Uriel. wrote: » is that not just the Polish?
wobzilla1 wrote: » Depends what country I suppose. It's popular in Bulgaria, they paint eggs and all that stuff. It's later in the year than ours if I remember correctly. First of March and St George's day are big for them
wobzilla1 wrote: » I've been going out with my girlfriend for 2 years now.They're cured meat is pretty savage.
du Maurier wrote: » I don't think it's specifically the preserve of the Polish, no. I think I was relating it to the vagueness of the thread title (Eastern European) and equated, albeit ignorantly, a perceived notion of their dress code!
darkdubh wrote: » So anyone who actually has gone out with one?
Specialun wrote: » one thing I will say is that they are way more open the Irish women about sex.Maybe its the ones I have cme across but my mates have dated some too and they said the exact same
wobzilla1 wrote: » They fight with their painted eggs too. It's like we used to play with conkers, trying to crush the other persons boiled egg. Then the winning egg goes on and fights someone else's egg.
Specialun wrote: » one thing I will say is that they are way more open the Irish women about sex.Maybe its the ones I have came across but my mates have dated some too and they said the exact same
Snickers Man wrote: » The most pants bulgingly sexy female accent in the English speaking world right now is that of an Eastern European woman who's lived in Dublin for a few years. Think Marketa Irglova in Once. Just imagine if that accent replaced both the League-of-Ireland Brian Kerr-type nasal drawl and the eau-moy-gawd DORT-style accent, which each represent the most loathsome extremes of aural nastiness in our beloved city today. T'would be great, like.
Everlong1 wrote: » I went out with a Latvian woman for a year. Had to break it off eventually though as she was wrecking my head. Very old fashioned in some ways - expected to be waited on hand and foot. Mad religious too.[/QUOTE] Code for she wasnt riding?
turtleshead wrote: » Everlong1 wrote: » I went out with a Latvian woman for a year. Had to break it off eventually though as she was wrecking my head. Very old fashioned in some ways - expected to be waited on hand and foot. Mad religious too.[/QUOTE] Code for she wasnt riding? Oh no, she was great in the sack. I just had to endure reams of text messages with Bible quotes every time we had a row. Which was often.
Uriel. wrote: » Interesting to see/experience other cultural traditions.
hidinginthebush wrote: » Not sure if joking
Ash.J.Williams wrote: » in slovakia the men chase the women with sticks and throw water at them! I remember a slovakian colleague moaning "aw no i hate easter" ha ha
Easter morning was always stressful for Jarmila Holková. Her father woke her at 6:00 a.m. by pouring cold water on her face, and for the next six hours, young men would come to her flat, drag her outside, douse her with buckets of water and whip her with wicker sticks.
BraziliaNZ wrote: » They never look happy. I don't think I've ever seen a Polish woman smile.
Playboy wrote: » Over here maybe... Been to Poland and once and it was a real eye opener. Expected them to be quite serious and cold like most of the Polish I have met here but they couldn't have been more different. Super friendly, smiley and up for a laugh... Not sure why that attitude to life doesn't travel with them or isn't as obvious at least.
padd b1975 wrote: » Powerful stench of xenophbia off this thread.
wobzilla1 wrote: » Because Ireland's a rainy and cold ****hole. My girlfriend's the same for a few days when we come back from Bulgaria.