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Thread: Faroe Islands (Away) Wed 8th Jun 05

  1. #21
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    [QUOTE]Originally posted by davros
    [B]Gents,with respect.....much as we all love Mr.T.F.,not much to do with impending trip to the Faroes......we couldn't even use TF
    as whale bait!

    Davros, mr TF is an important figure in Irish football, i'd rather have him with us in the Faroe's then Ian Harte.
    Its crazy to see people be what society wants them to be but not me.

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    Originally posted by davros
    Gents,with respect.....much as we all love Mr.T.F.,not much to do with impending trip to the Faroes......we couldn't even use TF as whale bait!
    Dav. That's true. T 'NP' F has nothing to do with the Faroes but his attitude could be brought up in the Israel section. As you said on Friday, the 'our struggle is your struggle' line is the sort of thing that needs to be addressed before the Irish embassy in Tel Aviv are worked off their feet.
    Originally posted by Duncan Gardner
    Much as I enjoy reading your multi-lingual posts, Lopez, surely it should be "vivent les rosbifs"?

    Enjoying see M. Pape scoring for them yesterday. Some of the French running and handling was excellent.
    As Del Boy would say 'Mange Tout'. As for M Pape, yes great handling and running but can't say I enjoyed watching it. Were we wearing our Irish head, NI head, British head or just plane International Marxist head yesterday, Dunc?
    This is the cooooooooooooolest footy forum I've ever seen!

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    I was backing the boys in green. And the Scots. They need a miracle to avoid last place by the look of it.
    They're red, they're black
    The hatchetmen are back.

    We'll support you evermore
    Though you never score...

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    Originally posted by Duncan Gardner
    I was backing the boys in green. And the Scots. They need a miracle to avoid last place by the look of it.
    I heard about your 'excited' text in French that 'we're' back in it after HT. Apologies. Just wondering if you take the line that as Ulster players are not good enough to get into the team/being ignored by a racist, sectarian cabal from Limerick that you were no longer supporting the lads. I must say I wish we could run and pass like the French. Hope I won't be saying the same on thursday about Brazil.
    This is the cooooooooooooolest footy forum I've ever seen!

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    a 100 seater chartered plane will cost £37, 000 for a day trip to the the faroe islands which 370 a head

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    I know little about rugby union, but there is a reason (other than the Limerick cabal picking their mates), why Ulster might have so few players in the Ireland team. Many of the Ravenhill side aren't actually qualified for Ireland.
    They're red, they're black
    The hatchetmen are back.

    We'll support you evermore
    Though you never score...

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    Originally posted by paddyl
    a 100 seater chartered plane will cost £37, 000 for a day trip to the the faroe islands which 370 a head
    Are you Ray Treacy?
    Originally posted by Duncan Gardner
    I know little about rugby union, but there is a reason (other than the Limerick cabal picking their mates), why Ulster might have so few players in the Ireland team. Many of the Ravenhill side aren't actually qualified for Ireland.
    FFS. Whatever happened to the place that gave us George Best and Willie John McBride?
    This is the cooooooooooooolest footy forum I've ever seen!

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    Originally posted by Duncan Gardner
    I know little about rugby union, but there is a reason (other than the Limerick cabal picking their mates), why Ulster might have so few players in the Ireland team. Many of the Ravenhill side aren't actually qualified for Ireland.
    There's another reason too, most of them are $hit!

    What has this got to do with the trip to the Faroes though?!
    We're not arrogant, we're just better.

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    Originally posted by Schumi
    What has this got to do with the trip to the Faroes though?!
    F*ck all! But as the Faroes is some fifteen months away and DG will be in Cardiff or Chorzow or Belfast on the same day we thought we would chat about something of mutual interest that didn't descend into the quagmire of six counties politics.

    Now to get this back on track. DG: Do you think there is a lodge in Torshavn? They're big in Greenland with the eskimos...or is that the Inuit of Canada?
    This is the cooooooooooooolest footy forum I've ever seen!

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    http://www.smyril-line.fo - Ferry Company that looks like it sails to Torshavn from Lerwick
    Last edited by Réiteoir; 18/04/2004 at 1:23 AM.

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    All we have to do is to fly to Aberdeen (or Prestwick then get a coach or train over to Aberdeen if flying Ryanair)

    We can then get the ferry to Lerwick from Aberdeen - then the sailling to Torshavn from Lerwick...

    Simple enough - but the time it'll take will be quite hefty!

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    lads this is an e mail i got from a girl at one of teh ferry companies

    Hello again,

    I have just popped in to the office to speak to my boss about the forthcoming game in Faroe. We think we may be able to make up some sort of a package for this trip, ferry and accommodation for the 2 nights.

    What I will need is some information from you too, then we may be able to negotiate a better deal for yourself!!!

