bin on the Aran islands once 30 years ago one of the most remarkable days in my life. love at first sight, remember the power of the ocean been marvelous.
Three questions: 1. What exactly happened to the West side of the island? 2. Does it have anything to do with the old glow-in-the-dark being dumped nearby? 3. Where's the warehouse for all the roads?
No better woman, Chloe's a strong leader, and strong enough to be gentle. I've known this since I've met her many years ago. It doesn't surprise me that she's been called to leadership, and I know Inis Oirr is in safe hands.
Incredible looks like paradise a little piece of heaven in a complicated world I wanted to live somewhere like that however I never got around to doing it
The most amazing thing about Inis Oírr to me is that they've always managed to arbitrate disputes without much of a police presence. The police in Ireland were established by the British (the Peacekeeping Protection Force and later the RIC and DMP) as was a punitive justice system. Before that it was brehons and druids who would arbitrate disputes with conflict resolution instead of just trying to hunt and punish people as we do now. Community bonds discouraged crime too which are strong on the island. It's preserved a lot of Irish tradition!
Rot! Everbody knows it was leprechauns and the rest of the fae court who decided disputes. You would find yourself a rowan tree and stand before it, or inside a mushroom ring (as long as you made sure to remember to ask permission to enter it, as the little folk would look poorly on you if you forgot) and you would tell your side of the story to them sure in the knowledge that whoever you were in dispute with would do the same. Then you would make your offering (booze, baccy, eggs, milk, honey or blood sometimes depending on how serious and crimson was your dispute) and the faery folk would see to it that if you were in the right things would shake out in your favour and depending on how wrong your opponent was they would get what they deserved.
@@Classsick101 No it would of been still very barren.Any soil thats there now is a result of seaweed and sand brought from the shore before that trees would have had a very hard time,it would not look as barren but probably it would be covered by 4 ft high hazel shrubs and that would be about it .
Ireland is home to some of the most advance technology and chip manufacturing plants in the world. The issue however, is infrastructure and planning laws mean they don't propagate. You can walk across Ireland and see farmers using donkeys in their fields and next field over see an Intel chip manufacturing plant. You can drive your newly purchased Tesla off the dealership and drive it back to your 400 year old cottage. It's a mix of both worlds.
The native Irish speakers are a strange people. When we Irish people ( first language English) visit on holidays speak Irish to them they answer us in English and refuse to speak Irish with us. Apparently, they regard Irish as theirs exclusively.
@@chloeomalley6303 Míle míle buíochas a chara, is dálta mé ag freastal mo mheánscoil áitiúil agus bím ag foghlaim Gaelainn as mo chairde cainteoirí dúchais 💚🤍🧡 (Má tá aon píosa gramadach mícheart i mo abairtí ná bí buartha chun é a cheartú)