Strange Easter Traditions


As spring is here, also here is Easter. And maybe you are looking for some new traditions for this year.
Read these odd traditions in countries all around the world and maybe you can find something for yourself.

As a Latvian I have to say that couple of these traditions does not seem so strange, but looking at it from a different perspective, other cultures might consider some traditions a bit strange.


1.  As if men needed any more excuses to stay out of the kitchen, in Poland men do not take part in baking the Easter bread because his moustache will turn grey and the dough will fail to rise.

2. Well, here’s one different way of using eggs in a not so very strange Easter tradition. Easter omelettes are a big way of celebrating the occasion right across France but they do it just a bit differently in Haux in the Nantes province. Every Easter Monday the townspeople of take their eggs to a huge pan in the main square and make a huge omelette. More than 4,500 eggs are used to create a dish that feeds 1,000 people.

3.Do you want to know how to maintain your health and beauty throughout the next year? Well if you live in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland and some parts of Hungary it’s easy. On Easter Monday you just wait your turn for the men to throw water at you and spank you with a handmade whip of willow decorated with ribbons. “Pomlazka” is also meant to get rid of the ugly and bad things of winter. Many countries with an Orthodox population celebrate this in some form or another but in most cases it is just the water throwing. It is known in variable connotations of Dyngus Day. 
In Latvia we also have this kind of tradition but without water throwing. You can whip your loved ones with a willow whip saying: Out the sickness, in with a health. (Translation may be a bit off, but the thought is there).




4. Greece has many festivals and Saints Days because Easter is more important than Christmas in the Orthodox calendar but amongst their strangest traditions is in Corfu when they throw crockery and pots out of the windows on Easter Saturday. There are a few theories that try to explain this. Some say it represents the rejection of Judas, others say it is simply the exuberance of having a smashing time after the abstinence of Lent, other theorists expound it symbolises getting rid of evil, others that it marks the change of the season when old pots of last year’s harvest are exchanged for new and others think it’s adopted from the old Venetian custom of throwing out your winter things ready for new ones for Spring. Whatever the reason, if you visit Corfu at Easter time be sure to wear your hard hat.

5. In a small town called Bacup in the North of England, every Easter Saturday you can watch the Nutter's Dance. No it isn’t a day the lunatics escape from the asylum but the name given to a strange Easter tradition that has been performed in the town, boundary to boundary, since the 18th century. Led by the Whiffler (or Whipper In) who cracks his whip to drive away evil spirits, a band of men with blackened faces and skirted red, white and black costumes and neck garlands dance traditional folk dances. The origin is believed to have been Moorish sailors who ended up in the area somehow, hence the face coloring and costume style but why it happens on Easter Saturday, there’s no real explanation.

6. Usually, all over the world it is the Easter Bunny that brings in the chocolates and hides the eggs, but in Australia it is an Easter Bilby that brings the eggs. One reason behind this interesting change is to create awareness on bilby which is an endangered species in Australia and another reason is a dislike towards the bunnies which destroy the crops. On Easter, chocolate bilbies will be made.



7. I have to admit that I find this strange Easter tradition the most surprising of all and I’m not sure that the answer is "the butler did it." In Norway, Easter is a five day bank holiday where all shops and businesses close. Grocery stores open on the Saturday before Easter Sunday but otherwise during the holiday shut down Norwegians celebrate Easter by reading tons of crime novels known as Påskekrimmen. TV stations also join in by broadcasting plenty of crime thrillers and magazines print stories for readers to work out a whodunit. Even milk cartons are altered where for a couple of weeks a mystery story is printed on their sides. Why? It’s a mystery!

