When do decorations usually go up and come down? Are there any unique traditions?
We hit the Christmas Log with sticks to make him poop candy.

Australian here. Christmas decorations will go up shortly for a lot of people. They come down a day or two after Christmas.
Obviously the main difference is that it’ll be the middle of summer so it’ll be unpleasantly hot. A lot of people do BBQs for a shared meal, seafood is a very common thing here for Christmas, especially prawns. Oh and Cherries. Everyone loves cherries for Christmas for some reason. And Pavlova
Other than that, it’s probably pretty similar to Christmas in the U.S.
Canada. We’re heathens. We celebrate solstice.
The others are starting now. Some go for months with the decoration and tree. It’s stupid.
Greece here! We put on decorations pretty much when we please, as far as it’s before the Christmas eve. The timeline is:
- December 6th, St. Nicholas day: rather than gift giving, this day is attributed to sailors. There are special ceremonies held by the coast by decorated boats
- December 24th, Christmas eve: Kids go door- to-door and sing christmas carols (κάλαντα, /kalanda/) accompanied with triangles and drums. It’s a cacophony, but it’s cute. They usually expect money or sweets in return (money is more appreciated) or even both, so make sure you’re stocked with coins! Some religious households bake “christopsomo” (χριστόψωμο, meaning Christ bread), a ceremonial round loaf of bread with religious markings on top. There’s a midnight mass for the religious ones too.
- December 25th: still no gift giving, this day focuses on feasting and gathering up, usually famillialy. Tables overflow with festive cooking, including christopsomo, melomakarona (μελομακάρονα, a syrupy biscuit) and kourampiedes (κουραμπιέδες, a spicy, dry, crumbly biscuit with a generous sprinkle of icing sugar, enough to make it look snowy). Some of the most religious have been fasting for quite some time till this day comes as well.
- January 1st, new year’s, st. Basil’s day: Now’s the time for gifts! St. Basil (Άγιος Βασίλης, Ayios Vasilis) is our own version of Santa Claus, so the children get gifts on new year’s instead of Christmas. Another feast happens, and usually ends gloriously with the Vasillopita (Βασιλόπιτα) which is something like a dry cake with a single coin inside. It’s split radially in pieces or in squares, each one given to a single member of the table, except for some that are “given” to Christ, to the holy Mary, to st. Basil, to the house, etc. so you always cut more pieces than you actually need. Someone’s piece will have the coin inside, they “win” the year and are said to have good luck. Companies also tend to hold Vasillopita ceremonies later in the year, and in those ones whoever wins the coin gets generous gifts, like a bonus or extra time off.
- January 6th, Epiphany (Θεοφάνεια, Theofaneia): The Christmas season concludes with Epiphany celebrations, where brave souls dive into cold waters to retrieve crosses blessed by priests, commemorating Christ’s baptism and marking the end of the festive period.
brave souls dive into cold waters
How cold is the water at that time usually? Is there ice?
No, the Mediterranean doesn’t freeze. I don’t know the exact temperature, I’d say about 10°C to 15°C? Outside the water though, it could be much lower, like 0°C
Some of us, in the UK, play Whamageddon which is a concerted effort to get all the way through December up to Christmas Day without hearing ‘Last Christmas’ by Wham.
“I got Whammed in Poundland today!” is a typical cry of dismay for someone who has failed.
Hey, we play that in Australia too!
That song is EVERYWHERE here in Japan each Christmas and it drives me nuts.
Dane here. Decorations go up in December - except for all the people putting up already now (especially lights on houses).
Kids watch “julekalender” (24 episode Christmas drama series where Christmas is always in jeopardy but gets saved last minute - one episode each day).
We celebrate Christmas on the evening of Dec 24 (can’t wait until 25th). Usually dinner is pork (with the hide roasted such that it is crispy) or duck with potatoes and sauce. Potatoes ar sometimes caramalized, like candy apple. Dessert is risalamande, a rice pudding with whipped cream and chunks of almonds. The person that finds the sole uncut almond wins a prize. We then turn on the lights of the Christmas tree… And dances around it singing (this is where foreigners really starting giving confused stares 😂). When done we open our gifts and have a hyggelig time.
Pretty much the same, except that the main celebration (and gift-giving!) occurs on the Eve, and the songs are depressing.
Pretty much a regular family hang out but with more food and some token decorations (one year we had a single christmas bauble on a small orange tree).
Spain. Right after Halloween (years ago was even before) and they stay until someone remembers to take them off. Sometimes April.
From the US but in Japan. Christmas is a normal working day. Couples often go out for a date night. KFC’s chicken (or another fried or roasted one) is a common staple for dinner.
Family will get each other presents. I’ve heard it’s more like one present, but I don’t really know. I should ask the in-laws this winter when we go for New Years (the big family gathering time in Japan and NOT so much a big party time with lots of businesses closed).
For Norway it depends, really…
We get the small things (lights, figurines) out with advent starting, so late november/early december, but don’t do the tree until the night before (23rd). The outside lighting we usually do a bit earlier, as it gets super dark here and it looks nice.
Some people do it much earlier.Special traditions for Norway would probably be porridge with an almond in it. The one who gets the almond wins the marzipan prize.
Our family does it a bit differently: There are many almonds, the total changing every year and only Mum knows, and the one with the most gets to pick from the prize pool first. That way, everybody gets something and the kids are happy.
I finally won last year with 14.
It’s also super fun watching people looking like chipmunks, hiding their almonds until it’s time to count.Rural Germany. Christmas time still starts in December/1st advent for me, although some houses have wintery decorations up the day they remove the Halloween ones, and the city has made some preparations for the coming Christmas markets today. Christmas markets are where people go buy Glühwein/mulled wine in a Christmassy atmosphere, a hot drink just tastes better in cold weather than in one’s house (we drink it there as well, of course, can’t enjoy Christmas sober).
Advent traditions include an advent wreath, which is still really Christian in nature, and advent calendar, which has become entirely commercialised around toy brands and chocolate.
The gift giving and the first proper look at the tree is done on Christmas Eve’s Evening, after the religious members of the family went to Church. That evening we eat either raclette or hot pot/Chinese fondue, the other meal then a week later at Silvester. We have started to eat a locally sourced Christmas goose on Christmas day recently.
Dont forget the classic christmas dinner of just sausages sauerkraut and bread
Colombian here. Some people start in November, some in December, some never take theirs out after December. Goverment decorations usually are December.
However, over the years the ammount of people doing external decorations has decreased inmesenly, from maybe 75% to 25%.
BBQs and the beach here in NZ, much the same as .au.
The shops here have just started to decorate in the last week or so. The first houses are starting to put stuff up. We kick off on Dec 1st when we tane the kids to cut down a tree and then do a advent from then to the 23rd. We do our christmas on the 24th and travel to my mums on the 25th and do christmas lunch/dinner ther and stay for at least her birthday (the 26th). Generally do a BBQ and a ham.
Quebec here. There isn’t much “magic” anymore. Too much too early too soon. It has become pretty much only a cheap commercial stunt.
Some asshole stores annoyingly start decorating early September, most do it in October. And the fucking music blasting non-stop 24/7.
Fuck this shit.
Canada, here.
It’s the same in the West. There are 12 days of Christmas and none of them are in fucking November.
My wife and I like to get out of town when we can, but lately it’s a low-key night at home, no work, watching some telly or something. She likes all the classics: misfit toys and Burl Ives.







