• For 2024 Pilgrims: €50,- donation = 1 year with no ads on the forum + 90% off any 2024 Guide. More here.
    (Discount code sent to you by Private Message after your donation)

Search 69,459 Camino Questions

Starting a new kilt thread (it is February, after all!).

Join our full-service guided tour and let us convert you into a Pampered Pilgrim!
Sporrans - it's what badgers are just dieing to be!

The sign of a true Scottish gentlemen?

One who moves his sporran from the front to the side when the dancing changes from Eightsome Reel to a slow waltz...

(And a true Scotsman doesn't keep money in his sporran in the hope that someone else will buy the next round of drinks - not suggesting anyone might be mean, just 'canny' with their money...)
 
Down bag (90/10 duvet) of 700 fills with 180 g (6.34 ounces) of filling. Mummy-shaped structure, ideal when you are looking for lightness with great heating performance.

€149,-
As Stephen said (above) - Western Isles and where the first clan was formed by your ancestors about 1200 years ago. Many spellings (which is normal) - seems that your association is the Clan MacLaine of Lochbuie.

There was a partial migration to Ireland at one point - so your confused background! ;)
Thanks for the info. Really appreciated!!
 
Very light, comfortable and compressible poncho. Specially designed for protection against water for any activity.

Our Atmospheric H30 poncho offers lightness and waterproofness. Easily compressible and made with our Waterproof fabric, its heat-sealed interior seams guarantee its waterproofness. Includes carrying bag.

€60,-
As my dad says, deep pockets and short arms
No pockets in a kilt, but certainly 'prudent' - being 'thrifty' is a virtue surely?

(And in reality it easier to keep folding money in the elastic of your sock flags/ 'garters' for when it is your round - the change goes either to the bar staff or the charity tin on the bar; it leaves more space in the sporran for hip flask, clean handkerchief and dance card - and not a mobile phone in sight 😉).
 
I think there might be something to that added fertility thing. Pretty much because when I see you "ordinary" men in a kilt this is how I actually DO see you...Plus now I really want to look up under your skirts.
 

Attachments

  • meanwhile.jpg
    meanwhile.jpg
    49.8 KB · Views: 11
Coming late to this very amusing party...but just to say:
trousers are not made for our anatomy!!
They're not made for anyone's anatomy.

And to ask: So...what if you are a mixed up person with Canadian/American parents, with warring ancestry coming from both sides, with some Scots-Irish thrown in for the sake of confusion?
Whose tartan would you wear?
 
Ideal pocket guides for during & after your Camino. Each weighs only 1.4 oz (40g)!
This is great. I grew up in Clan Okee as in Muskogee Oklahoma USA. I never really considered my families ethnic heritage until recently when our family was traced to Clan McGregor in Scotland. I am now seriously considering purchasing a kilt with the McGregor tartan. But the question is....would it look good with my cowboy boots, spurs and Stetson? 🙂
 
Join our full-service guided tour and let us convert you into a Pampered Pilgrim!
Recently, genealogy experts have done the math. Any person who was living about 1000 years ago who has a living descendant, is ancestor to every living person. (I'd assume this to be along continental lines.)

So pick some member of the Irish-Scot nobility of 1000 AD and wear their tartan!

The Scots were Irish, pushed the Picts out of the western coastal area when they colonized.

Buen camino, cousins.
 
I'd be very interested to watch from the sidelines while you debated that point with the Irish Guards :)
View attachment 56046
Historically, the insurgents that the Romans encountered north of the Hadians wall and who they called Scoti, were invading Gaels from Ireland :
- "By the 5th century, the Gaelic kingdom of Dál Riata had emerged in western Scotland. This kingdom was inevitably conquered and consumed by Pictland, spreading its culture to it in the generations preceding and following its conquest. The name came to be applied to all subjects of this now predominantly Goidelic speaking Pictish kingdom – hence the modern terms Scot, Scottish and Scotland.[10] " https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scoti

As a holder of the P312 "Western Atlantic" Celtic gene, even I could wear tartan !!
 
Last edited:
Very light, comfortable and compressible poncho. Specially designed for protection against water for any activity.

Our Atmospheric H30 poncho offers lightness and waterproofness. Easily compressible and made with our Waterproof fabric, its heat-sealed interior seams guarantee its waterproofness. Includes carrying bag.

€60,-
And to ask: So...what if you are a mixed up person with Canadian/American parents, with warring ancestry coming from both sides, with some Scots-Irish thrown in for the sake of confusion?
Whose tartan would you wear?
You can exercise your Canadian heritage without risk. All the provinces in Canada have their own tartan, as does the country as a whole. I know from experience that the Nova Scotian tartan is very popular in that province & is seen in many ways. Nobody will mind if you wear it.
 

Most read last week in this forum

Last year on my camino I was a bit annoyed when someone back home told me to enjoy my vacation. I bristled. Why did that word annoy me so much? I was on a pilgrimage! Anyway, I'm about to embark...
Everyone talks about the wonderful café con leche, but what if tea is more to your liking? Can you even get tea along the Camino (Frances)? I don’t drink coffee but my morning cup of tea is...
Hey all. I haven't been on the forum for quite sometime (years probably). I walked the Camino Frances in 2016 and to say it was life changing for me is an understatement. On day 3, at the café at...
I am just back from a few weeks on the Via the la Plata. Since 2015 I have been nearly every year in Spain walking caminoroutes I loved the café con leches. This year I did not like them as much...
When you stop at a bar for a beer, wine, coffee or bite to eat, and sit at a table, is it expected that you will return your dirty dishes up to the bar before you leave? I alway do, as it seems...
Let me preface this by saying please understand I am not picking on anybody, I fully understand that mistakes happen and how. Been there, done that. I have been astonished to see so many lost...

❓How to ask a question

How to post a new question on the Camino Forum.

Forum Rules

Forum Rules

Camino Updates on YouTube

Camino Conversations

Most downloaded Resources

This site is run by Ivar at

in Santiago de Compostela.
This site participates in the Amazon Affiliate program, designed to provide a means for Ivar to earn fees by linking to Amazon
Official Camino Passport (Credential) | 2024 Camino Guides
Back
Top