No. The water comes from the Wicklow mountains. The Liffey waters would not be pure enough to use. Because of the colour of Guinness and the river Liffey looking quite dark, a connection is often made, but it is not used in it.
No. The water comes from the Wicklow mountains. The Liffey waters would not be pure enough to use. Because of the colour of Guinness and the river Liffey looking quite dark, a connection is often made, but it is not used in it.
No. The water comes from the Wicklow mountains. The Liffey waters would not be pure enough to use. Because of the colour of Guinness and the river Liffey looking quite dark, a connection is often made, but it is not used in it.
No. The water comes from the Wicklow mountains. The Liffey waters would not be pure enough to use. Because of the colour of Guinness and the river Liffey looking quite dark, a connection is often made, but it is not used in it.
No. The water comes from the Wicklow mountains. The Liffey waters would not be pure enough to use. Because of the colour of Guinness and the river Liffey looking quite dark, a connection is often made, but it is not used in it.
No. The water comes from the Wicklow mountains. The Liffey waters would not be pure enough to use. Because of the colour of Guinness and the river Liffey looking quite dark, a connection is often made, but it is not used in it.
No. The water comes from the Wicklow mountains. The Liffey waters would not be pure enough to use. Because of the colour of Guinness and the river Liffey looking quite dark, a connection is often made, but it is not used in it.
No. The water comes from the Wicklow mountains. The Liffey waters would not be pure enough to use. Because of the colour of Guinness and the river Liffey looking quite dark, a connection is often made, but it is not used in it.
No. The water comes from the Wicklow mountains. The Liffey waters would not be pure enough to use. Because of the colour of Guinness and the river Liffey looking quite dark, a connection is often made, but it is not used in it.
No. The water comes from the Wicklow mountains. The Liffey waters would not be pure enough to use. Because of the colour of Guinness and the river Liffey looking quite dark, a connection is often made, but it is not used in it.
No. The water comes from the Wicklow mountains. The Liffey waters would not be pure enough to use. Because of the colour of Guinness and the river Liffey looking quite dark, a connection is often made, but it is not used in it.
No. The water comes from the Wicklow mountains. The Liffey waters would not be pure enough to use. Because of the colour of Guinness and the river Liffey looking quite dark, a connection is often made, but it is not used in it.
Loudest Band Ever
Check in the guinness book of world records.
Guinness was FIRST EVER brewed In Celbridge, Co.Kildare, Arthur Guinness' home town. He was born in what is now "The Mucky Duck" main street, Celbridge. He first Brewed the beer in the "kildrought" bar and shortly after that set up the first commercial brewery for Guinness in neighbouring town Leixlip.
Apparently 5.5 Miles high according to Guinness world records
The largest raccoon that was ever discovered was a raccoon named Bandit. He weighed 75lbs and was in the Guinness Book of World Records.
Georgia Brown is the Guinness World record holder, she apparently reached 8 octaves.
Actually, many people consider Guinness to be an acquired taste; that is, few people like it the first time they try it. The special flavor qualities that make it unique often turn people off the first few times they have it until they develop a liking to it. There are a few things that contribute to Guinness's unique flavor, not the least of which is sour beer -- yikes! It's hard to believe, but about three percent of every new batch of Guinness is sour Guinness -- beer that has been boiled down to about half of its initial volume and then "vinegarized." Also, if you've ever had the pleasure of drinking Guinness Extra Stout on draught, then you've experienced that incredible rich, creamy head that never seems to dissipate. They get that by using special Guinness taps that inject nitrogen gas into the beer, which, together with the the carbon dioxide carbonation, create the most unique head known to man. A common misconception about Guinness is that it's a heavy beer. It's not, really. There are far fewer calories in a pint of Guinness than many other genuinely heavy beers.
One award is that he got the Guinness World Record in 2012 for youngest author that sold the most books in the world ever.
yes in 2005 for attending three premires in a 24 hour time span. :)
The first Guinness World Record for the largest cake ever made was set in 1989 by the Fort Payne Chamber of Commerce in Alabama, USA. They baked a cake that weighed 128,238 lbs and measured 122 feet long.
well the answer to that my pal is 15
Paul McCartney is in The Guinness World Records for being the most successfull musician of all time