Australian Christmas Imagery

Christmas comes at the beginning of winter, so our festivities often incorporate fireplaces, comfy sweaters, hot cocoa, and sleigh rides with jingle bells. No to mention fatty winter food, evergreen trees, snowflakes, and plenty of other winter iconography.

But Christmas isn't cold for everyone. Head south of the equator, where Santa makes his rounds a few scant days after the summer solstice, and the imagery of the festive season starts to gets a little confused. This is particularly evident in Australia, where British and American cultural influences collide with the inescapable realities of the weather, resulting in a lot of sweaty people in Santa hats lolling about on Bondi Beach.

Australians still love Father Christmas in his fur-trimmed coat (which he can take off), but he doesn’t have reindeer, which only live in the arctic. See some wonderful images of Christmas in Australia from the past and present at Atlas Obscura.

(Image credit: State Library of Queensland)


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I moved to south Texas to get away from cold. Having already done my time in OR, WA, & upstate NY, I decided I never again want to scrape ice off a windshield, shovel snow, bundle up just to check the mailbox, or sit on a freezing cold toilet seat first thing in the morning.
All week it's been in the high 70s. It's after 11PM and the windows to my house are still open.
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Just TRY living in the deep South after living way up North and you will truly appreciate the cold northern weather. I moved deep south 7 years ago, my biggest regret to date, and I miss the snow. I miss the smell of apples in the fall and the maple leaves turning their glorious colors. I miss my kids/grandkids jumping in piles of leaves and then, later, burning the leaves and popping foil wrapped potatoes into the embers to cook and feast upon later in the evening. The potatoes have a flavor unlike any restaurant can recreate! Oh, how I wish I were back up North...
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