Well, Shan, you got me there!! That first quiz was really a big flop.
I got 17 questions right, I got the name Plastic Paddy--> The roots are there but the green card is in danger of not being renewed! Help, I NEED to stay in Ireland for at least one more week. The next test was even worse.
Well, I think that the Church of Ireland Cathedral in Armagh is a very interesting site to see. I love the story about the oxen.
Übi, I have a great idea. What if you go to one of the local pubs and watch that footballgame, in the meantime Shan and Jurak and I will go to that church. When we come back, we will be thirsty and hungry. I hope they serve some local food.
First I'm gonna check in in the hotel, because I'm very tired. I wen out so much in London, that I need some rest now <img src="/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/sleepey.gif" alt="" /> . You guys can go if you like, I'll meet you on one of the Aran Islands in a few hours.

At the beginning of the twentieth century, the Aran Islands were immortalized by Irish playwright John Millington Synge in his The Aran Islands and, later, in his one-act play entitled Riders to the Sea. Today, thanks in part to press about Synge's work, tourism has nearly replaced fishing as the main industry of the islands. Tourists come to see the islands' picturesque whitewashed turf (or peat) cottages and admire the view of the Atlantic from the 300-foot cliffs that make the islands inaccessible from the west. However, the most popular tourist destination within the islands is Dun Aengus, a prehistoric structure found on Inishmore. Dun Aengus is comprised of three semicircular terraced stone walls that extend to the edge of the 270-foot cliff that forms the island's western border. Like most prehistoric monuments, the function of the structure is unknown, though many guess it was built as a temple to the ancient gods.
I would like to visit the limestone cottages. [Linked Image]
See ya! <img src="/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/wave.gif" alt="" />