Title: | Celt Notefile |
Moderator: | TALLIS::DARCY |
Created: | Wed Feb 19 1986 |
Last Modified: | Tue Jun 03 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1632 |
Total number of notes: | 20523 |
On one of my recent trips to Ireland, as I was in Shannon Airport preparing to embark back to Boston, I ran across something unusual. There in the duty-free shop were your usual tourists, mostly American and a few Europeans, buying perfume, sweaters, and those classy "Kiss me I'm (8th generation) Irish" hats. At one counter, though, there were hundred of people all swarming around the electronics goods. Even the pilots, dressed up in military garb, were trying to buy anything and everything in sight. Any guesses? Da! Da! Russians, on a layover from Cuba to Moscow, stopping to enjoy an hour of madness. You could have sold them your brothers old walkie-talkies, or your Mr. Microphone. They cleaned out the place. I'm surprised the plane could lift off. Reminds me, too, of a show I saw where Russian fishers come into Scottish ports (or was it the Orkneys?) and buy anything that needs batteries. -Yurgi
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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133.1 | Red sails in the Celtic twilight | AYOV15::ASCOTT | Alan Scott, FMIC, Ayr, Scotland | Mon Feb 16 1987 15:10 | 20 |
Aeroflot at Shannon: the Russians probably need to stop somewhere between Cuba and the USSR - story is that they barter cheap aviation fuel to the Irish. The Russians save on hard currency, which they'd need otherwise - the Irish re-sell the cheap aviation fuel to other airlines to persuade them to go on using Shannon (which is probably less needed as a trans-Atlantic stop-over by other European airlines, passenger or cargo, these days). Russian fishermen in Scotland - was the show "Local Hero"? (a really entertaining movie?). In real life, ports on the north-west coast, such as Ullapool, are reportedly full of Russian, Polish and other factory fishing boats during some parts of the year - they buy fish from local and European fishing boats. Apparently, all this fish-buying, and associated shore-leave, has quite an effect on the local economy. I've been up there and heard about it, but not at the right time of year to see it... One of our programmers here in Ayr has stories of schooldays, (20 years ago), drinking in pubs in Irvine, (near here), which stocked vodka traded from Russian ships. |