Absolutely brilliant job mate. Must give you so much pleasure. I’m irish, from Dublin. I live in Scarborough Yorkshire and I would love to have that in my house. I’m thinking of doing it in my shed. Well done.
I spent some extended periods of time in Columbus when I worked for Nationwide. On those trips I also spent extended periods of time at the Claddagh bar. I still have a coaster from Claddagh tacked up behind my bar in the basement. Well done sir, it looks great.
A dream turns to reality! One can only wish to be one of those blindfolded patrons lucky enough to be virtually transported to an Authentic Irish Pub without ever needing to leave their locality!
Looks great. It looks authentic. Right down to the small bathroom that seems to be in pubs all over Ireland. Looks better than all the so call "Irish Pubs" that have sprung up everywhere that are no more than Irish themed bars or restaurants that hang shamrocks, a map of Ireland or the Irish flag up and call themselves an Irish pub.
Not quite, Bulmer's is an English Cider maker who opened up in Clonmel in the 1930's, it was later sold on by the English parent Company, but was allowed to use the same brand name and formula, but only in Ireland. Magners is an original Irish Cider Brand also from Clonmel Co. Tipperary, which is what Bulmer's Ireland has to sell as a brand name out outside of Ireland, and the taste is slightly different. At the entrance the current facility, one wall has Bulmer's on and the other wall has Magners on it.
The two of ye seem to be irish so I'm gonna say what I need to say here 😂 this frosted plate that he puts his pint down on and says he's seen in irish pubs, am I delusional in saying you wouldn't find one of them in the whole country, I'm from Ireland and have never seen one 😂
@@shanedunne5533 Have to agree with you Shane I've never seen a frosted plate in Ireland, and I've been in a fair few pubs here in my time. Also I've never seen glasses in a fridge, in Ireland, although it's not unusual in Northern Australia.
Amazing pub build sir. So I’m born and raised in Youngstown a Buckeye Fan living in Fort Wayne Indiana. Feel your pain as a Irish Fan living in Columbus. Is that a DIY frost plate or did you have it built or bought from a supply house?
No stand up urinal ? Also , you should have one or two booths so people can sit down opposite one another . I'll cut you some slack because you have a small place , I was able to do more with my place because overall basement is 11.000 SF , but I love what you accomplished with the room you had to work with.
He didn’t say that. He said he’s into his Irish heritage. Further, no American means they’re Irish by nationality when they say that. You have to understand the context of the eastern seaboard and why immigrants used that designation for themselves when in places like Boston, NYC, Philadelphia, Baltimore, etc. The neighborhoods were extremely segregated by immigrant populations and of course when kids were born in the new land, they would hang out on the streets and in the neighborhoods and though they were American by birth, their ethnic backgrounds differentiated them all. These neighborhoods and distinctions still very much exist in places like NYC, Boston, etc. So when someone in New York says “I’m going out with this Irish broad.” He doesn’t mean from Ireland. He means she’s from an old Irish neighborhood and raised differently than him, perhaps because he was raised in an Italian family. I lived in Bradford, England for a couple years and the kids of Nigerian background often said “I’m Nigerian.” Though they’re actually English. The Pakistani and Indian kids, too. It’s no different.
Cool frost plate, but I do find equating a university (Notre Dame) with a country to be odd. Did this guy at least go to said university? Does he really support a university that he didn't attend simply because he has Irish heritage? Why doesn't he rather support the Irish national soccer team? Do Native Americans support universities that use their tribes as mascots?
it Amazes me people go through all the time and expense to build these "pubs" and then stock it with nothing but lousy bottom shelf liquor. Atleast get some quality booze or what's the point .
Not completely true, William Magner set up in Clonmel in about 1935, making cider. H.P. Bulmer took over in partnership in about 1946. using Bulmer's cider formula which is almost identical to the original Bulmers cider still made in Hereford. C&C bought out the Irish side of the company in the 1960's and retained (as part of the sale) the right to use Bulmers name and formula in Ireland only. Therefore a slightly different formula is used on the export brand under the name of the original owner Magners. You do occasionally see Magners for sale but only in off licenses. At the new entrance to the factory at Annerville Clonmel, Bulmers is on one side and Magners on the other. I live down the road and make my own hobby cider from my own cider apple trees.