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As I wrote in my last post, Toem was the most westerly of our possessions. I was curious to see it and enjoyed the drive through winding narrow lanes cutting through fields rich in grass greener than I had ever seen.
No wonder the cows and other animals looked so fat and happy. Milk is really creamy and so is the butter.I was given thick creamy golden butter with everything I ate in restaurants, hotels and B&B. Promoting the local product! The whole area survives on agricultural produce. Almost no industry.
I finally arrived in Toem and found it to be a very pretty small town. The local church had some O'Ds but I noted a row of graves leading to the church marked as those of priests from the USA.
I read them all with curiosity. Then I understood for they all had Irish family names. They had chosen to be buried 'in the homeland'. How nice and sentimental!
I talked to some local women and they asked me lots of questions about life in Berlin once I told them I lived there. It was a nice exchange of information and I noticed how easily Irish people just open up on first meeting and talk openly. No wonder they say they have all kissed the Blarney Stone :-)

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