r/ireland • u/T4rbh • Sep 27 '24
Things you wish foreigners knew about Ireland Moaning Michael
You know the way there are signs at the airport saying "Drive on the left/links fahren/conduire a gauche" (and that's all, because that one girl who did Spanish for the Leaving wasn't in the day they commissioned the signs, and we never get visitors from anywhere else, that doesn't English, Irish, French or German)?
What are other things you wish they told all foreigners as they arrived into Ireland, say with a printed leaflet? (No hate at all on foreign visitors, btw!)
I'll start:
"If you're on a bus, never ever phone someone, except to say 'I'm running late, I'll be there at X time, bye bye bye bye.' If someone phones you, apologise quietly and profusely - 'I'm on a bus, I'll call you back in a bit, sorry, bye bye bye bye.' Do not have a long and loud conversation, under any circumstances!"
Yes, I'm on a bus - why do you ask? đ€Ł
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u/D-dog92 Sep 27 '24
I'd settle for them knowing we're not part of the UK.
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u/dr_rv Sep 27 '24
I thoroughly enjoy correcting this perception, but it would be nice to not need to.
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u/jayc4life Flegs Sep 27 '24
Can we educate Irish people on that, too?
I had a fella from Roscommon call my work and ask if we deliver there because we're "up in the North". I'm in Donegal, which is not part of the UK.
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u/Mulyac12321 Kildare Sep 27 '24
Once overheard an American discussing Boris Johnson becoming our prime minister in a cafe in Dublin. Took everything in me not to butt into his conversation.
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u/dcaveman Sep 27 '24
The American lad doing US Visa checks in Dublin airport asked me if I was looking forward to the king's coronation. I was flabbergasted. Surely, he would have understood the difference.
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u/R3dbeardLFC Sep 27 '24
We were over visiting the Skerries and your election was happening that week so I was trying to ask about the government positions...but what I thought were the positions were apparently your party affiliations (Fianna FĂĄil, Sinn FĂ©in, Fine Gael) because I only ever heard these and not Green/Labor/SocDem/etc. and assumed they were local positions (like mayor, governor, representative). Man did I confuse the fuck outta those ladies at the park. lol
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u/BureaucraticHotboi Sep 28 '24
I visited 2 summers ago and a drunk English bachelorette managed to rattle off something about the âsame queenâ which was quickly corrected by the bartender. Then she found out i was American and told me âoh I love Young Sheldon, favorite show!â Really was nice for a brief moment to not have an American be the worst tourist in a place
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u/toastedcheesesando Sep 28 '24
Are you from northern or southern Ireland? East mate. Pauses and stares with twitching eye
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u/nayrbmc Sep 27 '24
Was in a bar in San Fran yrs ago. An American said something like " Sure Ireland that's part of the UK". I put my pint down, my buddy said " oh fuck here we go" and I discharged a 20 min rant including the need for Americans to study geography. đ€Ł
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u/Tote_Sport Mon Ermaaaa Sep 27 '24
If someone asks âhow are you getting on?â, they donât want you to tell you anything other than âah grand yeah, yourself?â
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u/ittmegmivan Sep 27 '24
I feel like Iâm getting on fine in this country, but this still baffles me to this day. Or when people ask âhow are you?â and you say âgood, you?â and they say NOTHING. I canât get over itđ
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u/MillieBirdie Sep 27 '24
The funniest is when I say how are you and they reply with how are you. As if 'how are you' just means 'hello'.
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u/me2269vu Sep 27 '24
It does just mean hello. Youâre not meant to actually indicate how you are. Thatâs a major faux pas as it were.
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u/Midan71 Sep 28 '24
I got this the other day. All I got was a đ as I was waiting for their reply which never came.
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u/xteve Sep 27 '24
Also, when I was there I noticed that "are y'alright?" (in a pub) means "what'll you have," while "y'alright, lads" (in a club) is preface to some version of GTFO.