8.  In Finland, the Easter celebrations have a Halloween look as the children dress up as witches with broomsticks hanged around their necks. They wander in the streets in search of treats. It is believed that during the festival, witches become more powerful and bonfires are made to scare them off.
9. Another strange Easter tradition that you will find practised in some form or another right across Christian countries is the lucky egg game. Hardboiled eggs are used in various ways until only one unbroken one is left and the person holding that egg has good luck until next Easter. In Latvia it is performed like a game of conkers, in Greece the eggs are dyed red representing the blood of Christ and you bang the eggs on your neighbour’s heads and in England it is known as Egg Jarping and around the world it might be known as egg tapping or egg knocking.
10. Colombians have strange dinner menu for the Easter day. Instead of chocolates and eggs, they dine on iguana, turtles and big rodents for the feast.
11. In other countries Easter eggs are hidden and children go for egg hunting but in Germany Easter eggs instead are displayed on trees and prominently in  streets. Some of the trees will have thousands of multi color eggs hanged on them.


Happy Easter everyone!


Weirdest USA's laws pt1



This is a very small part of all of the strange laws that I went trough. It is amazing how many of those there are and one more odd than previous. So here they are grouped by states. 
I know there is a lot to read, but every one of theme is interesting.





Alabama
  • It is illegal to play dominoes on Sunday.
  • It is illegal to wear a fake mustache that causes laughter in church.
  • Bear wrestling matches are prohibited.
  • Men may not spit in front of the opposite sex.
  • Masks may not be worn in public.
  • Solitare may not be played on Sundays.
  • In Lee County it's illegal to sell peanuts after sundown on Wednesday.


Alaska
  • Huskies are not allowed in school buildings.
  • No child may build a snowman taller than himself on school property.
  • In Fairbanks it's illegal to feed alcoholic beverages to a Moose.

Arizona
  • Donkeys are not permitted to sleep in bathtubs.
  • There is a possible 25 year prison stay for anyone cutting down a cactus.
  • In Glendale it's illegal to drive a car in reverse.
  • In Maricopa County no more than 6 girls may live in any house.
  • In Nogales one can't wear suspenders.
  • In Tombstone it's illigal for men and women over the age of 18 to have less than 1 missing tooth visible while smiling.

Arkansas
  • A man can beat his wife yet only once per month.
  • In Little Rock dogs can't bark after 6pm.
  • In Little Rock if a man and woman flirt with each other on the streets they could be jailed for 30 days.
California
  • It is illegal to set a mousetrap without a hunting license.
  • Animals are banned from mating publicly within 1,500 feet from a tavern,school or place of worship.
  • Woman can't drive while wearing a housecoat.
  • Bathhouses are illegal.
  • It's illegal to eat an orange while in the bathtub.
  • In Arcadia peacocks have the right of way on any street.
  • In Blyth a person must own two cows before s/he is permitted to wear cowboy boots in public.
  • In Pasadena it's illegal for a secretary to be alone in a room with her boss.
  • In Los Angeles it's illegal to cry on a witness stand in any state court.
  • In Los Angeles it's also illegal to bathe two babies in the same tub at the same time.
    Colorado
  • It's illegal to ride a horse while drunk.
  • In Denver it's also against the law to loan your next door neighbor your vacuum.
  • In Logan County, it is illegal for a man to kiss a woman while she is asleep.
  • In Sterling a loose pet cat must have a tail light.
Connecticut
  • It's illegal to dispose of used razorblades.
  • Any one caught biking (riding a bicycle)over 65mph will be ticketed.
  • In Devon it's against the law to walk backwards after sunset.
  • In Hartford it's illegal to educate a dog.
  • In Hartford a man can't kiss his wife on sundays.

Delaware
  • Getting married on a dare is grounds for an annulment.
  • On Fenwich Island it's illegal to lie down on a beach at night.
  • In Lewes it's illegal to wear pants that are "form fitting" around the waist.
  • In Rehoboth one may not wisper in church.
  • In Rehoboth changing into or out of a swimsuit in a public restroom is prohibited.