    Is this the Republic of Ireland V Faroe?

    We may advertise in a few of the local newspapers if you could tell us which ones may be best? Once we get our packages underway!

    Do you think there will be a few travelling?

    Problem is, I am a big, big football supporter and really want to help you with this trip, what would the chances of a ticket or two for me?

    Hope to hear from you soon!

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    Quote Originally Posted by NeilMcD
    Hello again,

    I have just popped in to the office to speak to my boss about the forthcoming game in Faroe. We think we may be able to make up some sort of a package for this trip, ferry and accommodation for the 2 nights.

    What I will need is some information from you too, then we may be able to negotiate a better deal for yourself!!!

    Is this the Republic of Ireland V Faroe?

    We may advertise in a few of the local newspapers if you could tell us which ones may be best? Once we get our packages underway!

    Do you think there will be a few travelling?

    Problem is, I am a big, big football supporter and really want to help you with this trip, what would the chances of a ticket or two for me?

    Hope to hear from you soon!
    were they able to give any idea of a price?
    'It's not because I'm uncouth, it's because I'm Irish. The English language is a wall between you and me and f**k is my chisel.' - Tommy Tiernan

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    This is a trip I really want to go on. I mean when is the next time I'll get a reason to go to the Faroe Islands. It could be another 20 years before we get them in our group again. Having said that though there is a limit to how much I can spend. I would only be able to afford between €500 and €600 for travel and accomodation and I really don't know if that's going to be enough. I would imagine as well it's going to be quite expensive once over there.

    hmmm......

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    Another mail back, and davros were is your manners, staight on the attack.

    At the moment the itinerary would be as follows:

    06 June 2005
    Depart Aberdeen 1730 Arrive Lerwick 0730 (07 June 05)
    08 June 2005
    Depart Lerwick 0200 Arrive Torshavn 1500

    2 nights accommodation

    10 June 2005
    Depart Torshavn 0830 Arrive Lerwick 2100

    1 night accommodation

    11 June 2005
    Depart Lerwick 1900 Arrive Aberdeen 0700 (12 June 05)

    Hope this all makes sense to you!

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    Football hure MariborKev's Avatar
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    Apparwntly there was a feature on the Faroes in the Irish Times on Friday- any see it/have it
    Tifo poles, sausage rolls and a few goals.

    The Brandy Blogs, back and blogging the 2010 season

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    From the Irish Times, A flight will roughly cost about 400

    The Faroe Islanders hope their games in the Republic's World Cup group will encourage tourism. Rosita Boland sees what's on offer.

    Mention the Faroe Islands and most people reply: "Where are they?" The Faroes, an archipelago of 18 tiny north Atlantic islands, of which 17 are inhabited, lie roughly halfway between the Shetland Islands and Iceland. Geographically, they are closer to us than most European countries, yet they remain little-visited and mysterious places, hidden in fog for many days of the year. Politically, they are a self-governing part of the Danish kingdom, with their own language, parliament and currency. Gaining independence is a constant topic of conversation.

    The Faroes have their own airline, Atlantic Airways, which flies from Stansted twice a week during the summer. Even then, however, you can't be certain of landing at Vágar, the Faroes' only airport. Our flight circled in darkness and fog for an hour. Then the pilot's voice came over the tannoy. "If we can see the runway we'll land. Otherwise we're going to Bergen for the night," he announced briskly. There followed 10 minutes of uncertainty before we touched down, avoiding the trip to Norway.

    Most international airports in no way represent their countries: they are noisy, anonymous, busy places with urban landscapes right outside the doors. But the minute you walk outside Vágar's tiny airport you are already in the Faroese landscape. You can smell the sea, hear the seabirds, sense the wild isolation of this place of fjords, lakes and mountains. And, apart from the birds, it is silent.

    The sea defines everything in the Faroes. Nowhere on the 18 islands is more than three miles from the sea, so the Atlantic is constantly in sight and mind. Its economy is 97 per cent dependent on fishing. The other 3 per cent comes from tourism. There is one sea tunnel, which connects Vágar, the airport island, with Streymoy. Otherwise, the islands are connected by ferry, so almost every journey involves a sea crossing.

    Even the Lutheran churches are defined by the element against which so many generations of Faroese fishermen have battled, sometimes with tragic loss of life. The area where the congregation sits is known as the ship - in the Faroes you sail through life - and every astoundingly lovely and individual church contains a representation of a boat. In Klaksvík an eight-man boat hangs from the rafters; Gota's old church is built from wood salvaged from a shipwreck; at Kirkjubour there is a painting of a boat behind the altar by the Faroes' most famous artist, Samal Joensen-Mikines.

