We didn’t have any visitors for Christmas so we’d talked about taking a trip for it. I’m so glad we did it at home though. We did a little trip just before Christmas to the Christmas markets in Germany & France and we were planning a big trip to visit the UK but decided to hold off and go the day after Christmas so we could still open all our gifts on Christmas Day without having to haul them anywhere.
We’ve talked alot about the various Christmas traditions we’ve gotten to experience from
St. Martin’s Day to
St. Nicholas’ Day to all the
Christmas Markets. I wanted to share just a few more things we’ve found a bit different to the American traditions.
Live Christmas Trees are popular in Liechtenstein / Switzerland but do not arrive in stores until mid-December and are often not bought by the locals until Christmas Eve. And then, if there are young children in the house, the trees are usually secretly decorated by the mother of the family. Traditionally, they use real candles on the tree, which are lit twice, once on Christmas Eve and again on New Year's Eve (for good luck). Most people have now wised up to the world of fire safety and use electrical lights like in the US.
You may have noticed above that I said they light the tree on Christmas Eve & not Christmas Day - that’s because you open all your presents on Christmas Eve after attending Mass and the main Christmas meal is eaten after opening gifts on Christmas Eve.
So for those mamas following along, on this one day you go buy your tree, secretly decorate it away from your children while preparing dinner, have everyone dressed for Christmas Mass, come back home and surprise a beautifully decorated tree with all the gifts!, open the gifts and eat a full dinner. I’m exhausted just thinking about it.
Popular food for Christmas Dinner is ham and scalloped potatoes with melted cheese and milk baked into it. Dessert is often a walnut cake and Christmas cookies. It’s a simpler meal than alot of American Christmas Dinners, but then again, think of all the other things going on that day!
I couldn’t quite bring myself to go fully Swiss on this one, so we decided to keep everything on the 25th in our American standard.
When we returned from France we had just enough time to make Santa his cookies…
… and write him a note …
… ate the not-so-traditional Christmas Eve Pizza …
… and watched our family favorite Christmas Movie - The Muppet Christmas Carol.
The girls went to bed & I tracked Santa on Norad - he made it to Vaduz!
When we woke up the next morning, Santa had come!
Charlotte decided we should “dress fancy” for Christmas so after opening stockings, Dad made us French Toast while the girls got dressed.
Then we opened up packages from under the tree.
And we had to take a break when we opened a game we wanted to play with first.
Until we got bored and started to wonder if there was anything better under the tree…
And then someone found clothing, and decided to wear all of it at the same time.
The other one is going to have plenty of reading for a little while
When we’d partied all we could,
we ended the evening with a
germknödel, one of my new found favorite desserts!
Merry Christmas / Frohe Weihnachten from the Powells!