇮🇪❤️🇺🇸
I really appreciate the time and effort you put into creating this content. It's clear you're passionate about what you do!
Thank you!!
American here and I learned very quickly that coming to Ireland means slagging that cut straight to the soul. It's the Irish love language. 😆Signs should read: "Come in for a meal, leave with a new insecurity!" It's all in good fun though lol! 🤣Also, it's a scientific fact that Irish seagulls are more airplane than bird.
Tourists please note: Apart from the Hiberno-English part, pretty much everything else in this video applies if you also happen to visit the UK 😂
Haha yes I kept mentioning the UK in the video because it's so similar 😅😅
@@Tinyboots_travelsI’m a dub living in Oxford - the attitude to Irish folk from 95% of English folk is very positive now.
We do swear / had a c rant in Newcastle last weekend - I like you ya c$€ts.
Thanking bus drivers normal here too.
Irish are often friendly, to tourists, (was a dub barman) but they’re really saying - do you like us? What do think of us? 😂.
Dublin is open late as England, defo in a Dublin.
White pudding is ace - but try a spice burger - unique.
Great vid. Ta ❤️👍🏽👍☘️
I'm from Dublin, but I live in Bangkok with my Thai wife and son. My son speaks Hiberno English, which as you rightly pointed out. is extremely colourful. Some of the Thai mothers of my son's Thai friends have complained to me for exposing their children to vulgar English. I have told them. "Don't teach me how to speak my language, and I won't teach you haw to speak your's".
A polish girl on the bus with a 5 y.o. boy said out loud that her child wasn't picking up the language. Bus went around a corner and bags went flying. "SHITE!" said the kid. Ah sure he's picking it up just fine Mrs...
Hahaha yes I love that
😂😂😂😂😂😂
Hiberno English? What in the christ is that?
Yes but Irish is our language not English. We're not English! :P
When I started working in the local SuperValu we all started as bag-packers. It was like a rite of passage. If you were competent at packing bags, you could be elevated to packing shelves. (stock replenishment engineer)
Some of these points we take for granted until we go abroad, or foreigners come here and highlight them...
great video.
You are hilarious the way you kept apologising and doubting yourself all the way through this clip. That is SO IRISH!! 😂💚🤣 I’m from Cork and didn’t need the tips, but I’m sure that they were really informative for a lot of people. Well done! 👍
Haha stop, why are we like this, I almost felt GUILTY posting the video!! Well I'm so glad you watched, sorry you had to hear my pointless tips ahaha
Thanks for sharing, I enjoyed this and I'm Irish, God Bless You 🇮🇪❤️🇺🇸...
I’m going tomorrow. I’m from there originally. I can’t wait.
enjoyyyyy!! :D :D :D
I went to Dublin a couple of years ago from the UK, loved it, but still there were very few culture shocks if any. The main differences (aside from road signs being in two languages which is similar to Wales anyway) was the traffic lights made a different noise, Tayto being the main crisp brand over Walkers (Lays) and Euros instead of Pounds. That was it really, the biggest culture shock I got was getting the bus from the airport into Dublin and having to buy a ticket from the tuck shop nearby. Everything else just felt pretty similar, obviously there are structural differences and a few different laws but by and large it wasn't all that different.
Ah yeah Ireland and the UK are pretty much the same, which makes sense due to the history but .... UP TAYTO!!! haha
@@Tinyboots_travels I was genuinely excited to eat Tayto for the first time 😁
Ref swearing "absofeckinglutely " brilliant. Ref pubs. If a tourist or just visiting (as a worker or family member). We'll literally physically stop you from buying a round or paying for something. You MUST find a way to pay for something (just going to the jacks / toilets and return with a round of drinks), if not, later when youve left, we'll say ahhh he / she were lovely, great craic but a wee bit stingy / tight fisted, didn't put their fecking hand in their pocket" etc
Its more than GAA clubs that pack bags many charities do it and often bags are packed in supermarkets by staff ,did it often when i was working in a supermarket.The thing about sea gulls is probably true due a phenonemen called island gigantism where small animals become bigger on islands as a result of less competition ,whereas bigger animals do the opposite and become smaller because the resources are limited and less predators so less need to be big
That was fun. Thanks!
