
And with this day we began our Christmas Holidays, which consist in these day:
-Tomorrow, December 22th, it's the National Health Day. Why? you may ask. Because tomorrow the great Christmas Lottery is going to happen. The big prize is 3 millions of euros. Since it's very difficult that you win the big prize, almost everybody this day greet each other with a "Well, at least we have health"

-December 24th, Christmas Eve, it's tradition that every child in the Basque Country dresses like a farmer of the 19th century and tries to destroy good citizens ears with very out of tune carols. Like this: http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=EDlOSSbNkLk&feature=related (notice the children are dressed like they will be in December 24th. The first part it's the boy explaining in Basque what's the song about. If you want to know, it's about a son or daughter -the girl with the suitcase- that comes back to his/her parents home and sees them again, and she also sees his/her grandmother and grandfather roasting chestnuts). By the way, what they're trying to sing is this song: http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=7Oje9aK09c8&feature=related (see their clothes? That's because it's December 24th). Since a lot of people go out singing carols (and wanting money for that) we don't open the door to anybody. And when we go to grandma's place for dinner, we use ninja tactics of stealth.
-December 25th, Christmas. Spanish people didn't use to make gifts this day, but globalization is globalization, so a lot of Spanish children have adopted Santa Claus. Basque children don't need that, we're so stup-- errr... special that we have our own Santa Claus: Olentzero. In my family this day we have a sacred tradition: the Annual Game of Trivial Pursuit. After being painfully defeated by the group formed by my two Aunts and sister the last year, I've practiced all these months to win and recover my crown again

-December 31th, New Year's Eve. Nothing remarkable except one thing: in Spain we have the tradition of eating twelve white grapes, one for each stroke of the bell. Yeah, like a competition. There are rules: you don't eat any grape before the strokes begin, you have to eat one grape for each stroke and you have to eat all of them. Obviously, the scene ends up being very funny: Grandma claims in the sixth stroke that she's eaten all the grapes already


-January 1st, New Year. Also known as Day of the Hangover


-January 5th, the Day before the Three Wise Men's Day. This is the night where Spanish children can't sleep because the nerves, because in Spain it's tradition to make gifts in January 6th and not December 25th. We still do it in January 6th. At dusk, the Parade with the Floats begin in every Spanish city and town. We aren't an exception




- January 6th, Day of the Three Wise Men. Traditions: gifts, of course, and eating what we call Roscón the Reyes (French King Cake for you; ours looks like this). Delicious. Of course our cake has trinket

And this is all. Oh, yes, just to say that although in out home we put the three, Spanish tradition is to put a Nativity Scene.