Deleted User wrote: » I notice a tendency in recent reports of fires in Killarney National Park to refer to them as gorse fires? When did this word appear in Ireland? I remember it from Enid Blyton books, but never remember it being used here. The word used in this part of the country was always "furze". Yes, it's real first world problems stuff. But I just would prefer our furze, briars and sallies to gorse, brambles and copses.
5starpool wrote: » I've always referred to them as gorse as well, never heard the term furze before.
alchemist33 wrote: » They're whins. And they're often in a field with buachallans.
Lucena wrote: » In Offaly (in my neck of the woods anyway) we called it furze.
The Backwards Man wrote: » Benweeds
_Brian wrote: » Buachallans ?? Don't ya mean Ragworth !
5starpool wrote: » Both those terms are familiar to me from my youth. You based in the north west?
mariaalice wrote: » I have noticed fraughans being described as blueberries but that might be because there so many blueberries in the supermarket nowadays. I think local name for various things are disappearing everywhere we are becoming more global.
alchemist33 wrote: » We used that for some other weed whose other name I don't know
alchemist33 wrote: » Yup, grew up in Sligo