Florida
  • It's illegal for a single, divorced, or widowed woman to Parachute on Sunday afternoons.
  • It's against the law to dream about another man's wife or cow.
  • It's illegal to sing in a public place while attired in a swimsuit.
  • It's considered an offense to shower naked.
  • It's illegal to skateboard without a license.
  • It's against the law to put livestock on a school bus.
  • In Miami it's forbidden to imitate an animal.
Georgia

  • It's illegal to tie a giraffe to a telephone pole.
  • A school girl must offer to carry a school boy's books if they are walking together.
  • In Columbus it's illegal to sit on your porch in an indecent position.
  • In Johnsboro it's illegal to say "Oh,boy".
  • In Quitman it's illegal for chickens to cross the road.



Hawaii
  • It's illegal to appear in public wearing only swimming trunks.
  • It's illegal to put pennies in your ear.
  • All residents may be fined for not owning a boat.
  • Twins can't work for the same company.

Idaho
  • Boxes of candy given as romantic gifts must weigh over 50lbs.
  • In Idaho falls it's illegal for anyone over 88 to ride a motorcycle.
  • In Tamarack it's illegal to purchase onions after dark except with a special permit from the sheriff.

Illinois
  • You may be arrested for vagrancy if you do not have at least a one dollar bill on your person.
  • In Chicago it's illegal to take a French poodle to the opera.
  • In Joilet it's illegal for one to mispronounce the city's name.
  • In Zion it's illigal to teach pets to smoke cigars.

Indiana
  • It's illegal to bathe in the winter time.
  • Liquor stores can't sell milk or cold soft drinks.
  • In Elkhart it's illegal for a barber to threaten to cut a child's ears off.
  • In Gary one can't attend a public theater or ride on public transport within 4 hrs of eating an onion or garlic.
Iowa

  • A man with a mustache can't kiss a woman in public.
  • Kisses can't last for more than 5 minutes
  • In Mount Vernon no one can pick a flower from a city park.
  • In Mount Vernon all softball diamond lights must be turned off at 10:30 pm.
  • Within Ottumwa city limits a man can't wink to any woman he doesn't know.










Some Odd Places to Visit

Tired of the usual tours to crowded places and looking for some unique experience on your summer vacation? Here are some weird tours that are offered for tourists. 

 Weird Meat tour, Shanghai

Fans of the reality game show "Fear Factor" are used to seeing people eat the most disgusting things. But in Shanghai, where the UnTour company says "people will eat anything with four legs except a table, and anything with wings except an airplane," dining on scorpion skewers and fried honey bees is par for the (main) course. The 3.5-hour Weird Meat tour ($220 for up to three people) visits several back-alley restaurants and night markets, where dragonflies and duck tongue — along with plenty of beer for courage — are all on the menu.


Abandoned subway tours, Cincinnati
Tired of squeezing into packed subway cars during rush hour? You won't have to deal with that headache in Cincinnati, home to the largest complex of abandoned subway tunnels in North America. Tours of the more than three kilometres of darkened tunnels are occasionally offered by the Cincinnati Museum Center and Over-The-Rhine Foundation. They consist of wandering around the spooky passageways — wearing hardhats and toting flashlights — while a guide explains why trains aren't trundling down the tracks, part of a project started in 1920 that's now known as "one of Cincinnati's biggest failures."

Trolley Dances, San Diego
This public transit tour is nothing like its Cincinnatian counterpart (or any other tour for that matter). The 13th instalment of the event — running six times daily Sept. 24-25 and Oct. 1-2 — sees guests and a guide hop on one of San Diego's quaint trolleys, which then whisks them to six stops where the San Diego Dance Theatre stages shows in the public squares, pools and fountains along the way. Think of it as a mix of dance recital, city tour and flash mob ($30 for adults).



Brighton Sewer Tours
Ever wonder what happens after you flush the toilet? Didn't think so. But visitors to the seaside town of Brighton, England, are apparently intrigued by the city's subterranean workings. Tours of the "award-winning- sewers" have "become established as a highly popular attraction for tourists and local residents," according to the Southern Water utility that runs the hour-long, $20 outings. First off, who knew sewers could win awards? It seems Brighton's system is among the best examples of Victorian waste disposal, which could be why the sewers were named the "Best Place to Visit in Brighton" in 2007. We're not sure what this says about the rest of Brighton ...


