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When it comes to celebrating New Year’s, it seems that every country has its own quirky way of getting festive. From bread banging in Ireland to dish throwing in Denmark, here are five of the most unusual ways that the New Year is ushered in around the world.

Bread banging in Ireland

One traditional superstition when it comes to celebrating New Year’s in Ireland is that banging Christmas bread on walls and doors will ward off bad luck while promising plentiful bread in the year to come.

Another tradition we can get behind: if the first person to enter the house is a tall, dark and handsome man, it means good luck for the rest of the year.

Dish throwing in Denmark

In Denmark, it’s common practice to take old dishes, saved up throughout the year for this express purpose, and throw them at your friends’ front doors on New Year’s Eve.

Returning home to find a huge pile of broken crockery outside your house is considered a good thing: think of it as a pre-social media way of assessing your number of friendships.

Imaginary holidays in Colombia

We’ve heard of a lot of off-kilter traditions that are meant to impart good luck on the cusp of the New Year.

Perhaps our favourite, though, is one that happens in Colombia: residents are said to carry empty suitcases around their neighbourhoods in the hope that the coming year will be filled with exciting travels.

Exploding milk jugs and the New Year’s dive in the Netherlands

Carbide shooting, or carbidschieten, is an appropriately explosive New Year’s tradition. Carbide, a cheap material that comes in rock form, emits an explosive gas when wet, which the Dutch use to create a cannon-like effect.

The carbide is placed in large, metal milk jugs with some water, and then the gas is lit from a small touchhole. This creates a huge burst of flames accompanied by a deafening bang as each jug pops its top.

That’s not all for the Dutch; to begin the New Year as many as 25,000 people all jump into the ice-cold sea first thing in the morning. Consider it an effective but not particularly pleasant hangover cure!

Raining refrigerators in South Africa

Residents of Johannesburg’s Hillbrow neighbourhood take part in a cleansing ritual each New Year. They do this by taking any unwanted possessions that have accumulated in their high-rise apartments throughout the year and throwing them out of the windows.

Items like chairs, mattresses, televisions, ovens and fridges are cast down on to the street below, and as if that wasn’t dangerous enough, residents also shoot fireworks horizontally from one building to another.

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Written by insider city guide series Hg2 | A Hedonist’s guide to… whose guides cover all the best hotels, restaurants, bars, clubs, sights, shops and spas

 

(Feature: © Purestock/Thinkstock)

About the author

Claire BullenGlobetrotter, chowhound, travel writer for Hg2 | A Hedonist’s guide to... and contributor to Cheapflights Travel Blogs.

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