Monday, 29 July 2019

Roman Walls, Scottish Friary, Irish Wedding, GOT & Welsh Castles

Join Noel and I as we travel for 3.5 weeks around England, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Ireland & Wales.


Places on our list are...

  • Yorkshire Dales
  • Hadrian's Wall
  • Gretna Green
  • Stay in a 13th Century Scottish Friary
  • Catch a Ferry from Scotland to Northern Ireland
  • Play Golf
  • Go Horse Riding
  • Do a Game of Thrones Tour
  • Attend a Wedding in a Castle
  • Drive to Galway
  • Visit Kylemore Abbey
  • Do a Barge Cruise
  • Catch a Ferry from Dublin to Liverpool
  • Stay with Family in Northern Wales
  • See some Welsh Castles
  • Dine with Family in Manchester
  • Stay in the Victorian Gothic Building Bruntwood Hall
  • Visit the Souks in Dubai
So if you would like to follow our adventure it starts August 2nd 2019.


Irish Craic Explained

"Craic" (/kræk/ KRACK), or "crack", is a term for news, gossip, fun, entertainment, and enjoyable conversation, particularly prominent in Ireland. Craic is a Gaelic word, with no exact English translation. The closest you get is “fun." No relation to the narcotic.
  1. Good craic: A fairly ok night out, fun but nothing too amazing
  2. Mighty craic: Better than good craic, not quite at the highest level, someone did some crazy stuff maybe.
  3. Savage craic: Almost there, great night all together, everyone on top firm, Guinness flowing, great jokes.
  4. Deadly craic:  A step above savage but not quit the Everest moment.
  5. The craic was ninety: The nirvana of craic, everything was amazing, incredible, everyone hooked up, the pints were great.
  6. Minus craic: That’s when a night goes wrong and essentially you’d have had more fun in a mausoleum.

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