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question for non UK members

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

TonyOz

TonyOz Report 15 Nov 2010 21:50

Hi Stray.

Of course i was joking..lol

I guess......our hot Aussie Christmas dinner is similar to what you have in the U.K
After all, the majority of Australians had Brit immigrant ancestors, so for most a traditional hot roast. We ( our family ) have 3 meats. Pork, Ham, Chicken and veg... (Roast Potatoes, Pumpkin, Cauliflower, Peas & Beans ) followed by traditional home made plum pudding with custard or cream.
On occasions, pending on the weather ( Hot ), its the same meats,( cold or hot )... but with salads rather than Veg. Seafood is also very popular...crab meat, shrimp, tiger prawns..ect. A few people do prefer an outdoor BBQ, and we might have a night time BBQ on the odd occasion on Christmas day, and my grandies swim in our pool. This also depends on the weather. Cooking a full roast in Australia inside, on a 40c plus day is not fun....lol


Our weather prediction plays a big part of what Aussies do on Christmas day.

Each State has there own Carols by candleight. Carols at the Domain Sydney.....and Carols at the Myer music bowl Melbourne, are the two that are popular.


Most suburban houses are decorated with lights and sundries, and people walk the streets on a warm or hot evening viewing them.

Our decorated tree is the Aussie Pine ( tradition) and about 6ft in height.... or some may have the Fir tree. Normally purchased at a pine tree plantation or local greengrocers or scout hall......for about $45 -50 As a kid in the 40-50s my father used a Gum tree branch that we decorated.

The song i posted is played on our radio's throughout the festive season, along with many other Aussie Christmas songs, but we get both traditional Christmas songs, and Aussie of course.

Our Christmas cards are mostly standard..... depicting winter snow fields, with Santa and reindeer ect,ect...but you can also purchase Aussie Christmas cards that may have Santa in red shorts and a summer floral shirt on a sled, pulled along by six white boomers ( kangaroos ).....Santa at the beach lying on a deck chair drinking a beer or cocktail.....A Kookaburra....or a Koala up a gum tree chewing on a gum leaf, with baby Koala clung to its back wearing tinsel and a Santa hat. There are quite a few Aussie varieties.

Naturally, Christmas is summer over here, but at a guess i would say, that a small majority of us Australian born peeps, would love to experience perhaps just one white Christmas. It would be a novelty.

Merry Christmas from Australia.

Janey. If you want to hear that song.
http://silver-mg.com/Xmas/Aussie_Christmas.htm



Tony...:>))

SylviaInCanada

SylviaInCanada Report 15 Nov 2010 22:05

Janey's house at Christmas sounds so wonderful!!

I do know the style of her house, it's a common one over here as well. I'm guessing about 100 or so years old???


We always have Christmas crackers after the turkey but before the Christmas pudding ............. they're sold in all the stores here, some much better than others of course!!

OH makes rum sauce for the pudding, we pour brandy over the pudding in the kitchen, set it alight, and bring the flaming pudding into the darkened dining room.


Then we set out a jigsaw puzzle on the dining table to be done after we've finished eating, and anyone who wants to can sit there, or sit in the living room and chat ..... the living room is separated from the dining room by a wide archway, so communication is easy. And any kids can play with their toys.

We then put out Christmas cake and mince pies, plus some cold turkey and rolls at about 6 pm, in case anyone feels peckish!

We don't often put up decorations now, what's the point if we are going to be away? This year it's the daughter's turn. And grandson's first Christmas.

If we do stay home, inside decorations do not go up until the weekend immediately before Christmas, and they come down on January 6th, Twelfth Night. All the swag greenery is burnt in the fire place, and the tree goes out the door into the back garden.

We started to do the late set-up to keep our daughter calm, and the second because that is what we were both brought up to do ...... my mother in particular was very superstitious ..........decorations still up after 12th Night was very bad luck.


My birthday is January 7th, and I used to beg and beg her to let them stay up for my birthday party! Never ever succeeded. Even when I suggested we took them down, then put them back up again. I even tried "January 7th is Greek Orthodox Christmas .........".


Like many Canadians we are lazy about outside decorations ............... we have lights (LED ones) around the eaves of the house, and they stay up all year. OH plugs them in in early December. We do put up icicle lights around the balcony railing, and then take them down again.



We started the "pick up friends" for Christmas that very first Christmas in Texas ...................... we'd got married in the August, and moved overseas 3 days after the wedding. No family there ......... only friends. So it just made sense to us to celebrate with friends.


Then we carried it through after coming up here the following August. We had some friends who came every Christmas for years and years. Others came only the once or maybe twice.

OH's sister emigrated over here in 1970, then married 2 years later. But they live 15 hours drive away, and so we only managed to get up there a couple fo times when the children were young, and they never made it down here for Christmas ...... part of it was timing, most was the cost.

It cost as much to send my daughter on the 2 hour flight to visit up there this past August as it had cost for her to come all the way across the country ................. and we can very often fly to the UK for cheaper than it costs us to go to the daughter's!


