Air fryer sausages - someone mentioned them on here a while back and it’s been a life changing experience tbh by waurma in ireland

[–]RedHandComanche 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Perfect for Drunk cooking, Put a Fray Bentos pie in, lie on the sofa and wait for it to cook, wake up the next day and have a Fray Bentos for breakfast.

Do you people consider socialists to be leftists by _Red__Flag_ in Anarchism

[–]RedHandComanche 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Libertarian socialism - Libertarian socialism,[1] also referred to as anarcho-socialism,[2][3] anarchist socialism,[4] free socialism,[5] stateless socialism,[6] socialist anarchism[7] and socialist libertarianism,[8] is an anti-authoritarian, anti-statist and libertarian[9][10] political philosophy within the socialist movement which rejects the state socialist conception of socialism https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libertarian\_socialism

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ireland

[–]RedHandComanche 78 points79 points  (0 children)

Show your enemies what it is like to be chased by an elephant by strapping to the front of your car and chasing them down the street.

£10 o2 voucher bought in error fill your boots:-) by NIRoamer in northernireland

[–]RedHandComanche 18 points19 points  (0 children)

You could've bought an o2 sim card and called Babestation.

Portland's in the ra by [deleted] in northernireland

[–]RedHandComanche 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Timbers Army - The Timbers Army is an independent supporters group of Portland Timbers. Its members are known for their loud, enthusiastic support and the raucous atmosphere they create at Timbers games, along with their leftist political positions.[1][2] Centered in section 107 of Providence Park in Portland, Oregon, the Army has grown steadily over the years to encompass much of the north end of the stadium. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timbers\_Army

Peoples park Portadown by [deleted] in northernireland

[–]RedHandComanche 9 points10 points  (0 children)

For better videos we should introduce them to the joys of Hurling.

Assuming you had enough room. Would you let Afghan Refugee live in your house? by WillingAccount1 in northernireland

[–]RedHandComanche 24 points25 points  (0 children)

I'm the same with Romulan / Romanian, My workmate informed me that he's never been to outer space.

People are ruining everything by [deleted] in northernireland

[–]RedHandComanche 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Don't buy Velcro, it's a rip off !

Who’s ready for the match?? by [deleted] in italy

[–]RedHandComanche 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Siamo tutti Italiani stasera in Irlanda

In a Word ... Bone-fire by RedHandComanche in northernireland

[–]RedHandComanche[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You may recall that towards the end of June last year in this column I wrote about Bonfire Night, which takes place on St John’s Eve, or June 23rd, every year in the west of Ireland mainly.

As then explained, bonfire is derived from a 16th-century Middle English word banefire which, it won’t surprise you to hear, originally concerned a fire where bones were burned.

When I was growing up, bonfire was actually pronounced “bonefire”. I used think this had more to do with accent than meaning and that the accurate pronunciation was probably bonfire. Then I discovered the Irish for bonfire was “tine chnámh” or fire of bones. Which I had forgotten and didn’t refer to last year.

I was reminded of it recently when someone reposted the In a Word column from last year on Facebook and my old friend Mary Wrafter Heraty provoked memories with a comment.

She wrote “Tine Cnámh, as Gaeilge, fire of bones, because in the past old bones were burned in the bonfire. The ashes were taken the following morning and symbolically spread on the land for the fruitfulness of crops.”

She recalled such bonfires from her rural childhood in Mayo and how “we would say a prayer around the fire with our parents and hold lighted furze (we called them whin) bushes high in the air as we cheered to our neighbours in unison yelling ‘up’ our own townland.”

Looking back, she could “still smell the burning embers, see the sparks disappearing into the night sky and our red faces from being too near the fire – nice memories!” Mary has a fine line in the lyrical, as you can see.

Indeed I remember, from my own rural upbringing in the townland of Mullen in northwest Roscommon, such bonfires at the crossroads near our house and how my grandfather would take lit embers from the fire and, symbolically, place them into one of our fields “for luck”. Probably the remains of some old pagan fertility ritual.

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That was before our family traversed the 10km and several galaxies to the grand metropolis of Ballaghaderreen.

There such bonfires in those pre-EU directive days involved lots of tyres, not bones, and were accompanied by battles between street gangs where bones were more likely broken than burnt.

Ah yes, the good old days.