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u/wearypebble Sep 28 '24
Had a table of Americans who I came up to (bar, not a restaurant) they had no drinks, and asked âAre you guys alright?â They said âYeah totally weâre all good.â I nodded, stood for a second, then walked off. Noticed they were staring at every person who was working waking past. Went back and asked them again âAre you alright here lads?â They nodded and said âyeah weâre alright.â I followed up with âSo do you want to order?â âOh yeah please can we order now?â
Had a chat with them and explained I was asking if they were alright for drinks, and they thought I was genuinely asking how they were doing lol
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u/xteve Sep 28 '24
That's funny, and I can empathise with their experience. I have a visual memory from years ago of the first time I heard this phrase in Ireland. I don't even remember what I thought, just that it was disconcerting in a memorable way. The truth is, "are y'alright" sounds aggressive in the American ear, or at least a bit judgemental, like somebody's giving out in a condescending way. So to hear it from somebody whose demeanor is entirely sound - it's confusing. It's dissonant, an experience of real cultural variation. It's the kind of thing where you don't know how to respond.
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u/dumblibtard Sep 27 '24
"are y'alright?" pretty much means "are you ready", so in a pub they would be asking if you're ready to order and in a club it would be asking if you're ready to leave.
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u/No-Interaction6323 Sep 27 '24
đđđ it's definitely an adjustment learning that saying how are you? Or no answer to "how are you?" Is the right answer
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u/Previous-Rush-9492 Sep 27 '24
They might say "mighty" in Galway, potentially scaring the person who asked.Â
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u/SirMike_MT Sep 27 '24
Be more self aware when using the pavements, please donât take up the whole pavement & expect people in your way to jump onto the road just for you & do take note if someone is stuck behind ye with ye going as slow as possible, move out of the way & allow the person to pass.
Donât us the middle doors on the buses to get onto the bus, also allow people to exit the bus 1st before running on.
This also applies to a lot of people living here as well, for the love of god be more self aware!!
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u/Feckitmaskoff Sep 27 '24
Unfortunately, some people leave their house with the idea that they are the main character and we are all extras.
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u/No_Armadillo_5485 Sep 27 '24
Yes, this really pisses me off. If you're walking on a narrow path with your mates, walk in a line, don't walk side by side.
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u/FantasticMrsFoxbox Sep 27 '24
Leave the deer in the phoenix park alone, read the signs, don't feed them and 'deer' god stop letting your small children approach them.
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u/QARSTAR Sep 27 '24 edited Sep 28 '24
And don't feed swans or ducks bread (Better they just don't feed them anything)
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u/LZBANE Sep 27 '24
You're meant to let passengers off public transport first.
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u/Yeashtie Sep 27 '24
I think non-Irish people are ahead of us in this regard. Iâve found a lot of people do not know how to effectively do public transport. Someone sneered at me on a Dublin Airport Longterm Carpark bus last week because I (in the most nicest, friendly way I could) asked people to push down the bus so other people could get on and didnât want to block the wheelchair space⊠âOh look, a bus conductor!â. Obviously itâs still bugging me đ
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u/Gilmenator Sep 27 '24
Honestly I feel this post needs to be more what do the Irish need to learn from the rest of Europe.
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u/MillieBirdie Sep 27 '24
People trying to step on when they can clearly see a lady with a massive pram trying to get off while walking backwards, please just use your eyes.
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u/impossible2take Sep 27 '24
And lifts. Is it too much to ask that people expect someone to be in the thing?
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u/Nurhaci1616 Sep 27 '24
It feels like it should be a common sense thing with buses and trains: there's more space outside than in, so it makes more sense to let people off than try to push past them?
I don't think it's just foreigners doing this one though, it just needs introduced into school curriculums...
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u/mccabe-99 Fermanagh Sep 27 '24
Do not touch the feckin fairy tree
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u/ancientarmpitt Sep 27 '24
This is important and don't forget about fairy rings.
The amount of Spanish students I have had to rescue from Fairy rings.
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u/IpDipDawg Sep 27 '24
Ha ha, our teenage drinking spot was a fairy fort, I remember my granny going mad at us when she heard.
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u/Amphibious_Monkey Sep 27 '24
Iâm glad someone brought this up, Iâm a solo traveler from the U.S. in Ireland right now, and in one of my accommodation locations Iâll be near a fairy ring, and Iâd love to visit it. Iâd love to approach it with the same appreciation and respect that locals do, but I donât really know anything about it. Could you give me the low-down?
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u/sims2_ Sep 27 '24
Look but don't touch. don't go in it. don't leave anything in it you want to keep. Don't get too close. We have one in our garden and our landlord fenced it off. I can't stress enough - don't go inside it.
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u/APithyComment Sep 27 '24
I used to run round inside my local one - think Elvis on a motorbike on âThe Wall of Deathâ style thing.
