completedit wrote: » No wonder Irish people move to other English speaking countries and even then we stick together.
Anteayer wrote: » Supposedly according to someone who's never visited Finland I would suspect.
ToddyDoody wrote: » Just from what someone else said. I don't mean to turn after hours into a dumping ground.
Feisar wrote: » I also rate the Dutch as great fun, had some mental nights in a pub called The Flying Dutchman, a lot of people say they are a dour lot, deffo not the case. However I suppose it's down to the circles one moves it.
Anteayer wrote: » +1 on that! I always found the Netherlands really friendly, vibrant and I like the zany sense of humor. Dour is certainly not a word I would associate with the Netherlands. It’s very, very well organised (probably due high population density and basically being under the sea if they ever forgot to turn on the pumps, maintain the dykes or miscalculate anything) but it’s one of the most fun loving places I’ve been.
completedit wrote: » Living away surrounded by foreigners, just find their ways so odd. I was sitting around a dinner table and they were having a really earnest conversation about yield curves. I'm probably just an idiot but just find their ways so odd. No wonder Irish people move to other English speaking countries and even then we stick together. Anyone think Irish people in general are just more jovial and better craic than foreigners or is it just what we are used to? Nothing like living away to make you appreciate home �� *Don't want to come across as bad, just my own experiences living away. You'll never beat the Irish.
Anteayer wrote: » It's actually true though the coldest and dampest places I've ever lived have been in Ireland and the UK. The quality of many houses and residental apartments is very low - some of the very recent build has caught up but you've a lot of houses here where the temperature plummets within 10 mins or turning off the heating and things like on demand hot water and central heating were considered ridiculous luxuries by a lot of those from a couple of generations ago while they've been standard in many parts of the continent for probably 100 years. I think part of it is while Ireland and British weather can be miserable it's not generally cold enough to cause hypothermia so we never bothered with proper insulation.
mikemac2 wrote: » The continentals I’ve house shared with must have free oil/gas and electricity where they come from Heating and immersion on full blast hours each day :eek:
completedit wrote: » Americans are so strange and foreign to me unless they are from California or Deep South or something. I just like the Californians I’ve met mindset. People from the Midwest are the worst, zero divilment, zero charm.
Tacklebox wrote: » Working in heritage and tourism, I find the French students quite irritating. They just run riot and if there's a lonely peacock minding it's own business or a goat wandering around a big lawn. You can guarantee those French will chase it to death. The Irish students are well behaved in comparison. Ok they're Messer's but they've respect for animals or fowl.
castletownman wrote: » Just on this, I was at a seminar for museums before christmas, and one of the lecturers told us to be wary of groups of students from those multitudes of language schools in Dublin. Like wild animals as soon as they enter a space like a museum
Maurice Yeltsin wrote: » I'd wager at least a good third of Germans would qualify for the Irish definition of an oddball. And tight as a nun's baby cannon.
King of Kings wrote: » I work for a german crowd i find them quite like the irish...they good craic mostly...decent humour. The efficiency thing is a myth ...no idea where that came from...they can be useless at times. Nice women too generally... Worked for swedish place before...Nordics are weird as fcuk...esp swedes who are boring and i cant fathom the reputation swedish women have....give me an irish or german lady any day.
completedit wrote: » Living away surrounded by foreigners,
Feisar wrote: » Was in Stockholm once, thought I was entering the land of milk and honeys, I was deffo wrong.