St Nicholas Day

Jasminesmommy

<font color=red>My dh pops the can for me<br><font
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Jul 18, 2003
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Do any of you celebrate St. Nicholas Day? When I was younger we use to hang our stockings and if we were good it would be filled with candy and small toys and if bad it would be coal. I was always good. If you celebrate it how do you do it? This is the first year my lids are old enough to understand and I will be doing the same thing as my parents. My poor Son will be getting coal. My daughter I am undecided on.
 
I don't celebrate it. Didn't even know it was a real day. When is it celebrated?
 
Originally posted by JC2
I don't celebrate it. Didn't even know it was a real day. When is it celebrated?

Do not celebrate it either. Did a search and it is celebarted on December 6th.
 
Yes we celebrate St Nicolas. The gifts go in a shoe though. Mine will both be getting nice things as they are sweet young ladies.
 

It is celebrated on the 6th. Its kind of a neat way to get the kids to act good for a little while.
 
We celebrate it. The gifts go in the kid's slippers instead of the shoes.:Pinkbounc :bounce:
 
It's an Eastern European Tradition!

Used to just leave a little something by DD's bed so that when she woke up in the morning it was there! Always had to make sure it wasn't breakable though!LOL

Now that she is older and realizes it's MOM, I've stopped doing it! At our Credit Union they used to have a "St. Nick" dressed up and then I would take DD to have her pic taken. She was always surprised that he knew her name! and if she acted up while at the bank! I miss those days when she was young and naive!

Well at least she still believes in the "MOUSE"!LOL

Scratch
pirate:
 
did a quick search online -


How Is St. Nicholas Day Celebrated?

Europeans have been celebrating the good saint for centuries, each country with its own twist on tradition. But it's the Netherlands' tradition that immigrated to the United States.


According to songs about the holiday, St. Nicholas resides in Spain, spending most of the year recording the behavior of all children in a big red book.

In the Netherlands, St. Nicholas Eve includes festive family dinners, after which Sinter Klass (the Dutch pronunciation of St. Nicholas) often appears with his helper, Black Peter. They may offer cookies and candies, or give a mock lecture to children on good behavior.

In some traditions, St. Nicholas doesn't appear that night at all, but instead, a loud knock is heard and a bag of gifts is left on the doorstep.

Later that night, St. Nicholas visits each house on a white horse. He listens through the chimneys to check the children's behavior, and then jumps down the chimney flue to exchange the carrot or hay left by the children in their shoes for a small gift or some candy.

However, bad children don't receive such nice gifts. Instead, they will receive onions, coal -- or switches.

The tradition of children leaving shoes by the fireplace eventually evolved in to today's Christmas stockings.

According to The Holland Ring online, St. Nicholas Day is traditionally when people are expected to poke light-hearted fun at one another. They are also expected to make their gifts, or disguise them in a creative way -- or even hide them and leave a trail of clues. Gifts are traditionally accompanied by poems.
 
We celebrated it when we were little in PA. Lived in a very German-influenced area. We would put our shoes out on the night of the 5th and would get a little "treat" in it on the morning of the 6th -- candy, etc. That was about all we did, though.
 
We celebrated it when I was a kid , too. We'd put our shoes by the front door and find candy in them in the morning. Fun way to start the Christmas season!
With that in mind, are you serious about giving your son coal? I can't imagine setting my kids up for that kind of disappointment. How will that affect your relationship a few years down the line when they realize it was you who was behind such meanness? Something to think about....
 
Last year I started puting the gifts around their little tree in their room.
 
growing up we always put our shoes on the hearth the night before and in the morning they were filled with some candy and maybe a small toy like a mini-barbie type doll. for some reason we usually got orange slices...yum! I loved celebrating St. Nicholas day...it helped take a bit of the edge off of that horrible wait until Santa finally came. Oh, and typical of 70s kids, me and my sisters actually owned clogs, which is what we usually set out.

I haven't decided whether or not to continue the tradition with my own kids. I have done it with my dh some years, though, even though he never celebrated it growing up. Daniel is 21 months now and its time to decide whether or not to keep it up for him (and the 2 on the way). When I was growing up most families on our block celebrated but here noone has really heard of it.
 
I went to first grade at St. Nicholas Grammar School in Ohio. I remember telling St. Nick what I wanted for Christmas. And yes, I couldn't have told you the date, but I remember that it was early in December. Nothing like getting first-graders hyped for Christmas early!
 
We have always celebrated St Nick day. Seems that where we are it is very localized. My mom, who grew up 2 hours north of where we live had never heard of St Nick until she moved to the area, and I was mentioning to my SIL last year that St Nick would have to come to Disney, because we were down there last year at this time, and she didn't know what St Nick day was.
 
My ds' preschool is having them bring in an extra shoe tomorrow to get a "treat" and learn about the tradition. It doesn't seem to be well-known here, one of my neighbor's said "don't you have to have a wooden shoe?" :rolleyes:

I think it's a cute way to teach them about a different heritage, the teacher also asked any families with other special traditions to share them.
 
We have always used Stockings. My mom use to get the ones that were bigger then us and fill them. I will be giving my son coal but i will also give him a little something else as well. I want him to be aware of his behavior. He is 4 and still wets and poops his pants. He knows the difference but refuses to listen when he is home and gets lazy.
 
We used to celebrate St. Nicholas Day when I was little. We'd put our shoes out at night and in the morning there would be a treat. I'll probably continue the tradition with my children... when we decide to have them.
 


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