Christmas is celebrated on December 25th in Lithuania, where people typically gather with their families at home. They sing, dance, wrap presents, and meet with relatives, while enjoying traditional foods like vegetables, cereals, nuts, fruits, mushrooms, herring, and duck. According to folklore, a cold Christmas means a late spring, while a sunny one promises a fertile year. Overall, Christmas is a time for families to rally together, give gifts, and celebrate the holiday.
Christmas is celebrated on December 25th in Lithuania, where people typically gather with their families at home. They sing, dance, wrap presents, and meet with relatives, while enjoying traditional foods like vegetables, cereals, nuts, fruits, mushrooms, herring, and duck. According to folklore, a cold Christmas means a late spring, while a sunny one promises a fertile year. Overall, Christmas is a time for families to rally together, give gifts, and celebrate the holiday.
Christmas is celebrated on December 25th in Lithuania, where people typically gather with their families at home. They sing, dance, wrap presents, and meet with relatives, while enjoying traditional foods like vegetables, cereals, nuts, fruits, mushrooms, herring, and duck. According to folklore, a cold Christmas means a late spring, while a sunny one promises a fertile year. Overall, Christmas is a time for families to rally together, give gifts, and celebrate the holiday.
Place • Usually people celebrate Christmas at home with their family. Time • Christmas is celebrated on December 25 Activities • Singing • Dancing • Wrapping presents • Meeting relatives Food and drinks • People usually eat vegetables, cereals, seeds, nuts, fruits, berries, mushrooms, other forest goods with nettle, herring, duck, hemp or linseed oil. • Also people drink mostly poppy milk and other beverages. Fun fact • If there will be a cold Christmas need a late spring sunny day fertile year. Exclusivity
• Christmas is a time of rallying, when all the
relatives gather to give each other gifts and celebrate. Thanks for wathing