Historic Toilet Tour, York
Who knew the British were so obsessed with their loos? The northern English city of York is a hotbed of history, with a world-class Viking museum, spectacular Gothic cathedral and well-preserved Roman walls. What ties all this history together? Toilets, of course, which is why
York Walk offers its "Historic Toilet Tour," a $10 "jaunt through the pungent history of the public toilet." While strolling across the famous Lendal Bridge and around Exhibition Square, visitors will learn about Viking toilets (fetid pits in the ground), Roman facilities (they had seats and everything!) and medieval garderobes (which often emptied into castle moats). Note: make sure you go before you go.




Red Light District Sex Tour, Chicago
Billed as "America's only sex tour" by Weird Chicago, this titillating three-hour jaunt takes in the steamy side of the Windy City. It includes Chicago's original red light districts (once quite racy, now quite yuppified); the world's first Playboy Club (the subject of an upcoming NBC TV series); and various adults-only toy shops and S&M boutiques. Needless to say, the $30 tour is for adults only, and according to Weird Chicago requires "clothing, open minds and polite attitudes." It's good that they're clear about the "clothing" part.

Chernobyl tours
Note to visitors: don't forget your lead underwear. More than two decades after the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in Ukraine,
Solo East Travel is offering $450 "ecological tours" of the crippled power plant and surrounding region. Visitors get to see the infamous Reactor No. 4 (from about 100 metres away), the eerie "dead town" of Pripyat — complete with abandoned ferris wheel and empty public swimming pool — and the "red forest" where pine trees have changed colour because of radiation. You even get to feed catfish in one of the power plant's cooling channels and measure radiation levels yourself — just to see if the tour was really such a good idea.

Illegal Border Crossing Tour, Hidalgo, Mexico
Had enough of Mexico's cushy all-inclusive resorts and breezy cabana bars? This four-hour "caminata nocturna" — a guided night hike — skirts the desert hills and dry riverbeds of Parque EcoAlberto , an ecological reserve about 800 kilometres south of the real U.S. border. But this isn't just any evening stroll: participants follow a fake smuggler under real barbed wire fences in an effort to cross a fake border patrolled by fake police officers who'll blind you with real spotlights and even shoot at you — using blanks, of course — in an effort to slow you down.


That is it for now! Stay tuned... Next post will continue traveling topic.

Source: http://travel.ca.msn.com/international/photogallery.aspx?cp-documentid=30152324

5 Weird Animated Films



''A Scanner Darkly” (2006)
Richard Linklater's second animated feature . Instead of aimless stoner philosophizing, Linklater chose a Philip K. Dick novel about a drug enforcement agent (Keanu Reeves) who becomes a hostage of his own addiction. As heartbreaking as it is exhilarating, the breezy, impressionistic rotoscoped animation is the perfect fit for the material: when the characters are feeling anxious or high, the animation warbles accordingly. But the greatest feat is the "scramble suit," a disguise that the agents use to hide their identities. A constantly shifting mass , it, like the movie, is impossible to pin down… or take your eyes off of.




''The Tune” (1992)
Certainly any of Bill Plympton's animated features would fit comfortably on the list, but it's his bizarre musical debut that remains closest to the heart. Following songwriter Del on a quest to write the perfect song in hopes to impress both boss and main squeeze, the filmmaker takes every opportunity in this charming collection of vignettes to showcase pure weirdness, with some catchy songs thrown in for good mesaure



''Yellow Submarine'' (1968)

(As a fan of Beatles this is my favorite)
For all of its hallucinogenic trippiness, which makes it a favorite for late night tokers, "Yellow Submarine" endures thanks to its inherent sweetness, like an early-animated "Sesame Street" segment gone off the rails. Instead of trying to judge the movie based on any sort of narrative coherence or storytelling skill (basically concerning itself with the Blue Meanies, a band of monstrous cretins, and their attack on free will, imagination, and general grooviness – all the things the animated Beatles stand for), the movie works best as a kind of jukebox musical, packed with references to the band and their songwriting. The animation, for all its primal crudity, has an easily enjoyed charm, with a flower-power liquescence to the movement of characters (and the titular underwater vehicle). 