    Until a few months ago Gásadalur, on Vágar's cliffs, was the last village in the Faroes without a road: unreachable by boat, it was accessible only by hiking over the 2,000-foot mountain or by taking a helicopter. The postman hiked there three times a week. A tunnel under a mountain now links the tiny settlement to Bour. Gásadalur's dozen houses cluster together in a valley overlooking Mykines, the Faroes' most famous island, an amazing cliff-faced shelf of land where the hardiest of the Faroese live.

    Tórshavn is the smallest and most modest capital imaginable - and one that is refreshingly unmaterialistic. The population of the Faroes is only 48,000, and 19,000 of them live in Tórshavn. Posters all over town advertise a concert this month by Boney M, a band many thought officially forgotten. Tórshavn has simple hotels, which encourage you to drink the pure tap water in your bathroom, and shops with very limited goods.

    All over the Faroes are houses still built in the traditional way: a stone basement, tarred wooden boards and a grassy roof. There are no trees on the wind-beaten islands, so islanders used to gather driftwood to build with. The cost of living is high, and houses are expensive, so most single people live at home, in converted basements. With such a small population everyone knows and looks after everyone else.

    Fishing, hiking, birdwatching - particularly at Vestmanna or on Mykines - and sightseeing are the chief tourist attractions. The football-mad Faroese hope their continuing presence in international football will help draw attention to their islands: they play a World Cup qualifier at Lansdowne Road on October 13th. More than 6,000 Faroese, male and female, play club football at home, and they follow their national team obsessively.

    Cut off in bad weather in the era before flying, the Faroes have traditionally had to be self-sufficient in food. To this day all vegetables apart from potatoes are imported. As the islands' grassy terrain supports only sheep, fishing, fowling and whaling have been constant ways of getting food. Puffin and guillemot, which are abundant, are still eaten here. The two roast puffins I had were terrific: like duck but smoother.

    The Faroese also catch pilot whales, which are not an endangered species, for their own use. Jóannes Patursson, a 17th-generation farmer at Kirkjubour, was in the first boat out last month when the cry of grindabod went up. This means a shoal of whales has been spotted, and every boat in the area takes to the water.

    That hunt yielded 90 whales, all of which were killed within seven minutes. Two months ago 250 whales were killed. Once the whales have been sliced and weighed, under police supervision, the meat and blubber is divided gratis within the community, as is the way in Faroese tradition.

    "There are on average one million pilot whales in north Atlantic waters," says Patursson, who is fully aware of the anti-whaling movement. "The most we ever take in a year is 2,000. It has always been part of our culture, and no money is ever involved."

    The only time money changes hands is when a restaurant buys whale meat. Every whale killed is eaten: the Faroese hunt not for sport but for food.

    Whale steak was on the menu at Merlot, a restaurant in Tórshavn. Whale, being a mammal, is, of course, meat. There is nothing fishy about the taste. My braised whale steak, which was almost black, tasted like a combination of beef and venison. And it was delicious, a fact that may startle many people.

    In the Faroes it rains for an average 280 days a year, and the fog can sweep in at any time: one full day out of the three I spent on the islands was lost to it. So the Faroes are sometimes not easy to see, even when you arrive, and much of what you can do there is dependent on the weather. Yet it is still beguiling, rewarding every clear hour you spend there: a place of stories, haunting dimensions and huge horizons. One mysterious name from the lovely litany of the shipping forecast now revealed.

    Getting there

    Atlantic Airways (www.atlantic.fo) flies year-round from Copenhagen and Aberdeen and twice a week from Stansted in the summer. Maersk Air (www.maersk-air.com) also has a route via Copenhagen. You can also get there by ferry on tours that take in the Shetlands, Faroes and Iceland, with flights back (www.smyril- line.com).

    The best time to go is between June and August, but the weather is always unpredictable. Watch out for special deals straight from Dublin for the Republic's return match in the World Cup qualifiers on June 8th 2005. Expect to pay about €150 for a double hotel room in Tórshavn. A bed in a hostel in Tórshavn is €21. Be prepared to pay €9 for a beer. www.visit-faroeislands.com

    Flights go out monday and come back thursday

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    Faroes June 2005

    Have been in contact with local football team on Faroes. They advise Ryanair from Dublin to Aberdeen and then Atlantic Airways direct to the Faroes. BBC website has details of their holiday programme from there.

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    Quote Originally Posted by NeilMcD
    Be prepared to pay €9 for a beer.
    It will be just like a night out in central Dublin
    Where am I now? I'm over here,
    I've got those empty pockets and I can't afford a beer.

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    Quote Originally Posted by davros
    PO' B,That beer price 'll be partly down to the fact that some jokers on here ,basically told the Faroese Tourist Board,hundreds of Irish were coming,FFS .......Thanks a bunch......
    I'm sure the tourist board could figure that out for themselves.

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