Celtic Classic Weekend…Slainte!

celtic

This past weekend I went to one of my favorite places…the Bethlehem Celtic Classic! The Celtic Classic is the largest free Celtic fest in North America and it is honestly just so much fun.  I love fests of any sort (unfortunately I missed the Italian American Fest that is a normal stop for me this time o’ year, but grad school interrupts. Damn papers.), but Celtic fests have to be my favorite.  In my opinion, there is nothing better than good beer, good music, men in kilts, and all things Celtic, really.  I should just take a hop, skip, and a jump over the pond already and set up shop in Ireland (or Wales. Or Scotland.)

If I can’t make it to Ireland, Bethlehem could get the job done in the meantime.  Bethlehem, PA is a historic town that’s main income used to be steel.  It was settled by the Moravian’s and now hosts Moravian College and Lehigh University.  The town itself is adorable.  I really don’t know much about it other than I love it.  The Hotel Bethlehem is where my dream wedding would take place.  Everything is Celtic, slightly pagan, and has this old world charm that is missing in so many modern towns.  I love any place with brick sidewalks, old ruins, and that earthy feel that is so hard to find in my congested hometown.  I feel like when you are in Celtic regions, you can feel a connection to the earth.  Maybe I am imagining it or maybe I’m descended from faeries.  I guess we’ll never know, but I’m going with faeries.

So, let’s just go through all the great things that were at the fest this weekend.  First, the food.  I know Ireland and Scotland aren’t exactly known for their food (haggis anyone?), but Shepard’s pie is honestly one of my favorite foods.  I know there is a “big” hooplah over whether or not beef or lamb goes in Shepard’s pie, but I like beef.  Tar and feather me if you must.  Lamb’s are just so cute and I have a hard time eating adorable things.  Also, I just haven’t really had the opportunity to try it. Maybe if someone wants to make it for me, I’ll try, but I don’t want to spend money in case I don’t like it.

Second, and this one is verra obvious, the alcohol.  I’m not a whisky drinker (maybe I’ll get there one day), but I do love me some beer.  I especially love me some Smithwicks.  I love it even more when there is just a trailer filled with it.  I will never understand the people who get Miller Lite (my go to cheap beer, not knocking it), when Smithwicks is available for the same price.  Guinness was obviously on tap, as well, but one more dollar.  As I like to say, Guinness is like eating bread and Smithwicks is like the best milk you’ve ever had.  Maybe not exactly, but it works for me.  Slainte!

Third thing, the music.  I love Celtic rock.  Again, it goes back to the feeling of being connected to the earth and I really don’t think you can beat that.  I love bagpipes and there were plenty of pipe and drum bands marching around playing.  The highlight of the music though was Jamison.  Jamison played traditional Celtic rock songs and put a Celtic spin on some rock and pop classics.  The energy of those guys though was what I’m really writing home about.  They can perform, they can get the crowd going, and they do not stop.  I watched them twice yesterday and I’m probably going to start following them around the coast.  If you want good music and an entertaining show, you definitely want Jamison. Alabama said it best, you gotta have a fiddle in the band, and they do.

So let’s talk shopping.  I love to shop and this place has some of the best vendors of any fest I’ve been to.  I hate all the cheap IRELAND t-shirts that most people have and try to claim that they are actually Irish.  It looks like a Claire’s during March.  I don’t want fake St. Paddy’s Day stuff.  I want to buy actual things from Ireland.  So after walking through the entire fest and debating whether my purchase would be jewelry, pottery, or clothing, I settled on a gorgeous emerald green wool shawl from Ireland.  I have a rule that if a stranger tells me I should buy something/look good in something during my deliberation stage, then I need to buy it.  Well, I put the shawl on to learn how to wear it and a lady told me it looked beautiful on me. So I bought it.  It’s the cross that I bear.

So the final favorite part of the fest, which I know you’ve all been waiting for, is the Highland Games.  Every time I see these 6’5 wonders of men, I just fall in love with this sport even more.  I got a spot right in front for the caber toss, which is my favorite event, and cheered on the athletes.  Now, I learned from talking to one of the athletes, that the Bethlehem games is the hardest throwing competition to get into, so these guys are the best of the best from this side of the pond.  There were multiple perfect throws, which is impressive every time it happens.  These guys can also put on a show.  Maybe Scotsmen are just born showman, but I’ve never been to a Games where the athletes weren’t also hysterical to watch.  My favorite part of the Bethlehem games is the meet and greet following.  I just like to stand among Highland athletes because I feel so short.  At 5’9, I am not a short woman and I rarely get to look up at men, but standing among those giants was a wonderful feeling that I do not often get.  I bent one of the younger and very attractive athlete’s ear for a while (he was very nice and told me all about the Games), but eventually I needed to move over and let the kids get pictures with him.  It was lovely while it lasted.

All in all, it was a lovely day.  I went home after and rode the Celtic wave a little more and watched the mid-season finale of Outlander.  Days do not get better than that.  Unfortunately, the Celtic fest season is over for now, but until next summer, I will just live knowing that I will actually be studying in Scotland next summer, which is pretty much better than anything I’ve done before.  So, here’s to my health and yours.  Slainte!