Loved the big bathtubs in Ireland!
The reason there are no sockets in bathrooms is that we use a higher voltage than Europe or the states , so it is more dangerous to use near water 🤔😁
As far as I am aware all of Europe uses 220/240 voltage and north America uses 110.
Lad the no plugs in the bathrooms is the most annoying thing on the planet. Also the whole radiator thing, new build houses typically use heat pumps which use low grade heat (below 40C) so they use a mixture of underfloor heating and low temp radiators. The old high temp radiators are fairly unusual throughout Europe as they have been using low temp radiators and underfloor heating for YEARS.
I am from Latvia..as a teen visited USA and then lived in Denmark for a few years...When i came to Galway in 2001 i was surprised how it reminded me of America a little...back then even american flags were all over Galway...all i wanna say is Ireland is a place in EU where you will feel US vibes the most
The US and Ireland have a long standing connection and relationship. America has the most Irish diaspora.
The bloody half shower glass doors! Every time I get out I'm risking a broken neck. Don't forget to warn them about the immersion!
ahhhh god damn i forgot the immersion because I've never had that before. Thanks!!
We speak with swear words because we were forced to use the english language, so we abuse it as much as we can.
Great video!
Glad you enjoyed it :)
My usual riposte to an American complaining about us Irish swearing is “ I think you don’t like that we put mother in front of the goddam mother word. I just love the looks on their faces.
Learned nothing but you're delightfully charming! Lovely accent - I can envisage you doing a fine recital of Ch18, Molly Bloom monologue! Swearing - Ireland 2nd rate, Mexico is numero uno! The most distressing difference USA v Ireland - Americans think when you say stuff you're speaking literally! My vocabulary is pauperized since coming to the USA.
Mexico has the advantage of swearing in Spanish. It's by far the best language for swearing, in my opinion 😄
ahaha oh nooooo my fear has been confirmed, it WAS a pointless video!! Glad ya liked the accent though :) I look forward to experience Mexican swearing at some point!
Yes that’s why irony’s lost on Americans they are so used to the spoon fed obvious 1 step 2 step artificial audience laugh machine comedy sad really except when watching the confusion on actors faces when Ricky Gervaise gets stuck in at the Oscar’s then it’s fecking hilarious 🤣
New sub 😊
@@sheenavaughan2717 Hahaha I was literally thinking of Ricky Gervais when I was talking about it 😂😂
@ 🤣🤣🤣
My great grandparents moved from Stoke Newington in London to cork city in 1890 ..even though I'm technically English trust me im Irish through and through....i have the attitude
Great video. By the way, one New Jersey seagull would beat up five Irish seagulls. I hated them so much I came back home to live!
😂 This is very true. New Jersey seagulls are crazy!
Reallyyyyy, I'm off to Google them now haha
@@Tinyboots_travels th-cam.com/video/S2X5rYGWaxA/w-d-xo.htmlsi=9oFg3eddcH7htbeM
@@Tinyboots_travels they are gangsters LOL
I once flipped a lighting cigarette end (here in Ireland) -- seagull* swooped in, took it right out of the air!
Or, to use the scientific nomenclature, 'sh¡†ehawk'...
Yes, we do tip.😊
well Im mortified now haha
Swearing is sort of an art form here in Ireland, not just as offensive words, but also terms of endearment 💚
absolutely!
13:27 not a fast lane. It’s for overtaking (only) move left a safe distance after you overtake.
@@COM70 yes I mean fast lane as in you drive faster there to overtake someone
@ 👍 i know what you mean, but maybe you should Google it. If you are not overtaking a vehicle, it is a road traffic offense to be in that lane.
7:20 the voltage in the bathrooms for shavers is much lower 110v as opposed to our normal 240v which is way way more dangerous. In America the standard throughout the house (apart from cookers) is 110v. So it’s safer in America.