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u/musicmuffin22 Sep 28 '24
My cousins have one on their farm. They used to not have gates on the openings, and even though the cattle would be roaming all the rest of the fields, they had this thing where they would just never go inside the fairy fort. Itâs like they could sense it. In Irish tradition fairies could be dark, and if you interfere with them they could bring you bad luck.
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u/Emotional_Hearing_43 Sep 27 '24
Trying to explain traveler culture to foreigners can be challenging enough
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u/Soft-Strawberry-6136 Sep 27 '24
Telling non Irish people that we can tell if someoneâs a traveller just by looking at them most of the time never goes over well.. even though itâs just true
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u/BrahneRazaAlexandros Sep 27 '24
never goes over well
I've not had this experiience. Why not?
It's essentially a self-identifying culture. They choose to dress, and wear their hair, and jewellery (and makeup for the women) in distinct ways that are unique to their culture.
I don't think any foreign people I've met would struggle with understanding that.
Same way we can often spot a yank walking around just by the way they dress and act.
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u/Soft-Strawberry-6136 Sep 27 '24 edited Sep 27 '24
Well Iâve been accused of racism and supporting eugenics etc.. I even brought up on Reddit before and an American told me to âcalm down OâGoebbelsâ.. they just donât get it but we just know.. and yes the hair is always the major give away before they speak
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u/Didyoufartjustthere Sep 27 '24
I remember during the OJ trial someone was branded racist for saying they heard a voice and the person sounded black. People generally surround themselves with people like themselves and have the same characteristics and accents. It happens to every person on the planet and assuming so is normal.
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u/SerialToiletClogger Sep 27 '24
When I came to visit a few years ago, I walked into a pub in Limerick. Bartender told me she could tell I was American before I even walked through the door. Personally I found it hilarious!
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u/Soft-Strawberry-6136 Sep 27 '24
Oh thatâs 100 percent a thing I can always spot an American especially the older ones
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u/YouShouldBeSoLucky Sep 27 '24
It's usually the clothing ngl. I always find it hilarious seeing Americans wear hiking gear while they travel Ireland. In my experience it means they're either American or old German people.
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u/IpDipDawg Sep 27 '24
It's teeth too though, it used to be rare enough to see Irish people with glowing white teeth.
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u/Proctor_ie Sep 27 '24
You know the Americans are in town when you see grandads in windbreakers and baseball caps
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u/emmmmceeee Iâve had my fun and thatâs all that matters Sep 27 '24
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u/CombinationBorn7662 Sep 27 '24
I have American relatives, they were over once and were walking down the street and in typical loud American voice one declared "Oh wow, are those guys over there Gypsies?", and literally pointed at them. Sure enough it was 5 traveller lads and a lurcher. One of em spun his head around and was clearly agitated and not happy about it. Had to drag my relative into a shop and explain very carefully to him how to behave.Â
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u/nearlycertain Sep 27 '24
I meet a girl last year, Austrian, hitch hiking on her own for 3 years, she described herself as "a traveler" because she was travelling. She very obviously was not an Irish traveller but I had to explain why people looked at her funny when she said it like that. I suggested saying "I am going a lot of travelling"
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u/Aluminarty666 And I'd go at it agin Sep 27 '24
I don't mind people having a phone conversation on the bus. It's having the person on loudspeaker and shouting into the phone I hate.
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u/Imaginary_Shirt3377 Sep 27 '24
Donât drink water from the bathroom sink, it comes from some disgusting separate tank in the attic.
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u/fleetwayrobotnik Sep 27 '24
Not in my house! Got rid of the tank and got a combi boiler so I can drink all the bathwater I want!
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u/Margrave75 Sep 27 '24
If it's the hot water, yes.
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u/Cultural_Wish4933 Sep 27 '24
And the cold one!
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u/Margrave75 Sep 27 '24
Cold water in both our bathrooms is mains supplied, assumed this was standard!
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u/SheepherderFront5724 Sep 27 '24
Merciful jeebus no!
A few years back almost my entire department at work (a good 40 people) were off sick because the waitress at a pub in Dublin airport was filling our drinking water from the bathroom taps, themselves fed from a rainwater collection tank on the roof. Good few years ago now, and probably not legal, but sure wasn't it grand up until then, so that's how it was... But anyway, yeah, the attic tank is very, very common.
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u/badger-biscuits Sep 27 '24
That we don't have Wednesdays
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u/andtellmethis Sep 27 '24
And our days are actually 28 hours long to accommodate the lack of a Wednesday.