Fantastic Planet” (1973)
Now here's a film that kisses the idea of outlandish cult films on the mouth. Director René Laloux and artist Roland Topor team up for this short & strange sci-fi, demanding both attention and interpretation as they revel in their (never forced) bat-shit ways. On an alien planet, humans (known as Ohms) are cultivated by an alien race known as Draags, which are giant spiritual beings who either keep Ohms as pets or ban them from their civilization with an occasional extermination cycle. The narrative follows pet Ohm Terr who ends up learning the Draag culture and escaping to the wild, spreading his wisdom to an unwilling and religious tribe. Laloux, like a pro, keeps dialogue to a minimum and allows the weirdness to speak for itself , focusing on the two societies' rituals and relationships with each other and the wildlife. There's some ardent metaphors here, definitely, but if that's not your cup of tea, it contains probably the greatest soundtrack ever. 




Heavy Metal” (1981)
Rewatching "Heavy Metal," which recently made its way to the glorious Blu-ray high-definition format, what becomes very apparent is the influence that the second story in the loose, tits-and-blood anthology (based on the cult sci-fi magazine of the same time), had on Luc Besson's "The Fifth Element." It, like "Element," centers around a gruff, unspeakably jaded New York City taxi cab driver (Richard Romanus) who stumbles across a beautiful girl with a secret, and unwittingly becomes her ally. The rest of the movie remains pretty cool (it's nifty to see artwork by icons like Richard Corben, up on screen, moving around), but the herky-jerky animation style is often times too sketchy to be fully enjoyed. Part of this is due to the movie's cheapness, another part due to the often rotoscoped images (sort of an early motion capture), but a lot of it has to do with the attitude of "Heavy Metal" – the source material was definitely 100% "fuck you," why should the movie be any different?


That is it for now. Don't be shy to share if you liked! Thanks :)

Source of information: http://blogs.indiewire.com




The Most Weirdest Tribes

I would like to introduce you with couple of the most unusual groups of people.



1. WaYao - clearly they are not the most usual human beings. The Yao people or waYao are a major ethnic and linguistic group based at the southern end of Lake Malawi in Africa. These people played an important part in the history of East Africa during the 19th century. The waYao are a predominantly Muslim people group of about 2 million spread over Malawi, Mozambique and Tanzania.


2. Surma people - Surma women have the weirdest mouths in the world. Surma is the collective name for the Suri, the Mursi and the Me'en with a total population of more than 186,000. Suri is the name of a sedentary pastoral people while Mursi is the name of closely related sedentary pastoral peopleSuri or Shuri is the name of a sedentary pastoral people whose language is over 80% cognate with Suri. Here you can get a closer look to them ( WARNING: May contain some disturbing pictures) 







3. Hamer people
Hamer are tribal people in southwestern Ethiopia. Cow jumping is a rite of passage for men, that must be done before a man is permitted to marry. The man-to-be must "jump the cattle" four times to be successful and only castrated male cattle and cows may be used to jump over. This test is performed while naked as a symbol of the childhood he is about to leave behind him. Upon completion of the test, the young man joins the ranks of the maza – a group of men who recently passed the test. They will spend together the next few months of their lives in supervising the events in villages throughout the Hamer territory.
In this video you can see this ritual as a part of wedding.




4. Bushmen - Have you seen the film “The Gods Must Be Crazy”? You’ll learn more about the Bushmen if you’’ see the film. The indigenous people of southern Africa are variously referred to as Bushmen, San, Sho, Barwa, Kung, or Khwe. These people were traditionally hunter-gatherer. They switched to farming as mandated by the government for modernization programs. 
And there is a little insight in the lives of Bushmen


SOURCE: http://spirituality.knoji.com