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Here's the plane we're going on for our trip to Ireland

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I've heard that if you bring a small harp to Eire via Aer Lingus, they'll put it on the plane for free and take very good care of it.

I was in Dublin in the late 1960s. It was not long after Nelson's Pillar in their downtown area was blown up by Irish republican activists. But the natives would still say "I'll meet you by the Pillar" even though the Pillar wasn't there anymore.

Remember that in Eire, it only rains twice a week... once for three days, and once for four.
 
It is now just after 7pm and it has been raining buckets since early afternoon. It's not just the rain, though. The cold is damp even when it's not raining.
 
It is now just after 7pm and it has been raining buckets since early afternoon. It's not just the rain, though. The cold is damp even when it's not raining.

Where I live, in Niagara, it's pretty humid. My cousins would visit from Alberta, and they had a hard time with the humidity in the summer. And our winters are cold and wet, too.
 
I was driving in Montreal, not really knowing where we were going and, stopped in traffic, the driver of the bus behind me tapped my window and informed me that the bus lane I was occupying was not for the Canada goose.
 
A good toque is a necessity up here. I don't recall considering what people elsewhere called these things, but yeah it must be distinctly Canadian. For pronunciation, think Gandalf - "Fool of a Took!"

Please do share plenty of pictures Louanne, so I and others can live vicariously through you. I would absolutely love to explore some castles, but I've never been to Europe. Closest we've got here is probably Quebec City, my favourite place to visit in Canada.
 
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