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This was presented as tongue in cheek!!STEVIE wrote:Before I make the usual faux pas please expand on your "take".
I'd certainly give these guys pole position and perhaps it explains why the kilt is so universally popular too.
Steve.
What do you mean? My Dad used to hunt the wild haggis as it ran around hills!STEVIE wrote:Sinned
OMG that is such a blow to my traditional native pride.
You'll be telling me next that Haggis came to us from the Romans via England.
Oh woe, woe and thrice woe I say!
Aye min, yer coorse.
Steve.
I do not think I will ever see another New World turkey in flight and attempting to gain altitude without thinking of that. Haggis on the wing? There's something, somehow, intrinsically wrong about that.Kirbstone wrote:[...] hasn't been a single haggis seen flying South of Aberdeen this year, let alone shot!
You would think they would have the sense to keep turning them round when they were young, so they ran around the mountain the opposite way for half the time and their legs would become equalised; this would prevent family arguments about who got the bigger 'drumsticks'. The animals would also discover what another haggis looks like from the front, something they never do in the wild.STEVIE wrote:...Apparently they liked the look of a lopsided animal, the left and right legs don't match. It was the Scots who had the brains to turn them into the delicacy that we know today.