Published 1st Feb. 2022
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To the 80% of the planet's population that aren't Chinese, the celebration practices of Chinese New Year are still shrouded in relative mystery, save for abstract flashes of association: the colour red! Dancing dragons! Paper lanterns! Thus, we shed light on how some of China's big cities celebrate the Spring Festival, as it's also known.
New Year's celebrations date back hundreds of years in China's capital, Beijing, which is buzzing at this time of year. At midnight on the 30th, there's an enormous fireworks display which is unparalleled by Western efforts. The fireworks continue on and off for 15 days - no big deal; just be sure to pack ear plugs. The evening ends as all good evenings should, with traditional dumpling eating to signify prosperity. It's on New Year's Day that residents start to make the rounds, visiting relatives armed with the famed hong bao - red envelopes containing money, to non-Mandarin speakers. If you're visiting Beijing over the Spring Festival (as Chinese New Year is also known), make a beeline for a temple fair: they're a great showcase of Chinese culture, folk art, and - most importantly - the fabled dragon and lion dances. You'll catch all of the above, as well as reenactments of the Qing Dynasty's worship ceremonies, at the Ditan Temple Fair - but if you're after a more authentic experience, head to the Hongluo Temple Fair.
New Year's celebrations are wonderfully varied in Hong Kong. There's an annual flower market, which opens around ten days before New Year and closes in the early morning of New Year's Day; a parade with floats; and various sporting events, from the Chinese New Year Race Day (a popular horse race) to the Lunar New Year Cup (a football tournament). One of our favourite traditions happens on the eve of the big day: worshippers wait outside Wong Tai Sin Temple (a famous tourist spot) and rush inside once New Year begins, hoping to be the first to offer incense to Wong Tai Sin, a deity with healing powers.
Harbin has become renowned solely for the eponymous Harbin International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival, which officially opens on the 5th of January. As the name suggests, ice and snow carvings are the main attraction here: imagine whole cities of life-sized luminous ice palaces and great monoliths of sculpted powder, and you'll begin to get the picture. A little like Legoland, if it were made out of winter weather.
The largest city by population in China, New Year is probably the only time in Shanghai that you'll be able to enjoy relative peace and quiet, as most of it's inhabitants - and, subsequently, it's infrastructure - grinds to a halt. Never fear: it doesn't mean that celebrations get sidelined. The Lantern Festival on the 14th of February is a particularly pretty tradition that this year sees Shanghai's Yu Garden illuminated and adorned with special horse and dragon lanterns.
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