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Whiskey, Revelation & Demolition

An epic wherein our hero encounters criminal football, kilts, haggis and whiskey:

Like many fairs, the Dublin (OH) Irish Festival had a demolition derby, except all the crashes occurred during Aussie & Gaelic rules football. (Yes, On a day off, I attended a fair.)

What are these sports, and what’s the difference? They both resemble rugby, but maybe with more running. Aussie football was invented by criminals; it uses a football-shaped ball. The less interesting Gaelic football uses a round ball, which has more dependable bounces so there’s less tackling, blocking and general mayhem to recover an errant ball. BTW, there are female and co-ed teams — it’s considered impolite for a 220-pound guy to flatten a woman.

Amidst uncommon numbers of redheads, Celtic tattoos and kilts, the fest also had haggis and a whiskey tasting. (What is haggis? See below.)

At the fest, I learned that most Bushmills whiskey is underwhelming. But I did formulate a life-guiding principle (without the aid of whiskey): I will not wait in line for haggis. There’s a lot of “haggis” and other stuff that’s not too bad but not worth the time.

Browsing the kilt stores gave me new respect for my son’s friend, Coen, who wore a kilt almost constantly for awhile, A kilt costs at least $50; even costlier is the camoflauge kilt (one of Coen’s favorites) — it didn’t disguise the fact he was wearing a kilt. My favorite: the $150 leather Utilikilt (with all its pockets and loops, it’s like Batman’s tool kit as a skirt).

Footnote: Haggis is made of boiled, minced organs, suet, oatmeal and seasonings. Scotland has a distillery every 15 feet so they don’t care what they eat.

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