sfwcork wrote: » Sh!t wrong forum Mods move to Ah please
sfwcork wrote: » Do you think its bad luck to touch an ancient site or is it just superstition
mathie wrote: » Your aunt wanted you to touch her ancient site.
Where To wrote: » I know a girl who kissed the Blarney Stone and caught crabs in the same weekend. Not sure if the two are related though.
sfwcork wrote: » did she ride the stone yeah?
Mr. Incognito wrote: » There is something to it tbh I for one wouldn't cut down a fairy fort. There is one near us that has been excavated and the found a tunnel running 23 miles under it They were supposedly use to run guns back in the day and perhaps the stories were told to keep people away. Or they belonged to an ancient race, newgrange wasn't built without serious knowledge of astrology and geometry. in short. I'm more on the leave them alone side of the fence
corktina wrote: » never mind all the BS, you should never damage an Ancient Monument because it is what it is
who the fug wrote: » How much did the priest charge for the mass, does he have an albi for the nights in question, if he is legit look at the altar boys
DEFTLEFTHAND wrote: » Growing up in the country I heard these stories all the time. The fairy forts in particular used to terrify me as a child. Even now I still wouldn't interfere with them or build on a site which has one. Probably sounds foolish to a lot of people but I'm not willing to take the chance. :pac:
Arpa wrote: » Growing up in Dublin, we got an education and laugh at all this utter trollop. No such thing as haunted sites or fairy forts, leprechauns or unicorns. As a child I used to do as many superstitious things as possible...broke mirrors, walked under ladders all that crap...nothing....grow up country people.
sfwcork wrote: » Sooooooo tina you come here often