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The Irish Year of the Sheep

July 3, 2010 in dublin, Ex-Patriate Games, spazarific

I ask you – what’s the point of being the friend who lives in Ireland if you don’t give Irish gifts? Below are my offerings for Koko’s baby shower, held today at Franchia Restaurant on Park Avenue a precious few weeks before Baby Bruce drops. Baby Bruce will be born during the Chinese Year of the Tiger – a fact honored by the many tiger-themed baby gifts he also received today – but as far as I’m concerned, this is the Irish Year of the Sheep.

LOOK. JUST LOOK. SEE HOW CUTE.

Ahhhhhh. No, really. LOOK HOW CUTE!

An Aran jumper with sheep on it!!! Count ‘em. Four sheep. One, two, three, four; a haon, a dó, a trí, a ceathair. Four!

Hee hee hee hee hee. Little buttons, Donegal wool. More sheep. Farm scene. COZY BABY.

I bought them from Trinity Sweater Shoppe a couple of months ago, as soon as Koko told me she was having a boy. Have been sitting on them like a hen with her eggs. The day I snapped them up, I brought them with me to the writing centre at College, where one of my classmates – a poet from Donegal – was busily at work on her thesis. I showed her the sweaters. I pointed out each and every little sheep. She smiled politely, barely masking a wince.

“This is for an American baby, I take it,” she said.

Christmas Crackers

December 22, 2009 in dublin, Ex-Patriate Games

I read a story written by one of my lecturers recently. It was about a family Christmas and in it, the mother bought two kinds of Christmas crackers – ones for the adults and ones for the kids. I was confused. Why would the kids need a different kind of cracker – were the adult ones made with crack instead of baking powder? Sean to the rescue: Christmas crackers are twists of shiny paper filled with a prize, so named because of the “crack” they make when opened. Two people grab either end and pull until the thing pops; the one who gets the larger end gets the gift inside. How fun. How insidious. They’re deemed Class One Explosives by the Anpost (Irish postal service). Terrorism, like. Explosions. Obviously. They couldn’t go in the holiday package.

Oh, well. It’s not as though there weren’t plenty of other things to buy. The nice thing about living abroad is that holiday gifts are simple to choose; just raid the local trad goods shops and you’re set. This year, Aran jumpers, Butler’s chocolates, and Fair Isles socks for the whole family. Should help them deal with that cray-cray New York blizzard.

File:Green Aran Sweater.JPG

Snow flurries in Dublin, holiday shopping madness on Grafton Street, mince pies sold everywhere, and apparently I can drink quite a lot of hot port without getting drunk.