Spike 12,049 Posted September 10, 2012 Share Posted September 10, 2012 Bit strict, you can enter until 9pm here under 18. Do they not serve food and stuff in pubs there then?Yeah, they do. They let kids in but get suspicious around teenagers. Usually there is a dining area for families etc.Here is a rough sketch of what one of the pubs in my town looks like: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
capriccioso 2,545 Posted September 10, 2012 Author Share Posted September 10, 2012 Yeah, I've seen parents bring in their children. As Spike said its the teenagers that the bouncers get all itchy over. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
capriccioso 2,545 Posted September 10, 2012 Author Share Posted September 10, 2012 No it wasn't. I'll not have insults given out about an icon of Australian history! The term swag developed from 'swagman', an itinerant wanderer in rural Australia in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Swagmen were basically handymen in the bush, they could perform a wide variety of farm and farming related tasks (most famously, herding livestock on horseback and shearing) and were paid in return. They would spend their money immediately on payday on a massive orgy of drunkenness and debauchery. What little money they had left the morning after was spent on more alcohol, which they carried in their 'swags' (shoulder bags) to tide them over until they made it to their next place of work. Less stereotypical swagmen carried supplies and bedding in their swags, but they are no fun and weren't immortalised in poetry by Banjo Patterson, so their voices in the historical narrative are irrelevant Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spike 12,049 Posted September 11, 2012 Share Posted September 11, 2012 No it wasn't. I'll not have insults given out about an icon of Australian history! The term swag developed from 'swagman', an itinerant wanderer in rural Australia in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Swagmen were basically handymen in the bush, they could perform a wide variety of farm and farming related tasks (most famously, herding livestock on horseback and shearing) and were paid in return. They would spend their money immediately on payday on a massive orgy of drunkenness and debauchery. What little money they had left the morning after was spent on more alcohol, which they carried in their 'swags' (shoulder bags) to tide them over until they made it to their next place of work. Less stereotypical swagmen carried supplies and bedding in their swags, but they are no fun and weren't immortalised in poetry by Banjo Patterson, so their voices in the historical narrative are irrelevant A swag is something you sleep in. They roll up into bags like this:FROM THE BUSH KNOWS THESE THINGS Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
capriccioso 2,545 Posted September 11, 2012 Author Share Posted September 11, 2012 A swag is something you sleep in. They roll up into bags like this:FROM THE BUSH KNOWS THESE THINGSI said that in the last line but dismissed it because Banjo Patterson didn't write songs about swagmen who carried beds around Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
capriccioso 2,545 Posted September 13, 2012 Author Share Posted September 13, 2012 @, Irn-Bru is a Class A drug manufactured and sold in Scotland. In consists primarily of sugar, artificial flavouring, sugar, more artificial flavouring, sugar, a pinch of artificial flavouring, and sugar. It was designed by health experts in 1901 to get Scotsmen off their arses to do anything except drink.A study released by John Perkins in 1992 determined that Irn-Bru is the leading cause of obesity in Scotland, greater even than influence from the far west or lack of physical activity. Perkins' study noted that since the introduction of Irn-Bru in 1901, obesity rates in Scotland have risen by 76 people.[1] The Scottish Parliament refused to act on this information, since Perkins was English and therefore completely biased against them.All young Scots suffer an indoctrination to Irn-Bru at the age of five (or thirteen for Scottish Jews). Their parents present them with a six-pack of heavy-dutyIrn-Bru and force them to drink it. This single event causes most children a life of addiction to everything pertaining to Irn-Bru.These unfortunate people, called Bru addicts by everyone else, die young, and have a much harder time finding a girlfriend.[2] (Experts have determined that this is the sole cause of Scotland's underpopulation problem.[3]) They are also much more likely to develop addictions to other solely Scottish things, likebagpipes, kilts, and the water of life.Several campaigns were launched against the production of Irn-Bru to stop the addicts from getting their daily dose, but nobody listened. On top of that, the leader of this movement, William Wallace, was revealed to have been a Bru addict himself.Irn-Bru has been clinically proven to increase a Scotsman's likeliness to commit a number of felonies, among them thievery, murder, and rape, but usually all three. An overdose of Irn-Bru is a Scotsman's most common defense for these offences.Due to the population's lack of desire to drink anything but Irn-Bru (non-alcoholic, anyway), all soft drink companies, including and not limited to the Coca Cola Company, have pulled out of Scotland. On the global market scale, this might not have that big of an impact... okay, so it has the economic potential of Timbuktu. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OneMoSalah 8,886 Posted September 13, 2012 Share Posted September 13, 2012 @,Irn-Bru is a Class A drug manufactured and sold in Scotland. In consists primarily of sugar, artificial flavouring, sugar, more artificial flavouring, sugar, a pinch of artificial flavouring, and sugar. It was designed by health experts in 1901 to get Scotsmen off their arses to do anything except drink.A study released by John Perkins in 1992 determined that Irn-Bru is the leading cause of obesity in Scotland, greater even than influence from the far west or lack of physical activity. Perkins' study noted that since the introduction of Irn-Bru in 1901, obesity rates in Scotland have risen by 76 people.[1] The Scottish Parliament refused to act on this information, since Perkins was English and therefore completely biased against them.All young Scots suffer an indoctrination to Irn-Bru at the age of five (or thirteen for Scottish Jews). Their parents present them with a six-pack of heavy-dutyIrn-Bru and force them to drink it. This single event causes most children a life of addiction to everything pertaining to Irn-Bru.These unfortunate people, called Bru addicts by everyone else, die young, and have a much harder time finding a girlfriend.[2] (Experts have determined that this is the sole cause of Scotland's underpopulation problem.[3]) They are also much more likely to develop addictions to other solely Scottish things, likebagpipes, kilts, and the water of life.Several campaigns were launched against the production of Irn-Bru to stop the addicts from getting their daily dose, but nobody listened. On top of that, the leader of this movement, William Wallace, was revealed to have been a Bru addict himself.Irn-Bru has been clinically proven to increase a Scotsman's likeliness to commit a number of felonies, among them thievery, murder, and rape, but usually all three. An overdose of Irn-Bru is a Scotsman's most common defense for these offences.Due to the population's lack of desire to drink anything but Irn-Bru (non-alcoholic, anyway), all soft drink companies, including and not limited to the Coca Cola Company, have pulled out of Scotland. On the global market scale, this might not have that big of an impact... okay, so it has the economic potential of Timbuktu.Irn Bru is not a drug! It is an awesome drink. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spike 12,049 Posted September 15, 2012 Share Posted September 15, 2012 This thread is an atrocity. I want to purge it from TC. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spike 12,049 Posted September 15, 2012 Share Posted September 15, 2012 This thread is an atrocity. I want to purge it from TC. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kezza 1,965 Posted September 16, 2012 Share Posted September 16, 2012 Well since Cap only really kept this thread alive it might as well be gone burger Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
manpe 10,861 Posted September 17, 2012 Share Posted September 17, 2012 In the state of Queensland, Australia, it is still constitutional law that all pubs, hotels and bars must have a railing outside for patrons to tie up their horse.is it so?Spike, you still haven't answered me Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spike 12,049 Posted September 17, 2012 Share Posted September 17, 2012 Spike, you still haven't answered me First I've heard of it. It would be one of those outdated laws the government couldn't be arsed getting rid of, it isn't enforced at all. For example in Australian it is against the law to change lightbulbs unless you are a certified electrician, but that law is not enforced at all. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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