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> Does Anyone Know About The Irish Stick Fighting
Rindy 
Posted: 28-Mar-2007, 12:53 AM
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smile.gif I sure would liek to see abou the stick fighting contest that used to beak out.

anyone have anymore info on those?


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Robert Phoenix 
Posted: 28-Mar-2007, 03:41 PM
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Ask and ye shall recieive:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A6644117

You can also check wikipedia. Just type in Irish stick fighting.


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dundee 
Posted: 28-Mar-2007, 03:57 PM
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yes my dear...... you simply take your blackthorn shillelah sneak up behind the one you want to subdue .... and whack im when he aint looking... bangin.gif


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Rindy 
Posted: 28-Mar-2007, 07:07 PM
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Hey dundee, I have one of those black thorn walking sticks would work real well your so funny. I started reading about it on google due to the movie The Wind That Shakes The Barley got me thinking about it. What is the name of the game they are playing in the movie looks like polo no horses, stick ball may be..?

Hope your spring is starting out well dundee-found anymore redheads lately?

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dundee 
Posted: 29-Mar-2007, 08:36 AM
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thank you for the compliment...*s* glad i gave you a chuckle... havent seen wind that shakes the barley.... *S* i want to find a nice old blackthorn.... i guess i am looking for that one that calls out my name.... just has to have a special look i will know it when i see it.... *S*
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Robert Phoenix 
Posted: 29-Mar-2007, 02:57 PM
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I hven't seen the movie yet but if the sticks looked somewhat like hockey sticks it may have been hurling. Not the kind you do after too many drinks though.
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Rindy 
Posted: 30-Mar-2007, 01:54 PM
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ROFL beer_mug.gif Thanks Roberto, I do believe that was what I was looking for. I was looking around on the web and this was some serious fighting..I haven't seen the movie yet either. I can't wait..it looks so good. Thanks to both of you..and dundee ya can't beat a good blackthorn stick...lol


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dundee 
Posted: 01-Apr-2007, 08:57 AM
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QUOTE (Rindy @ 30-Mar-2007, 02:54 PM)
and dundee ya can't beat a good blackthorn stick...lol


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nope that is what they are used for.... *L*
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dundee 
Posted: 01-Apr-2007, 09:24 AM
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oh found this for ya rindy...

http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/...3/batatext.html

and this

http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/...33/batause.html

and this...

http://www.geocities.com/cinaet/bataart.html


have fun with it and there is a guy on ebay that sells nice traditionaly seasoned in ireland shillelaghs... about $65 plus shipping...

The there points that make a well made Blackthorn cane are:

Thorns that are evenly spaced all around the cane.
The cane must have a fine taper.
The spurs cut close to the limb and small dimples are left behind each spur.


Some canes are passed off as blackthorn but are really made of Hawthorn (of a genus Crataegus a spring-flowering spiny shrub) this wood looks somewhat similar except that it does not have the same uniformity as Blackthorn.
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Madadh 
Posted: 02-Apr-2007, 04:41 AM
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Rindy,

I think the game you are talking about is hurling. From the GAA:

Hurling is a game similar to hockey, in that it is played with a small ball and a curved wooden stick. It is Europe's oldest field game. When the Celts came to Ireland as the last ice age was receding, they brought with them a unique culture, their own language, music, script and unique pastimes. One of these pastimes was a game now called hurling. It features in Irish folklore to illustrate the deeds of heroic mystical figures and it is chronicled as a distinct Irish pastime for at least 2,000 years.

The stick, or "hurley" (called camán in Irish) is curved outwards at the end, to provide the striking surface. The ball or "sliothar" is similar in size to a hockey ball but has raised ridges.

Hurling is played on a pitch approximately 137m long and 82m wide. The goalposts are the same shape as on a rugby pitch, with the crossbar lower than a rugby one and slightly higher than a soccer one.

You may strike the ball on the ground, or in the air. Unlike hockey, you may pick up the ball with your hurley and carry it for not more than four steps in the hand. After those steps you may bounce the ball on the hurley and back to the hand, but you are forbidden to catch the ball more than twice. To get around this, one of the skills is running with the ball balanced on the hurley To score, you put the ball over the crossbar with the hurley or under the crossbar and into the net by the hurley for a goal, the latter being the equivalent of three points."

Hope that helps. One of the old irish legends has a young boy (named Sétanta) using a hurley stick to kill a wolfhound thus getting his new name Cúchulainn.





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Rindy 
Posted: 03-Apr-2007, 03:19 PM
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Thanks for sharing that Madadh. This is all so interesting. The game does look like hockey.. I did find a url I would like to share it is the martial art of stick fighting.


http://www.geocities.com/glendoyle/bata/

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Madadh 
Posted: 04-Apr-2007, 04:43 AM
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Rindy,

That site was great. Will give some new moves next time I wear the kilt and carry a black thorn root.

Also, I think of hurling as closer to Indian Lacrosse. Its origins are similar .. a game that taught young men teamwork and how to fight. Have you ever seen the Mohawks play, it is a far cry from the college sport of today.
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Rindy 
Posted: 04-Apr-2007, 01:27 PM
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Madadh, glad you liked that site. Good luck on your new moves. I haven't seen the Mohawks play. Will keep my eyes out for them.

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englishmix 
Posted: 31-Aug-2009, 03:37 PM
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Is there any way in which the Irish haven't fought? fish.gif
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Camac
Posted: 01-Sep-2009, 09:02 AM
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englishmix;

As a Nation Ireland did not participate in WWII although many Irish did fight.

Ireland declared neutrality but in secret supported Germany.


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