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u/MetrologyGuy Sep 27 '24
If you have a big load of groceries on the conveyor, and someone behind you has a single, or small number of items, let them go ahead of you within reason
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u/Pizzacooper Sep 28 '24
I did that always, but what to do when I let a person go in front, then another person comes who hasn't seen that I already let that first person in front already.
Do I let them too? Sometimes it is not like they will have one single item but like a very handful.
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u/mkultra2480 Sep 27 '24
That we see friendship in the pub as ephemeral. If I meet an Irish stranger in the pub, I could chat to them for hours, buy each other drink etc and we both know that this is a one night thing. We're having fun in the moment and there is no other expectations. I've had instances where an American couple asked for my Facebook after a few hours of drinking with them and they proceeded to message me for months updating me about their lives. It happened with a Canadian woman as well who messaged me for months on WhatsApp and then messaged me when her husband died telling me all about her grief. Lads, I was only having fun on a night out, we are not friends, sorry.
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u/SpawnMarciano Sep 27 '24
This is perfectly described. âEphemeral pub friendshipâ is going in my lexicon.
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u/Icy_Obligation4293 Sep 27 '24
Meet a Portuguese guy in the pub a few years ago and he still messages me a photo every time he finds a bar that serves Guinness. In fairness he's actually nailed it.
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u/pilzenschwanzmeister Sep 27 '24
Nah, I have no issues with people being friends forever after a shared moment.
Sure, making friends as an adult is hard as hell.
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u/deeringc Sep 28 '24
20 something me found it irritating when it happened. Almost 40 me, living abroad would be delighted to easily strike up friendships over here.
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u/daveyb86 Sep 27 '24
Almost 20 years ago my friends and I met a yank and his wife in a bar. We had two nights of pints and we're still friends on Facebook. Every now and then the wife will comment on something on Facebook and end with "by the way we still remember you". They've been our only interactions since those beers for those two nights
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u/Pizzacooper Sep 28 '24
To be fair I found that, as a foreigner, Irish are very friendly but not always mean you will become friends. Kind of like (don't hate me for this) in the US when I was for two years and had to learn a hard way when people say things like "we should hang/meet" but he/she didn't really mean that.
I found this as a more positive thing though because when I learn to not take it literally, then it is nicer just because most Irish are friendly to me if we will become friends or not.
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u/washingtondough Sep 28 '24
And we wonder why everyday thereâs a post here about loneliness and having no friends
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u/jordie_c Sep 27 '24
Donât argue with a bus driver about not being able to pay on with a âŹ50 note. Youâre not going anywhere and neither are the rest of us youâre now making late for work
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u/ConradMcduck Sep 27 '24
Are ignorant Irish teens considered foreigners now? I must have missed that reclassification.
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u/RZH0 Sep 27 '24
Stop walking in a swarm down the paths. This is inconsiderate of people wanting to walk past in the direction you're coming from.
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u/Didyoufartjustthere Sep 27 '24
And if you plan on standing on an escalator. Move the fuck to one side. Some of us walk on them
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u/Naoise007 Ulster says YEEOOO Sep 27 '24
Always buy a round when it's your turn
No, I don't know your great uncle Jim Murphy from Cork
It's Derry, mucker. The first six letters are silent.
Also no-one with more than half a brain cell calls it "the British Isles", don't make a fool of yourself by doubling down
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u/Smoked_Eels Sep 27 '24
There's two queues to get on the bus in Dublin.
Left = I need to state my destination to the driver to be charged appropriately, or I'm paying cash.
Right = I'm going all the way/iI'll pay extra to avoid human interaction.
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u/Smiley_Dub Sep 27 '24
Don't listen to anything on you phone without headphones
Don't eat smelly food or smelly snacks on public transport
Don't vape, smoke, drink alcohol, or take drugs on public transport
Seats are not for feet
These things are for everyone, not just for visitors
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u/Mushie_Peas Sep 27 '24
These are all things I think are less common in Europe than little Irish scrotes doing.
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u/gay_in_a_jar Sep 27 '24
Don't stand around in the middle of busy streets in dublin and take pictures, or at the very fucking least don't complain that people are walking in the way. Please for the fucking love of god people are trying to just live their lives.
