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Thread: Training Kilt?

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    24th December 04
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    I'm thinking a nice comeback to the "training kilt" might go something like this:

    "Yeah it is, when I outgrew my pants I had to go to a training kilt. If the damn thing gets any bigger I'll have to get me a real one!"

  2. #2
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    14th September 05
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    Yasih, that is great! Glad I was not drinking for that one.
    The kilt concealed a blaster strapped to his thigh. Lazarus Long

  3. #3
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    27th January 05
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    It could be possible he thought you were a Highland Games athlete and that you were wearing a plain kilt to "train" in so as not to mess up your tartan kilt.

  4. #4
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    10th February 05
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    I was talking with an unnamed kilt vendor last year at one of the local Highland Games.
    I told her I had a utilikilt, but was now interested in getting a traditional kilt.

    She said that it's "pretty common" for someone to start with a utilikilt - or other non-traditional kilt, and decide they like it so much they want to get a traditional style.
    She said that for that reason, she (and supposedly other kilt vendors) sometimes referred to utilikilts as "training kilts."

    Personally, I didn't think she was trying to be insulting with the term.

  5. #5
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    15th September 05
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    yes this is partly true in my case. I purchased a sport last summer and tried to dress it up. To the untrained eye it looked OK. But thanks to this site I quickly realised ther were innexpencive kilts which would dress up better.
    I still wear my sport for transitioning out of wet kayak gear, and at the bar after paddling, It is perfect.
    It could be considered a training kilt. Because it is definitely part of my training gear.
    “Live each season as it passes; breathe the air, taste the fruit, drink the drink, and resign yourself to the influences of each.” H.D. Thoreau

  6. #6
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    7th April 05
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    Quote Originally Posted by Streetcar
    I was talking with an unnamed kilt vendor last year at one of the local Highland Games.
    I told her I had a utilikilt, but was now interested in getting a traditional kilt.

    She said that it's "pretty common" for someone to start with a utilikilt - or other non-traditional kilt, and decide they like it so much they want to get a traditional style.
    She said that for that reason, she (and supposedly other kilt vendors) sometimes referred to utilikilts as "training kilts."

    Personally, I didn't think she was trying to be insulting with the term.
    It's not really derogatory in that sense. Most people don't want to shell out the money that's typically charged for a full-blown traditional, but they can afford the contemporaries.

    Then, once they find out that they like wearing the kilt, they decide to save up for the "real thing".
    We're fools whether we dance or not, so we might as well dance. - Japanese Proverb

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