Lovely


*Brigadoon reference.
http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM,(thanks)
Thanks for the history lesson, Mike. I've learned something new, from inside my cocoon.MKG wrote:Used to be a common word (oh, a thousand years ago or so) and it's a common placename element. Those of you who've seen a sea-fog will understand why it also came to mean boundary and grey (and, as an aside, why boundaries used to be marked by grey stones).
There's a Harworth close to me (boundary farm) which sits spot on the Yorks/Notts border.
Irrelevant to the thread, but I thought it interesting![]()
Mike
Oh yes you do, or "Oh yes WE do", doesn't happen very often but is most common in July for some reason. Several years ago they had the Tall Ships race start from Castletownbere and we had haar for all of the three days they were around and funnily enough the Tall Ships were in Waterford this year and we had haar for the weekend they were there ... spooky or what?Annpan wrote:I have always lived in the West and you don't get a Haar coming in off the gulf stream in the Atlantic the same
We've got clear Atlantic here Ann. The most North-Westerly village on the mainland.Annpan wrote:the Haar comes in from the cold North Sea