President Barack Obama drinks a Guinness with his ancestral cousin from Moneygall Ireland Henry Healy, center, and the owner of the pub in Moneygall Ireland, Ollie Hayes, right, at The Dubliner Restaurant and Pub and Restaurant on St. Patrick's Day, Saturday, March 17, 2012, in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
President Barack Obama drinks a Guinness with his ancestral cousin from Moneygall Ireland Henry Healy, center, and the owner of the pub in Moneygall Ireland, Ollie Hayes, right, at The Dubliner Restaurant and Pub and Restaurant on St. Patrick's Day, Saturday, March 17, 2012, in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
President Barack Obama drinks a Guinness with his ancestral cousin from Moneygall Ireland Henry Healy, center, and the owner of the pub in Moneygall Ireland, Ollie Hayes, right, at The Dubliner Restaurant and Pub and Restaurant on St. Patrick's Day, Saturday, March 17, 2012, in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
President Barack Obama talks with staff behind the bar as he drinks a Guinness with his ancestral cousin from Moneygall Ireland Henry Healy, second from left, and the owner of the pub in Moneygall Ireland, Ollie Hayes, left, at The Dubliner Restaurant and Pub and Restaurant on St. Patrick's Day, Saturday, March 17, 2012, in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
President Barack Obama holds Cooper Coleman, 21 months, as he celebrates St. Patrick's Day at The Dubliner Restaurant and Pub Saturday, March 17, 2012, in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
WASHINGTON (AP) ? His jacket was only moss green but his pint was true Guinness.
President Barack Obama tilted back a glass of the dark Irish brew Saturday, observing St. Patrick's Day at a boisterous Irish pub with his ancestral cousin from Moneygall, Ireland, at his side.
At the White House, the main South Lawn Fountain burbled green water. Nearby, workers prepared for a visit Tuesday by the Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny.
The first family was putting on its Irish, a blood line that runs through Obama's veins.
Obama took his motorcade to the Dubliner Restaurant and Pub on a dazzling Saturday afternoon. He wore no Kelly green but his jacket was pierced with a button that read, "VIP GUEST ? Tell 'em Danny sent you." The president waded into a crowd ? some in leprechaun hats and others in dyed green hair ? at the entrance of the tavern near Washington's landmark Union Station.
He wished one reveler, Adam Joseph, a happy 29th birthday.
Reporters were ushered into the pub briefly, long enough to catch the president taking two sips of his beer. The thick foam stuck to his upper lip in a thin mustache. And he held Dubliner owner Danny Coleman's 21-month-old grandson, Danny, in his arms.
"Hey, Danny, who's this?" Obama asked, holding out his VIP GUEST button, which bore the child's image.
One of Obama's great-great-great grandfathers on his Kansas mother's side was Falmouth Kearney, a shoemaker who emigrated from Ireland to the United States in 1850. Last year, Obama visited his ancestral home of Moneygall, a small hamlet in Ireland, and was a hit when he drank a Guinness at the local pub.
On Saturday, the owner of that pub, Ollie Hayes, and Henry Healy, an eighth cousin to Obama and the closest relative still living in Moneygall, joined him barside at the Dubliner as his guests.
Some in the bar crowd chanted "Four more years!"
Coleman said the president finished his beer, and predicted that, at least on this day, Obama could count on the support of the millions of Americans who claim Irish ancestry.
On Tuesday, Obama and Vice President Biden will meet Kenny and attend a St. Patrick's Day lunch at the Capitol. Then the president and first lady Michelle Obama will host an evening reception at the White House.
As Obama left the Dubliner amid more shouts and calls of "Go Bulls!", the president offered lively patrons a bit of advice often unheeded on St. Patrick's Day.
"I expect you guys," he said, "to behave yourselves."
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