Wrong. It is an isolated / floating supply with limited power available, suitable for a shaver or toothbrush only. Most shaver socket units have outlets for 120 V and 240 V and accept US or Euro 2 pin plugs. If you try using a hairdrier they will shut down.
@ nice, mine is from 1970 something. Just a transformer a pull chord and a glass fuse.
Ohhhh I had no idea!
“Hi! How are you?”… it took me a while to understand that the Irish are not expecting an actual answer in return to this greeting. A reply of “Hi, how are you?” sufficed. So nobody wants to tell or know the answer to the question, “how are you?”
I found it a perfunctory greeting, and often wondered why not just stop at “Hi/ Hello!” instead.
Haha I know, i really don't know why we ask, again I think it's out of politeness 🤔🤔
My usual answer is something like " I'm in great form, in fact, so good that I'm afraid to tell you, in case you get jealous" or sometimes "fcukin terrible, how about you"
6:41 - How many murder mystery novels in development JUST GOT RUINED?!
😆😆😆
I have a hypothesis on the Irish cultural swearing. There are very few “swear words” in Irish (Gaeilge) the language. However there are countless swear phrases (whole sentences) they are viewed as totally benign, (a granny and even a parish priest would be comfortable using them. They are akin to Shakespearean floury language. They are not really in use in modern Irish even amongst native speakers unless they are very old or academically studying them. My hypothesis is that English swear words have gradually infiltrated and replaced these phrases over the last century or more and so we don’t really view swearing as vulgar or sinful. I am not a linguist or an anthropologist but I have been alive long enough to see the progression from my grandmother to my own children.
aw noooo bring the old floury phrases back!!!
I’m in Roscommon and I seen a bunch of massive gulls attacking a fox 🦊 😂 they ran him then flew off the other way laughing. I think he was on their feeding territory 😅 so ya I guess they are a bit mad and big here 😂 I’ve heard our sky looks lower than elsewhere in Europe even 😅 anyone ever hear someone say that?
Dear God the poor fox 😅😅 ohhh no way I've never heard that one but just reminded me that people from the US are always mind blown at how long it stays bright in summer here!!
@@Tinyboots_travels Many don't realize we're on the same latitude as much of Canada, NI the same as Alaska.
@@Tinyboots_travels I know I felt so bad I ran downstairs and out the back as if I could do something to help him 😂😅 yes our summer days are lovely and long I do be upset if I go on holiday and the sun is setting but at home it’s still bright for hours 😂
Very useful list. Thanks. Only upsetting bit was the subtitles that turned the word rural into royal. Excuse me!!!!! Royal Ireland!!!??? 😡🤪🤣
The occupied very north east I suppose. Temporarily.
I FEEL VERY BETRAYED BY THESE SUBTITLES!!!!
There was a time in Ireland kings were so plentiful you couldn't throw a stone without knocking a lump out of the head of a king!
Love your vlog the Irish are very like us Scots ie sarcasm, swearing
There is no problem with seagulls, they are very well behaved in Galway.
😂
not when I lived there haha.
You’re a scream. Don’t change. Just subscribed.
ahhhh would ya stop, thanks so much :)
I laughed my ass off at this and i'm Irish, both countries are fucked in the head. Yup da Dubs!
Having moved to Co. Cork from SE England (West Sussex) over 25 years ago nothing seemed that different, a bit more friendly perhaps. One awkward moment in my local pub one night, having been in the town about 6 months, an elderly man having too much drink taken started shouting about 'you f**king English', the Landlady instantly barred him and a couple of locals escorted him out the door.
That happens and will always happen. I've done it too. Im not sorry.
@@Lala-kc2fw Didn't pay for another pint of Beamish for the rest of the night, not that I was upset by it, developed a thick skin at school having had to transfer from boarding school to a state school.
I'm English and I don't blame him lol not against you personally but, you know, the whole 800 years of occupation thing.