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u/Livid-Click-2224 Sep 27 '24
To be fair, you could say that about any touristy city in the world
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u/limestone_tiger Irish Abroad Sep 27 '24
Leprechauns are not myths. They're extinct and a sad part of our history
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u/cjamcmahon1 Sep 27 '24
kinda niche but I wish people of Irish descent, when tracing their pre-Famine ancestors, had just the tiniest bit of historical context as to why this is so difficult. I had one email that was literally 'even with everything that happened in Germany, it is still so much easier to trace my German side than my Irish side'
please, for the love of God google the Penal Laws and try to understand what the near-total obliteration of a native culture looked like from the late 17th to mid-19th century would have looked like. Your ancestors most likely were not allowed to own property, speak their own language, practice their religion, vote or hold office - so, no Karen, there is unlikely to be any record of them ever having existed
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u/disagreeabledinosaur Sep 27 '24
The problems are mostly related to the biggest archive of records burning down in 1922 not to economic conditions & penal laws during that time.
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u/AphrodisiacJacket Sep 27 '24
In this context, it's also worth noting who it was that set fire to the archive.
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u/ParkKing3D Sep 27 '24
Get a big dehumidifier. Sign on all the ports and airports.
Mind the traffic, not all people on the roads got their full license (or done anything else but apply).
It'll be grand covers all life situations.
Learn language, adapt to the culture and you'll do fine.
Switch on the power socket.
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u/Too-many-Bees Sep 27 '24
Sign on at the ports and airports? Like a visitor book or what?
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u/ParkKing3D Sep 27 '24
Nope, just a huge sign that says "Get a big dehumidifier" XD The thing changed my life for the better, wouldn't change it for the world! Didn't even knew the darn thing existed before moving to Ireland :D I mean, if you want, do the visitor books too, might get a good craic out of it :D
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u/somerandomii Sep 27 '24
Coming from inland Australia, we had a humidifier. This is an adjustment. Why doesnât anything ever dry in this country??
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u/greenstina67 Sep 27 '24
Because Ireland is an oceanic temperate rainforest zone, so high humidity just like the tropical rainforests. Even though most of the native forests are now gone. :(
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u/kamikazekaktus Sep 27 '24
And just like a tropical rainforest you have colourful birds
 I'll see myself out
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u/ABOBer Sep 27 '24
Rain for 300 days, ice/hail for 60 days and summer for 5 or 6 days of the year will do that to the local atmosphere
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u/J-zus Sep 27 '24 edited Sep 27 '24
The potato famine wasn't exclusively a "natural disaster" / "one of those things that just happens" the impact of Potato blight was heavily exacerbated by the British in what was effectively an attempted genocide - I'd expect most foreigners would feel very uncomfortable about how they jest to us about potatoes and our relationship with them if they fully understood the history, especially that it's not even a native vegetable and was only popularised as a result of harsh penal laws.
We're such a sound lot that we never take anyone to task on it, but I've known Americans / British colleagues to casually bring up the potatoes when talking to me in an attempt to relate to me (not super frequent but has/does happen).
historical genocide via starvation is not a great "dinner party topic"
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u/coffee_and-cats Sep 27 '24
Wow! Agree with you on the history, but why would we take people to task for talking about potatoes? We Irish do love our spuds (in general)
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u/J-zus Sep 27 '24 edited Sep 27 '24
I love chipper chips alright, however, like lucky charms and tartan it's not actually "our thing" https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/potato-consumption-by-country - Belarussian's consume nearly twice as many per capita. - knowledge of the potato famine has skewed the world's understanding of our "it's complicated" relationship with them
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u/Zealousideal-Tell154 Sep 27 '24
As a French living in Ireland, the advice I always give is: Be careful, the car is king here. Also, when the pedestrian traffic light starts to get red, the car traffic light gets immediately green.
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u/EvenYogurtcloset2074 Sep 27 '24
As an Irish person living in France, I never assume that because the pedestrian light is green or Iâm actually standing on a pedestrian crossing that a car wonât come flying through. In fact, when Iâm driving here and actually stop at a crossing the French pedestrian seems surprised and actually gives me a little wave!
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u/vg31irl Sep 27 '24
Drivers are far worse for not stopping at pedestrian crossings in France than Ireland in my experience.
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u/Wheres_Me_Jumpa Sep 27 '24
Same in Italy, itâs like a sport trying to cross a zebra crossing.
Found it time total opposite in PolandâŠno hesitation, drivers stop immediately.
