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Is it really New Year’s if you don’t watch a ball drop? For your kid-friendly party, consider making a ball-shaped piñata that resembles the big ball that drops in New York City. You can even have the kids help you decorate it with paint, sparkly beads, and glitter. Then, at midnight, let the kids bang it open to find candy and trinkets inside. Turn your family room or heated garage into a ballroom with a disco ball, curtains and strings of lights.

Make simple goody bags to open at set intervals throughout the night. Write the time on balloons and pop one every 30 minutes or hour to build anticipation. Have lots of chips and dip, veggie slices, and things that are easy for kids to eat.

Life before kids looks different than life after kids, and I often find myself passing by holidays or activities of “yesteryear” because they don’t seem kid friendly. Poppers, pots and pans, confetti-filled balloons, you name it! Put together DIY noise-making machines to set off at midnight (or 8 PM, we won’t tell!). Try these DIY Easy Confetti Poppers made from toilet paper rolls and construction paper. New Year’s Eve has changed quite a bit since I became a mother, but so far the girls are so young that the night is still largely an adult night.

New Year’s Eve is celebrated with large fireworks displays throughout the country, especially in the cities. People over the age of 18 are allowed to buy fireworks, which are sold by local stores or by private people. While watching or lighting fireworks at midnight, people usually drink champagne. Spanish New Year’s Eve (Nochevieja or Fin de Año) celebrations usually begin with a family dinner, traditionally including shrimp or prawns, and lamb or capon. The actual countdown is primarily followed from the clock on top of the Royal House of the Post Office in Puerta del Sol Square in Madrid.

It has become the main «character» of many jokes and anecdotes. Nowadays this salad is also called Russian, potato and meat salad. On 13 January, some people celebrate “Old New feliz año nuevo 2022 Year”, according to the Julian calendar. Traditional celebrations of New Year’s Eve are the norm in Romania. Romanians follow centuries-old customs, rituals, and conventions.


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