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Christmas celebrations start at church with a
Nativity Play and Mass |
Sursee for Christmas was a lovely international affair with lots of family made up of Kiwi's / Swiss & Italian.
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Delicious Christmas Eve Dinner |
Christmas Eve was the Swiss Christmas celebrations at Amanda & Rico's, with their two children (Luna & Caio), Rico's Mum & sister, and three of Rico's Italian cousins. We attended a church service before our dinner, where Luna was involved in the Christmas Nativity. Luckily Bill and I already new the story as it was all conducted in Swiss-German, including the Christmas Hymn's. We could at least hum to them as we knew the tunes.
On returning to the house, Christmas presents had been delivered by "Christchlindli" (Christ-Child is the traditional gift-bringer in Switzerland & other European countries on Christmas Eve encouraged by Martin Luther in the 16th century to discourage the figure of Saint Nicholas - Santa Claus) while we were out! So lots of excitement with presents being opened, we all did well. Then we had a delicious evening of various fish courses, deserts and of course wonderful wines. A perfect start to Christmas.
With the Petrillo household being Kiwi as well as Swiss, Santa made an appearance sometime through the night delivering more presents! How wonderful for Luna and Caio to enjoy both cultures festivities and still young enough to accept them without query. Makes it all the more fun for us adults.
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Bill & Rico with manual for Lego
Note: not a child in sight! |
Christmas day started with a champagne breakfast, moved onto Rico's parents home to celebrate Christmas the Swiss-German way with a lot more Swiss families of Uncle, Aunts, Cousins and friends. Sadly Rico's father, Beniamino, had passed away at the beginning of November, so this first Christmas without him was felt by all family & friends. At 69 far too young. All the more reason to make the most of life, and get out there and enjoy!
There was more eating of traditional Christmas fare. Great to experience another cultures celebration of Christmas when we were so far from our own children and families. We were made very welcome and part of the extended family.
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Lovely walk in the woods
Luna almost looking me in the eye |
Thankfully Bill & I could walk the hour home afterwards to work off some of the festive food.
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We found a little Fairy Grotto |
Unfortunately the snow never eventuated for Christmas, or at all while we were in Switzerland, but we had beautiful, mostly clear frosty days, temperatures down as low as 1 or 2 degrees, below on a couple of days. Truly beautiful! And as you dress for the weather there and the homes are so well insulated and heated, you don't mind the cold when the days are so perfect. Except you do need an extra ten minutes to get ready to get all the gear on :)
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Break time on a walk in the woods |
We had lots of lovely walks through the woods near Amanda & Rico's. The surrounding hills are farm land where the villages exist, and with no fences, the land is very picturesque as you can see in the photo's. Pity NZ wasn't more like this, but we didn't see a lot of live stock so quite different to NZ in that aspect, and a reason they can exist like this. One of our walks was to Rico's Grandmother in the nearby village of Nebikon that should have taken two hours, but took us three with two children "whingeing" as Luna told us her & Caio sometimes did. She told Bill & I the story of another walk they did "that took six hours, with whingeing more"
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View from Klewenalp inside cable car |
We had a perfect day up on Klewenalp, approx 1200m above Lake Lucerne. Only problem of the day was that Cable Cars were the only mode of transport to get up and back down the Alp. Cable Cars are so numerous on the Alps which make up
Switzerland so no one thinks anything of them except me! We got into the large cage/carriage to go up and they just kept squeezing more and more into it before it departed. I was wedged right in the middle with my eyes shut all the way, not that I could have seen a thing if I had opened them. As I am writing this blog, you will now be aware we did make it and back quite safely!
Once at the top, it was very picturesque (one can't over use that word in Switzerland),
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A little bit of Hop Federation on the Alp |
and although the majority of people in our group were disappointed in the lack of
snow, there was sufficient for children & adults to have fun on the sledges we had taken up with us.
Once back down, we called into some Irish friends of A&R who now live there and celebrated Christmas in the Irish/English/Swiss way with a drink or two before returning back to Sursee where we stopped in at Rico's Mum's for a Raclette Cheese evening. This was a new experience for us and quite different to a Fondue evening, in that meat is cooked on
the top plate of a small cooker you put in the middle of the table, and grill "Raclette" cheese under the grill below the hot plate. You then pour the melted yummy cheese over tasty new potatoes (previously cooked) and the meat.
Delicious! God knows what Bill's cholesterol level will be by the time we return to NZ!
We had an afternoon in the woods cooking sausages, Bill in his element over the smoky fire. It is traditional in Switzerland that all Swiss kids get given pocket knives (Swiss knives of course) at some point, and having just had
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Bill happy with smokey sausages |
Christmas, all four children with us were whittling all afternoon. And I'm pleased to say no one lost a finger or were injured in anyway :) Our sausages in bread were accompanied with a cup of hot Gluhwein (mulled wine). Perfect!
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Luna & Caio whittling away |
A&R managed to get a day's pampering at a Day Spa while Bill & I looked after the kids - no one got hurt or cried, so I think we did well :) Our kids, should you ever get around to reading our blog, that is not an encouragement to have grandchildren just yet. But we did enjoy our time with Luna & Caio and seeing the world through their eyes.
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View out over the fields on our walk to Nebikon |
We saw the New Year in with A&R, Rico's mum, and a lovely Swiss/South African couple (Daniel & Jenny) with their young sons Olli & Thomas. The game of pictionary kept us all awake till midnight, just sad the men lost! Oops did I write that!
New Years day was a nice relaxed one, with a forest walk in the morning, and then a walk into town in the afternoon to have a lovely meal with Swiss couple Chris & Sabina & their two boys Noah & Jan, in their new home. Best lamb we have ever eaten& it wasn't NZ lamb !!!. Cooked to absolute perfection, thankyou Chris & Sabina.
Their home was being built when we were there back in June, so it was nice to see the finished home. Bill is very impressed with the building materials and designs that
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Perfect shelter to keep firewood dry |
the Swiss put into their homes. The high density buildings that have to be built in order to accommodate large populations in small villages are amazing in design. This home was one of four units, three floors high. A common basement takes all the
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Another perfect frosty day in Sursee |
vehicles, bikes, gear that most have in garages, plus more storage. And then you head up into each separate home which are built up over this basement area, giving large lawn areas out the front of each home. They end up quite separate to each other, great design, huge homes on less land that would be required back in NZ.
The next day it was time to return to Spain, only a 2.5hr flight from Zurich. We had a wonderful stay Amanda & Rico, thank you for so many new experiences of other cultures.
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Green - Flight Malaga to Copenhagen
Blue - Nightmare overnight train to Sursee
Pink - Flight Zurich to Malaga, back in Spain |