Bon Voyage 2013!
It's time to welcome in another New Year and Little Passports
wanted to share some of our favorite traditions from around the world
with you and your readers. The learning never stops! Use this easy copy
and paste post for the last day of 2013!
Little Passports New Years Eve Traditions Around The World
5, 4, 3, 2, 1...Happy New Year! As people in the United States start the
new year with fireworks, parades, and resolutions, people around the
world are also doing everything they can to welcome 2014. Join Sam and
Sofia of Little Passports as they visit friends in other countries to see how they start the year!
Colombia
Are you looking for travel and adventure? In Colombia, they say that if
you grab your suitcase and run around the entire block as fast as you
can at exactly midnight on New Year’s Eve, you will get to travel in the
new year. Sam and Sofia love joining their Colombian friends to
participate in this tradition—they are always looking for their next
adventure!
Greece
Sam and Sofia join their friends in Greece to celebrate New Year's and
St. Basil’s Day on January 1st. The Greeks start the year off with a
fun-filled day of food, festivities, as well as time with family and
friends. One favorite way to celebrate is eating the Vasilopita or St
Basil's cake, which is similar to a pound cake and is baked with a
silver or gold coin inside. Whoever finds the coin in their slice of
cake will have a very lucky year!
Japan
When it’s cold outside, you might want to slurp down a giant bowl of
steaming-hot noodles! But for the new year, not just any bowl of noodles
will do. Little Passports
always enjoys joining their Japanese friends to eat “long-life”
noodles. Imagine a dish piled high with long, winding, uncut noodles!
Many Japanese believe that eating these long noodles will bring health
and longevity. What a yummy way for Sam and Sofia to start the new year!
Scotland
Do you pay attention to who enters your house first on New Year’s Day?
In Scotland, on January 1st, people keep a close eye on the door because
whoever enters first determines the family’s luck the next year.
According to tradition, the “first-foot” must bring gifts—such as coal
to wish others’ warmth and shortbread to wish everyone full bellies
throughout the year. When Sam and Sofia visit their friends in Scotland
on New Year’s Day, they always bring gifts!
Bring Little Passports into your child's life in 2014 to teach them about all of the fascinating cultures around the world!
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