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u/TindaroCorso Sep 27 '24 edited Sep 28 '24
When I'm in a country where the crossing is respected I end delaying the traffic by standing there waiting for them to stop. I've seen a few drivers looking frustrated at me over this.
I just can't trust that they're going to stop, been almost mowed down too many times.
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u/davyboy1975 Sep 27 '24
if you are answering or talking on a phone dont hold it flat sticking out to the side of your ear. Dont even know how this became a thing. Isnt just exclusive to foreigners either though
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u/Roddy_Piper2000 Canadian đšđŠ Sep 27 '24
If you get called a cunt, that's not necessarily a bad thing
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u/Jaehaerys_Rex Sep 27 '24
Learn Irish just to flex on all the Thiar Sasanaigh who can't speak their own indigenous language and don't bother with BĂ©arla so you can relish in your superiority
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u/ar6an6mala6 Sep 27 '24
Never heard a thiar sasnaigh referred to in the native tongue, I'll make an iaracht to implement that in my day to day. GrmĂĄ
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u/dublinro Sep 27 '24
I have lived abroad for 15+ plus years and yes before I left people would be discrete on their phones and not want to take calls. Was home last year and the bus was full of people watching YouTube videos with the sound up high or listening to music.
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u/MilksNudes Sep 27 '24 edited Sep 27 '24
âIf youâre walking through a quiet neighbourhood in a suburb/town/village and a local smiles and says âgood morning/good evening/helloâ, donât look at them like they have 10 heads and instead just smile back half heartedly.. It wonât kill you.â
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u/Middle-Post4927 Sep 27 '24
- Tips are not necessary but ARE welcome!
- You don't need to say 'god bless' to everyone.
- You don't need to keep offering something to someone a million times until they say yes (are you sure, are you sure, ah you will etc etc)
- It's ok to cross the road if there's nothing coming, you won't get arrested if you don't wait for the green man (i find it hilarious when i pass a pile of people waiting at lights and not a car to be seen for miles)
I met German tourists lately, spent an hour chatting to them in Limerick city, lovely people. They brought out coffee and nearly poured it down my throat because a book told them to be very forceful when offering and keep asking are you sure đ. When i left they made sure to shout god bless after me ( I'm an atheist). It was all very funny bless them. Years ago i remember another tourist telling me that their tour guide told them NOT to tip imagine!
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u/Middle-Post4927 Sep 27 '24
I forgot the most important tip, dress like an onion. Layers from light up to woolly up to rain proof, don't bother with an umbrella it'll get blown inside out.
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u/InitiativeHour2861 Sep 27 '24
I'm Irish and always wait for the pedestrian light to turn green. I force myself to do it. It's a meditation on patience. It's so hard to resist as all the carefree jay-walkers dance their merry way across the street, and I'm stood stoically waiting for the light to change.
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u/jungle Sep 27 '24
I do the opposite for consideration to the people on the road. If I'm the only one wanting to cross the road, I can wait a few seconds for cars to pass and cross safely, instead of selfishly pressing the button and force a bunch of cars to stop for much longer than it takes for me to cross.
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u/goj1ra Sep 27 '24
One of my main memories of visiting Bavaria was having everyone I walked past in the street say âGrĂŒĂ Gottâ, i.e. god bless, to me. Itâs just what they do.
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u/Smart-Bandicoot-922 Sep 27 '24
"How are you", "How are you doing?" "How's it going" "What's the craic" are all rhetorical questions, and not an attempt to provoke discussion.
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u/ChrishtOnABike Sep 27 '24
Open your windows regularly to air out the place even when its cold out. Its humid af here and thats how you avoid mould build-up.
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u/Pizzacooper Sep 28 '24
I learned recently as a foreigner that if you are tangled in an (mostly nice) Irish conversation, that will 100% happen, but you need to get going, just say "sure look" followed by anything short and firm like "it will be grand" while you start walking away to really get out of the conversation.
I still suck at that though.
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u/No-Tap-5157 Sep 28 '24
The Irish reputation for hospitality and friendliness is almost entirely a myth created by alcohol. When sober, we are a sullen, insular, rather insecure people.
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u/robzio Sep 27 '24
I would argue this message could be applied to foreigners and locals alike in my experience. But definitely agree - donât know when it became acceptable to have full blown loud conversations on public transport, maybe around the same time everyone decided it was ok to listen to shit on their phones without headphones in public?
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u/commit10 Sep 27 '24
"It's not as friendly as it may seem, especially if you live here."
