Dr. Bre wrote: » Singabore
Mad_maxx wrote: » Never bullied by an Irish lad ,let alone "a Galway lad " Hope that answers your question
breezy1985 wrote: » It's the "elevated over the other small Irish towns and cities" bit I don't get. I was expecting it to be way better than Limerick judging by the way people go on about it but in reality it's about the same on a night out. Maybe a little more compact and easier to find your way round but for pubs and clubs it's almost identical. Cork though is way better than both as you would expect given the size but doesn't get half the praise Galway does
Hulk Hands wrote: » Il ask you again, at what point in your life were you bullied by a Galway lad? Every single thread ive ever seen reference the place, there you are with your little disparaging remark. Even some threads that have nothing to do with Galway you'll bring it back to there. It's very strange and a little sad tbh Where are you from, in comparison? Have to laugh at some of the remarks about the place as if that person comes from somewhere we couldn't equally rip on
fryup wrote: » just like Ireland then :cool:
breezy1985 wrote: » These are 2 places that I think let Berlin down at first glance. Alexanderplatz is an awful drab looking place that reminds me of Milton Keynes. Kreuzberg has some great pubs but also lots of walking round street full of nothing to find them. Reminds me of Shoreditch which so many people in London rave about but all my memories of the place were of walking around for ages between supposed great pubs not in em I saw lots of areas that might be great craic to live in in Berlin but I wouldn't recommend it to a tourist unless you were big on history
Hulk Hands wrote: » It's a town. It has the usual amount of things to do that 75k towns have, i.e very little, and has decent but limited nightlife and throws on a few festivals. It gets elevated over the other small Irish towns and cities because they have worse nightlife, fewer festivals and equally, little to do.
GT89 wrote: » Berlin Also the locals seem to be very unfriendly and customer service in shops, hotels and restaurants etc. is awful it's like no one can crack a smile they don't even say danke.
duffmann wrote: » As much as I love Berlin, I fear that it will become as boring as Dublin with the gentrification and hotels going up everywhere. It has changed a lot in ten years.
road_high wrote: » I quite like Galway city. It’s very easy stroll around, lively, nice shops and restaurants. Very pretty setting too with Connemara and the seaside
GT89 wrote: » Yes they are intimidating. I wasn't intimidated by them as I'm a grown man that's well able to handle himself but for lone women, children or older people it would be quite intimidating I'd imagine.
Mad_maxx wrote: » And Loughrea is one of the better towns in the county
MyLove4Satan wrote: » Absolutely! I was amazed at some the comments about Athens on this thread. Athens is a pulsating and energetic city filled with life. I do not care about the graffiti! It is pure energy. What kind of pussies are made frightened by graffiti in the 21st century FFS!
GT89 wrote: » Yes they are intimidating. I wasn't intimidated by them as I'm a grown man that's well able to handle himself but for lone women, children or older people it would be quite intimidating I'd imagine. The guys selling selfie sticks are also very annoying for tourists. Most Italians I've spoken to hate these guys and want every single last one deported.
Mad_maxx wrote: » Rural NZ is paradise but there isn't one memorable urban area in the entire country
Deleted User wrote: » Let me guess. Wexford council?
jmlad2020 wrote: » Dortmund is up there. I also found Howth to be incredibly underwhelming when I visited... I grew up on the west coast, beautiful scenery etc.. I just thought it didn't deserve the amount of Tourists it was getting in comparison to some other places in Ireland. It's all personal preference.
Brian? wrote: » Intimidating? Or just hanging around?
Fr Tod Umptious wrote: » While that may have been the case in the past I don't think it is much anymore. 20 years ago I brought an American lady to my non-tourist, provincial, 10k+ population home town. She was amazed about how busy the place was, both day and night. An American town of 10k+ would not have near as much shops, pubs etc. But in recent years I have seen so many places in the twon close. The pubs are barely busy at weekend now never mind during the week. Many small family shops have closed. I was in a job a few years ago that meant I had to overnight in similar type towns midweek. Places like New Ross, Mallow, Carlow, Skibereen etc I'd pop into a few pubs in each place and most were completely dead. No life or atmosphere in them.
Deleted User wrote: » i once had the misfortune of spending a night in loughrea.....it has no redeeming values
hahashake wrote: » Strongly disagree with this, touring the towns and cities, yes but it's a surprisingly big country with a lot of varied sights and activities. As long as you have a good itinerary, enough money and willingness to actually do things then there are months of things to do.
IsosKramer wrote: » Absolutely. Whenever I see these threads I feel they should just change the title to: "What do you hate most about Galway?"
GT89 wrote: » The only work I've seen immigrants in Italy is selling selfie sticks and other bits of tourist tat so I wouldn't say immigration has benefitted their economy. Nearly all the service staff in restaurants, bars and hotels are Italian. Most train stations in Italy are full of African migrants loitering and intimidating tourists.
FrKurtFahrt wrote: » This place. I spent a fortnight there one weekend - it's like visiting a mannerly clinic.
Hamachi wrote: » Good call. You can’t go far wrong staying near Alexanderplatz. Most of the u-bahn lines intersect there, meaning you can get anywhere pretty quickly. Not sure why people found it hard to track down nightlife in Berlin. It’s virtually impossible to miss it in Kreuzberg. Speaking of Kreuzberg, it’s an interesting place right in the shadow of where the wall once stood. The people are a curious mix of German hipsters and multi-generational Turkish families, who seem to co-exist relatively happily.
orangerhyme wrote: » I agree with this. Its probably unfair to compare midlands towns to the likes of Killarney or Westport but are probably much better than similar sized towns on the continent or Uk even. I think people will still pop out during the week for a pint, cards, pool, darts, watch a pl game on the telly. I think I heard a German economist saying that theres many small cities in Germany with a population over 100,000 and they wouldnt have a cinema even. I think this is due to the small birthrate since the 70s. Apparently Germanys native population peaked in the 70s and any growth since then is due to immigrants.