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Along the Lagan towpath on my way to the City Centre. Umm ...Excellent question. I’m going to have to get back to you on that one. Another view from the Lagan Towpath. Harland & Wolff is the company that built RMS Titanic . More on that later….
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Along the Lagan towpath on my way to the City Centre. Umm...Excellent question. I’m going to have to get back to you on that one.
Another view from the Lagan Towpath. Harland & Wolff is the company that built RMS Titanic. More on that later… Rowers on the River Lagan, with the Harland & Wolff cranes, Sampson and Goliath, in the background.
A nice change. During the week, with the exception of Thursdays, shops close by 7:00pm and the streets of the City Centre can feel pretty deserted. People are out and about in the City Centre!
In a pretty wild scandal earlier this year, horse meat was sold as beef and ended up in many products sold in grocery stores. About 700,000 horses in Northern Ireland were reported to be unaccounted for. http://www.belfastdaily.co.uk/2013/02/12/mystery-over-the-70000-vanished-horses/ In other words, our beef is actually beef.
At the beginning of our walk from Holywood to Helen’s Bay – a little excursion with my original flatmates and their friends. Ferry heading towards Belfast
I don’t know the name of these yellow flowers that were all along the coastal walk – but they smell like coconut!
Couldn’t help but think of my grandmothers. Helen’s Bay
Commemorating those who served and died in WWI. Taken from the train on the way back to Belfast from Helen’s Bay. Loyalist Mural
Back in the city – and time for milkshakes from Maggie May’s! At Maggie’s