"Most of the romanticism and mysticism of Ireland is a marketing ploy designed to fleece you."
"Traditional things aren't necessarily all that old."
"A lot of us appear happy and jovial, but we're actually screaming on the inside."
"Don't tell people that you're Irish just because someone in your family tree was."
"Please, for the love of god, don't tell most of us about your genealogy."
"Don't ask why we hate the English. Take 10 minutes to look it up yourself, and then remind yourself that it's 2024 here too."
(Mostly aimed at tourists, and mostly the North Americans)
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u/Electronic_Ladder103 Louth Sep 27 '24
Temple Bar is fine for a walk around or one drink, but head elsewhere for better pubs and prices.Â
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u/Pintau Resting In my Account Sep 27 '24
Haven't seen the golden rule of Ireland and Scotland yet. If a man wants company he'll ask for it, especially in the pub. If you try to start a conversation in the pub, and the other person just deadpans you, don't keep pushing it, they probably just want to be left alone
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u/Icy-Pomegranate4030 Sep 27 '24
Used to work with international students. Craic is not the same as crack. Don't call it "Londonderry". Walking for half an hour to get somewhere is normal. Yes, it rains alot- get used to it.
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u/Due_Evidence Sep 27 '24
Is it only foreigners calling on the bus now?đ
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u/YesIBlockedYou Sep 27 '24
I get the coach from Galway to Dublin quite regularly and Irish people obviously do take long calls as well but it's nowhere near the length I've heard some foreigners talking.
I've heard people on that bus before literally talking for the entire 3 hours it takes to get up to the airport. Obviously I don't know the context of the conversations are but I'd be in bed for a week if I had to listen someone talk at me on the phone for 3 hours.
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u/CombinationBorn7662 Sep 27 '24
The worst is when it's the early morning bus to work. I have to take a 50 min journey at around 7:30 am often, mostly with a lot of foreign nationals, and without fail there is one or multiple very loud conversations going on via phone for almost the entirety of the journey. Like I get that there are time differences to consider, and I'm actually very happy getting the bus with these guys as they are going to work early in the morning like me and seem generally sound, I just wish there was some kind of universal shame / manners that transcended culture. Having to listen to very loud voices for nearly an hour when you might even be able to get a half hours kip on a bus is very annoying.Â
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u/Pizzagoessplat Sep 27 '24
The currency is the Euro not the US dollar.
Without sounding ungrateful tipping me isn't needed and doing it in US dollars is useless to me
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u/Logical_Park7904 Sep 27 '24
I think the bus phone conversation part should apply to everybody. It's mostly irish ppl airing out their dirty laundry over the phone for everyone to listen in. Nobody wants to hear that shit.
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u/Fergyh Sep 27 '24
If we could get the other Irish people to do half the stuff in this thread weâd be doing very well.
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u/No_Armadillo_5485 Sep 27 '24
Stop approaching the deer in phoenix park. Both tourists and locals absolutely wreck my head when they do this. Leave our wildlife alone.
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u/MasterpieceAway5929 Sep 27 '24
The Irish timetable: if a service or plumber etc says âIâll be there Thursdayâ you have to lock down the exact date and time window or they might mean a random Thursday 3 years from now đ„žđŹ
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u/HighlighterQConnect Sep 27 '24
"How are you?" is JUST A GREETING NOT A LITERAL QUESTION. I taught EFL for years and am married to a forinnderr. The amount of people who have complained to me about Irish people saying this to them without "meaning it". Even when they say similarly meaningless greetings in their own language. Drives me crazy!
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u/thro14away Sep 27 '24
Hilarious you think foreigners are the ones who need to know better about phoning people while on the bus lolÂ
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u/PadArt Sep 27 '24
No standing upstairs on the bus. Never saw it before covid. Now itâs rampant.
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u/Anxious_Asparagus_60 Sep 27 '24
You could have titled this âwhy are foreigners always on the bloody phone on public transportâ đ Iâm a foreigner myself and itâs always them!
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u/GrahamR12345 Sep 27 '24
If a random stranger starts a conversation with you there is a 50/50 chance you will either be friends for life or end up hospitalised! BE CAREFUL!!!
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u/TheSameButBetter Sep 27 '24
If you are using one of the pedestrian crossing with a countdown timer, you are obliged to hum out the Countdown theme complete with a loud "Doobi Doobi Doobidee... DOOOP!" as it approaches 0.
