“Strive to make everyday the best day of your life, because there is no good reason not to.” Hal Elrod
Easter is big in Denmark. It kicks off the summer season after a long, dull Nordic winter, and the Danes go all in for it. Â a
For Danes Easter means being together with loved ones, relaxing and having fun making new memories.
Here are a few ways Danes celebrate Easter.
Decorate the Home
Like everywhere else in the world, the egg is a major symbol of Easter, also in Denmark. It symbolizes new life and a new beginning. For decoration using egg shells, you can blow out your own egg by making a tiny hole at the bottom and top with a needle. You might decorate some hard boiled eggs and have them on the side to admire. You could collect some twigs from your garden and hang home made salt dough decorations on them too.
Spring flowers are also collected and displayed inside the home to embrace the element of nature.
Get Together
During Easter, Danes celebrate mostly the arrival of springtime and with Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, Easter Sunday and Easter Monday being national holida...
Â
Midsummer in Sweden is one of the most magical and meaningful times of the year. Falling on June 21st, it marks the summer solstice—a time when the sun barely dips below the horizon. In the northernmost parts of Scandinavia, it doesn’t set at all!
Going back to the 1500s, Midsummer was seen as a mystical period when fertility levels—of both the land and people—were at their peak. Swedes would decorate the outside of their homes and farms with lush green foliage to honour nature’s bounty and bring good fortune.
As Sweden moved into the industrial age, Midsummer became a special time for community. Mill workers would gather for a hearty feast—pickled herring being the star of the table, a tradition that’s still going strong today!
In more recent times, Midsummer has blossomed...