There can only be one Highlander…

And his name is Jamie Fraser.  Book review time!! Can I get a “Dinna fash, Sassenach”?  And just in time for the Starz premiere tonight! 

outlander

So, I jump on literary bandwagons.  I figure if the rest of the world thinks this is a good book or worth reading, it just may be.  Let’s all say “Harry Potter” together now. One, two, three…”Harry Potter”.  Other times, the world leads us wrong (fortunately, I saw the first Twilight movie before I read the books, which made me never want to read the books. Dodged a bullet there. But I did read 50 Shades…oh well, can’t win them all).  Well, the latest book series obsession that I gave into was Outlander by Diana Gabaldon.  Now, if you’ve read my previous posts, you might have noticed that I like a man in a kilt.  If you didn’t notice, well, now you know.  I like a man in a kilt.  My aunt actually got me hooked on Outlander.  She knows I like Celtic history and time travel (big shout to to my Whovians here! According to Wikipedia, an episode of Doctor Who is what gave Gabaldon the idea for writing about 1700’s Scotland), she suggested I start Outlander before the television series premiered on Starz.  

Here’s the deal, I get OBSESSED with books.  I don’t just leisurely read and not have my world turned upside down by amazing character development and descriptive landscapes.  It just doesn’t work that way.  I want to be at Hogwarts, I want to walk for hundreds of pages through Middle Earth, I want to live at Pemberley, and I sure as hell want to dress Jamie Fraser’s wounds in 1740’s Scotland.  I don’t really want to be in the arena for the Hunger Games though.  I’ll just keep reading that one.  

Without giving too much away, because I hate to be that person, I am going to say READ THE OUTLANDER SERIES. It is currently 8 books, with a spin-off series for one of the supporting characters.  Admittedly, I’m only on the 6th book.  This is not a quick read (unless you are me and ignore all other responsibilities in life, lock yourself in your room with a cup of tea, and read straight through the night), but not because it is difficult.  I love the Lord of the Rings series, but I needed to take breaks while reading.  Seeing the 1,000+ page count on all of the Outlander books, I figured I would do the same, but the detail and the development is so superbly done that it simply isn’t a quick read because of the sheer length of the books.  Spoiler alert: I haven’t been reading books in between like I planned; I am just barreling through them.

So basically, the story involves Claire, a WWII nurse, who is unceremoniously (or quite ceremoniously, depending on how you look at it), thrust back in time to 1740’s Scotland, where she meets the dashing Jamie Fraser.  Jamie has a knack for getting into trouble and Claire has a knack for people thinking she is a spy or a witch.  Basically, they are perfect for each other.  One catch though…Claire has a husband back in present day! Oh no! Who will she choose? Kilt-clad, laird Jamie Fraser, or historian husband Frank Randall? I guess you need to read and find out.  

If reading isn’t your thing (it should be.  If you don’t like reading, you are doing it wrong.), then you can always watch Outlander on Starz.  If you can watch Outlander on Starz, you should also share your Starz Play account login information with me so I can watch it too.  PLEASE.  Or, if you’ve already read the book and you just want to see Jamie Fraser in the flesh, who wouldn’t?, you can watch it, as well.  Same rules apply though, I don’t have Starz.  Fortunately, a good marketing department at Starz has made the first episode free online to everyone, thus ensuring that all the Mrs. Fraser’s out there will bug their actual husbands to order Starz.  I’m sans actual husband, so I am bugging all of you.  I’ll love you forever, I swear.  

If you needed any convincing to watch the show, here it is:

jamie fraser

Look at that thigh. Sam Heughan is the one and only Jamie Fraser and Caitriona Balfe is Claire Randall.  Of course, I watched the episode, and I will actually probably watch it again as soon as I am done here because now I’m thinking about it and just want to see that handsome man in a kilt again.  If you are going to read the books and you haven’t yet, definitely do it before you watch the show.  The first season is breaking the book into 16 episodes, and if they are like the first episode, they are going to stay pretty true to the book.  

All in all, the books are fantastic.  I think it is easy to write a great plot.  There is a formula for it.  All of the Star Wars movies were written on it.  All great books and movies have the same plot arch. Underdog hero, has a fatal flaw, meets villain that defeats them once, they find renewed strength and overcome the fatal flaw, they meet the villain in an epic battle, they ride off into the sunset.  They probably got the girl, too.  Think of every movie you’ve ever seen.  It fits.

So, what makes a good plot great, is character development.  Write me a memorable character and I am putty in your hands.  Write me a memorable character that goes through self-discovery and evolves through the series, and I am a fanatic for life with t-shirts to prove it.  Ron Weasley, Mr. Darcy, Roger Mac (he’s in Outlander but not a main character until the later books), Samwise Gamgee, I could go on and on. Gabaldon doesn’t skimp on detail, and therefore, doesn’t skimp on her characters.  She brings every character to life and that is why I cannot put these books down.  I need to know what happens to them like I need to know what is happening to my friends.

So moral of this story, read Outlander.  Whether you want to go through the stones to find your own Jamie Fraser, or more like me want to head on over to Oxford to find your own Roger MacKenzie, it doesn’t matter.  Just read! And give me your Starz play login.  Look, Jamie wants you to. How can you say no to that face?

jamie 

On to the next place…

Where to go next? I am thinking Scotland. Actually, I am definitely going to Universal for the Wizarding World of Harry Potter next and I cannot wait! I just went to the studio tour in London and I want to compare! I’ll add some pictures soon. I have to upload them. That whole 35mm camera thing and all. No automatic uploads, but better picture quality (in my humble opinion) and chance that it will make it into an actual photo album (that is a fact).

Current priority list of next places:

1. Scotland
2. Ireland
3. Providence, RI
4. New Hampshire
5. California
6. Wales (again. I didn’t see enough last time)