@@tonys1636 i think i would be the same for the pint. It's a difficult thing to explain. It's not that we dislike you lot, i guess it's like touching a nerve sometimes. It's like a saying "Messing turns to crying" or something like that, a strange self loathing of sorts, especially when a drink is involved
@@lloroshastar6347 yeah 😂 pretty much, it's important though that you don't feel guilty about it as if it's a guilt trip. I've noticed some people like doing that to English/British people
If we got angry it's no we trying to put you down its like an anger at ourselves in a way too
Why do people coming to Ireland, from another country for example America expect everything to be the same as in America? A different country, even though it might speak English, should not be expected to be the same. Obviously there are going to be cultural differences. The differences are not really that hard for Americans to deal with. I m sure your video will have helped some of them understand.
Stage 1, cursing in Ireland is us using a verbal highlighter pen.
No offence intended, but some people don't like people writing on books.
hahaha I LOVE this !!!
Why is it . If the speed limit is 100 and I am on hundred exactly. In the fast line. Some guy bleeps me anyway. How much faster can be go anyway?
It's not a fast lane it's an overtaking lane you are not allowed to stay in that lane, overtake and then move into the left lane
The gay Spar never closes it doesn't even have doors.
And we LOVE to see it 🙌😂
Is the cursing a new thing in Ireland or have they always done it?
Swearing is just a way to get your message across.
It's not necessary but if you got our weather you would also swear a lot.
It's been a thing so long it's not considered cursing, they're just words. The fact that other cultures consider them as cursing or offensive is tough shit!
So just an explanation diff languages consider diff things vulgar so IN irish or gaelige .. (americans call it gaelic) swearing is just a part of talking much more so .. and you get place names like the hag's nipple or the man's balls etc and its not considered rude or vulgar. Gaelic culture still influences the way we use english .. so it comes from that .. irish can be exceptionally diplomatic it can be polite or it can be brutally violet or it can be extremely good for engineering its a much more flexible language than english and diff things are considered rude in irish .. so it just crossed over.
Thank you.
Go to northern Ireland
And don’t forget to visit the west of Ireland.
West is best!!
@@Tinyboots_travels yeah but they need to see political aspect not talking about Irish stereotypes lol like leprechauns and fiddlers music lol
Eastern Ireland is good too. But from the Ulster county of Donegal in the north to the Munster county of Cork in the south, the western seaboard is a great sweep of Ireland.
Cursing is the same as the English mate.if we curse in front of yee,yer on the inside track
YESSSS!!!
Sorry to be pedantic but it's not the fast lane, it's the overtaking lane. You should only be there if you are overtaking, otherwise get back in the left lane no matter how fast you are going.
You are beautiful ❤️
Its great, will hopefully turn people off coming here.
Well, you didn't curse enough - I didn't learn any new foul words to use on my upcoming Ireland trip. How about all those damn sheep on those F'n narrow country roads crowded with the big farm tractors. It scared me to even walk on the road where I was staying near Westport on the last trip as there are no shoulders to the road and often blind corners and the damn Irish drivers only drive as fast as they can... And then when you are driving and some fast Irish driver is right up your ass behind you and you go around a blind curve with vegetation creeping onto the road and what - some foolish bloke is biking on that narrow road just ahead and the driver behind you decides to pass just as your were going to give the bike rider a few inches to go around - that's when I need the new curse words... American drivers also need to be warned about the round-abouts, especially on the hiways - it's very counterintuitive for a US driver to be in the proper lane to where they want to go...
haha "learn how to swear like an irish person" video coming soon!!! Ah yes roundabouts , i forgot to mention othis one !!! Enjoy your upcoming trip though :D
You don't have to remember all the do's and don'ts for coming here. It's ridiculous. Just come and you will have a lovely time. You don't have to analyse every bloody thing! 🙄
@@ClaireQuinn566 well Claire you seem fun 😅😅😅😅
Yer a bit long-winded pet.
@@seamusdelahunty1615 tis called "ad money" 😅😅😅😅
And you’re rude. The girleen is a breath of fresh air. You must be great craic at party’s!!
Don't come to Ireland spend your money in other countries