We had 2 Christmases and 1 Thanksgiving where we had so many people that we took most of the furniture out of the living room and put it in the dining room. The dining table was extended to its limit and set up down the centre of the living room, and we added another table to one end! We moved another side table into the living room, and OH carved the turkey on there because there was no room on the table. I think 15 was the maximum we had.

We don't serve out in the kitchen ............... everything is put on the table, OH carves and gives people their preference, and then they help themselves to all the rest.


Last Christmas we went to OH's sister, her married daughter had just moved back to town (literally one month before!), and insisted on doing Christmas dinner. Their dad was Swiss, so their Christmases always had a lot of Swiss traditions ................ and A followed through with ALL of the British and Swiss ones from her childhood. Including a special yeast bread (not stollen) that is eaten usually after midnight church service ...... sis-i-l had long adapted that to Christmas morning while opening the stockings! It is made the night before, braided and left to rise overnight, then baked in the morning, and eaten with lashings of butter and possibly jam.

Her poor Canadian husband and his parents didn't get too many of their traditions!! But she did the flaming pudding. She put on dinner for about 16 people.

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 15 Nov 2010 22:45

Sylvia - you reminded me of what I forgot! We have white icycle lights around the 2nd floor balcony too; that's the finishing dazzle on the otherwise low-key decor. ;)

My house actually only dates from the 1940s. It's all brick, "in-fill" on a street of smaller much older houses, half originally wood houses and half brick houses. Some are peaky-roof and some slightly less old have flat roofs, which were mandated after a huge fire that spread roof to roof and wiped out much of this part of town a century ago. The flat-roofed ones look more like 19th century urban English houses, although overall it's much more jumbled, not as neat and uniform as an English street. We went back to peaked roofs because of the snow load, of course.

My friend from Vancouver visited here a few years ago to tour the fall colours, but spent most of the time getting me to drive around old neighbourhoods here and marvelling at the red-brick houses. Houses are wood out west (as they are in most of the US, as soon as you cross the border here in eastern Canada).

My house looks sort of like the mid-section of this double (with just one door on each floor, and one balcony, and a little bit taller and statelier with a three-part rounded window up top).

http://www.buyandsellwithmichelle.ca/images/properties/2009519163211.jpg

Much of the neighbourhood looks kinda like this.

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3594/3290693908_1b0c94e93a_z.jpg?zz=1

;)

SylviaInCanada

SylviaInCanada Report 15 Nov 2010 23:06

That's actually what I pictured in my mind! Having done quite a bit of travelling around Ontario towns.

Yes, our houses are almost all wood .......... which bothered me when we first came here. I just couldn't understand how a wood house could last, and be worth the money! Took me about 4 years of living in an apartment to decide a wooden house was worth it!

Mind you, I had to give up a wonderful view over the harbour to the North Shore mountains for the house!


and, just like your friend, I just marvel at all the old brick and stone houses back east.

Of course Vancouver only really dates back to about 1860 or so!



Our house is what is commonly called Veterans houses ..... some of which now count as Heritage houses. They were built in 1943-45 for returning soldiers. Basically a one-level bungalow with a basement. Ours started off as a 4 room house .............. almost central front door, living room on one side, bedroom to the other, bathroom and kitchen behind. But it has been extended backwards twice! Lot size is 33' wide by 120' long.

I can't find a "looks like" picture ..... but I'll send you one of our house, along with the monster that was built right next door, replacing a similar house to ours.




s

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 15 Nov 2010 23:19

I know just what your house looks like, Sylvia -- my grandmother lived in one for nearly 50 years from the early 1950s, until she was 95. ;) Slightly bigger - two bedrooms on the right with the bathroom in the middle at the back - but no hall, had to go through the little living room to get to the little central hall with the bedrooms, bathroom and kitchen off it. That's in London Ont, monster houses aren't as much of a problem there. Not like here, where I have the six three monster doubles in my backyard now ... where the cat poisoner lives ...

I wonder whether they'll decorate for Christmas? Not likely. You pay nearly half a mil (normal houses in this neighbourhood run under $300G; I paid $45G for mine 25 years ago!) for a sterile, hideous pile (cheapest grey brick, no style at all) in a crappy neighbourhood, you probably spend Christmas skiing in Whistler!

I'm wanting it to snow now so we can turn on the lights (also left up year round). Stop me!

SylviaInCanada

SylviaInCanada Report 16 Nov 2010 05:17

lol! Janey

....... at the Whistler remark!


We paid $27 thou for our house in 1972. Spent $25 thou on an extension in 1977

It's now valued at close to $700 thou....... the house is worth about $32,000, rest is value of the land.


Problem is ....... if we sell it, we will find it difficult to find anywhere else in Vancouver because prices are so high



Oh ................. news tonight, the "s" word was mentioned as possible for higher parts of V by the end of the week

StrayKitten

StrayKitten Report 16 Nov 2010 09:08

aw its sounds wonderful, i cant imagine swimming in a pool on christmas day, im going to ask my cousin to send me a OZ christmas card this yr haha littleman would think it was brill if santa had shorts on

thank you all for adding its brilliant to read how everyone else does chrstmas
we have ice this morning so snow is definitly on its way,
the mums at the school said its my fault for puttingmy chrstmas decorations up early lol,

stray V the decs, tinsel was attacked during the night lol,:)