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Opinionopinion

The wonderful and weird aspects of Christmas

Steven McCabe looks into the weird and wonderful traditions of Christmas from around the world.

If you didn’t know, carp is regarded as a delicacy in Poland, particularly at Christmas. Apparently it is common for the fish to be caught in rivers and kept alive in the bath until Christmas Eve.

Indeed, The Daily Mail reported recently that concerns about poaching by Eastern Europeans immigrants were such as to require the Environment Agency to spend an additional £150,000 on protecting our rivers.

To meet the demand from the large Eastern European community who live in this country, supermarket retailers Sainsury’s and Tesco have announced that they will be stocking carp this Christmas.

For millions of us carp will not be on the menu for Christmas and the traditional meal will consist of turkey with ‘all the trimmings’ followed by pudding topped with brandy sauce. 

If you include all the sweets and alcohol that is consumed, you can expect to take in around 7000 calories.

Given that our normal intake is 2000 Christmas can be quite a shock to our digestive system. The guilt we suffer is one of the reasons gymnasiums are so keen to sign new members in January though they will usually demand a year’s subscription knowing that most people will give up long before Easter!

As well as being a celebration of the birth of Christ (see below for ‘some’ clarification), Christmas is, of course, good news for business.

Most retailers expect to have increased trade and some depend on having a good Christmas. Woolworths, a notable casualty of the recession, collapsed in November 2008 because it was so far in debt it could no longer raise sufficient in order to pay its suppliers.