Dublin!!! myghaaaaddd why so gorgeous .😍😍😍😍😍.. for this show, I have watched it several times ... thank you the best couple 😘😘😘😘... seeing both of you feels like participating in it. ..thank you!! 😍😍😍😍
Hello! Thanks for the tour of Dublin...we are heading there in May. That stop on the way with McDonnel's and Circle K looked like South Carolina! Your tour of Dublin was helpful! Thanks! Cheers!
If you are coming to Ireland just let me tell you about Dublin city it not safe to walk in Dublin city after dark there is a lot of junkies in Dublin city and they will rob you and please stay out of Moore street too there is a lot of Roman gypsies and they are the worst Vinnie from Dublin city
Be prepared to be searching for accommodation in Dublin for a while, there's a big housing crisis at the moment, it extends to all towns in Ireland at this point
I'm so jealous, that food looks delicious, it's true about dublin can be expensive. But the quality is amazing and the buzz around the city is epic. Can't wait to get back to ireland 😊❤
Okay if your in Dublin and wanted cheep alcohol and food there is a place on Abbey Street called the silver penny its near the docklands so it's handy.
Thank you 😊 We actually couldn’t stay away and we are coming back in a month. Olivia’s mom was born and raised in England but her ancestry is 80% Irish ☺️☘️
Very nice. Thank you for sharing your adventures. People are not the same wherever you go. You sound American, but you don't look American. Its just a twist in my face recognition queue. Be safe.
Thank you for watching Avi 😊 Haha we tend to confuse people with were we are from. Olivia is American/British with both sides of her ancestry being (English, Irish, and northern european/scandinavian) but grew up in America. I (Maria) am Greek/American (with 100% greek ancestry). I grew up between the US and Greece. Hopefully that helps 😝
@@MariaOliviaTravel thank you for your reply. You look pretty, cute and interesting persons, regardless of your ancestry. I liked you immediately. (English is not my first language)
Dublin is an amazing city. But it IS NOT representative of all of Ireland. Captain A's, on Grafton Street has good American cuisine. the National Leprechaun Museum in Jarvis, across from the Jarvis Luas was interesting. I found a Mexican Restaurant in Cork and the woman was from Mexico City. Limerick, Tralee, Innis all have interesting sites to see. Ross Castle in Killarney and Bun Ratty Castle were must sees. Blarney castle was a liitle overpriced for the castle itself, but the gardens are marvelous and FREE.
The Tricolour was meant to represent the whole of ireland originally ,but officially it only represents the republic of ireland whereas the British union flag represents Northern Ireland .I mention that because you seem to have been abit confused about that.
You’re right! I’m pretty sure that’s what we said on the video 😊 if there was confusion our apologies, sometimes with the cuts in the video things can get lost.
Confusion reigns supreme then.. as originally the flag represented the nationalist (green part) and the unionist (orange part) with the hope of peace in the middle part (white). Little to do with religious conertations to be fair. Another point is the official name of our country is Ireland and not the Republic of Ireland, that's a soccer term to defrentiate both teams that are represented on the Island (yes, we've 2 teams as we're that good at soccer!) lastly.. The northern Ireland flag is not a union flag. Google it and see that it's similar to the english one with a crown n hand in the middle of said cross. Mhaith an fear. 👍
@@cathalduggan1564if you want to be that specific the name of our country is éIRe, as described by article 4 of An Bunreacht na héireann, as for the flag it can represent the native Irish (traditionally Catholic) being the green, the unionists (traditionally Protestant) being the orange, and the white representing the peace or “handshake” between the two, they got the information mostly right, I don’t think they claim to be historians, I would say if you asked 20 Irish on the streets the meaning behind the flag, you would get their answer more than once I would say.
"Cill Airne" pronounced "Kill Arna" - the Irish Gaelic name for Killarney. Grafton Street is not the main street in the city. O'Connell Street is the main street. Grafton Street is the main shopping street on the south side of the River Liffey while Henry Street/Mary Street is the main shopping area north of the river. The flag doesn't represent religions. The green stands for the nationalist tradition (when the flag was devised - based on the French tricolour -many of the nationalist leaders in the 18th century were Protestant) whilst the orange represents the unionist (remain part of the UK) tradition. It's political, not religious!
You two look so in love. I'm glad you are enjoying my country so much. Keep up the good work on the video, really impressive. Subbed, hoping for one back 😊