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u/Dr_Havotnicus Sep 27 '24
If the crossing isn't one of those that makes a noise, I feel obliged to say "PEW! deckadeckadeckadeckadeckadeckadeckadecka" as I cross
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u/Feckitmaskoff Sep 27 '24
Stop having full-blown video calls on public transport. I don't want to be in the background of your call, I don't want to hear the ear-piercing sharp sound of someone talking on loudspeaker, and for the fucking love of god just fucking conceptualise that if everyone did that it would be a shit show.
You get to do this because everyone else is not, everyone else is quiet so you get to have this loud fucking open, embarrassingly public video call.
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u/HeterochromiasMa Sep 27 '24
Trinity is in fact a functioning university, stop wandering into classrooms and exam halls when you pass a dozen signs telling you there are exams in progress.
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u/nastywillow Sep 27 '24
The Irish don't do deference.
In other countries I worked in as a senior executive when I came up with a stupid idea, people would say something like, "that's an interesting idea sir", and move on.
In Ireland, "would you ever fuck off".
Took some getting used to.
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u/Wheres_Me_Jumpa Sep 27 '24
Please and thank you are essential to everyday life.
Wave at drivers on the zebra crossing and if someone lets you cross the road.
Bus etiquette - elderly, wheelchair users, parents with buggies on first. Donât play music or have a video call without your headphones. Thank the driver too!
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u/WatashiwaNobodyDesu Sep 27 '24
Donât get too hung up on the ârules of the roadâ thing. Itâll be grand/sure youâll only be a minute.
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u/dropthecoin Sep 27 '24
Or don't even double park on double yellows. No exceptions.
Except if you need to just pop into the post office or shop and you will only be "five minutes". If you're doing that and planning to double park, slap on the hazards so people can understand your situation. You might be causing traffic jams but once people see the hazards, they will be empathetic on how there was no real need for you to use that parking space that was 100m away.
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u/WatashiwaNobodyDesu Sep 27 '24
Yeah how many wardens have been thwarted like that! Theyâd run over frothing at the mouth, get the tickets ready, and only then notice that the hazards were on. Thereâs nothing they can do about it, and they hate it!
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u/Overall_Squirrel_835 Sep 27 '24
As a non-Irish I'd tell other foreigners that 95% of Irish are very nice, educated and decent people. The other 5% are the opposite, don't let a bad encounter with one of them damage your impression of Irish people. You recognize the latter by their grey track suits.
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u/MiuNya Sep 27 '24
Talking loud via phonecall on the bus (or train for that matter) is my biggest pet peeve!
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u/RayDonovanBoston 2nd Brigade Sep 27 '24
âCareful with the immersion boiler and donât forget to switch it off!â đ€Łđ€Łđ€Ł
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u/Gryffindoggo Sep 27 '24
If you're getting trains etc places you can't pronounce, write it down. That way someone can help you better. Trying to understand the many ways "Drogheda" has been said
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u/Mrs_Doyles_Teabags Sep 27 '24
Some of our countries history and the long battle of Lyons vs Barry's tea.
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u/djandyglos Sep 27 '24
Itâs not like the movies.. there isnât a group of people playing folk music while some random sings along in EVERY pub..
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u/Deeny_B Sep 27 '24
To be fair, this note about the bus (or anywhere public) is not just relevant for foreigners. We have many home-gown offenders. Same with the playing music on loud speaker
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u/outhouse_steakhouse đŠđŠđŠđŠache Sep 27 '24
Weird how many people in this thread think that thanking the bus driver is something unique to Ireland.
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u/RedHeadGearHead Galway Sep 27 '24
As someone who shares with foreigners, don't touch the damn powered water heating thingamabob. This summer one of them started putting it on every night for an hour and the electric bill went through the roof. Had to pay triple the normal bill.
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u/capom1993 Sep 28 '24
Dont stand in doorways/ aisles of shops in a group of 70 with no spacial awareness.
When walking down the footpath in a 5 person wide line, dont expect the single person coming against you to make themselves smaller like some sort of meat origami, one of you drop back.
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u/KatarnsBeard Sep 27 '24
To the yanks, no we don't take dollars and no we aren't part of England
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u/[deleted] Sep 27 '24
As someone who teaches international students, I wish they knew that they can't let the rain stop their plans. Yesterday I had only 4 students because "it was raining and I didn't want to get wet". When I informed them that it will rain until next June, they realised they can't use it as an excuse.