Weird Canadian Traditions and Superstitions
Lisa Wojna
Disponibilité:
Ebook en format PDF. Disponible pour téléchargement immédiat après la commande.
Ebook en format PDF. Disponible pour téléchargement immédiat après la commande.
Éditeur:
Blue Bike Books
Blue Bike Books
Protection:
ACS4
ACS4
Année de parution:
2009
2009
ISBN-13:
9781897278871
Description:
Don't walk under ladders! Place a star on the top of your Christmas tree. Superstitions and traditions often govern how we participate in life. But what of the uniquely Canadian superstitions and traditions practiced across the country?
- Canadian folklore suggests eating fish from the head downward; for a filet of fish, eat the widest part first and then move downward
- In Alberta, picking blackberries after October 11 is bad luck because by this time in the year, the devil has surely laid claim to the remaining berries
- A First Nations ritual advises blessing a new home by taking smoldering sage from room to room and saying prayers; this will banish everything from evil spirits to ill feelings
- A Manitoba urban legend says that if you run around St. Andrews-on-the-Red near Lockport three times at midnight, you'll disappear
- In dustbowl Depression-era Saskatchewan it was believed that a red sky at night in the springtime meant the next day would be a windy one, too windy for farmers to seed
- According to one old folktale, the captain of a schooner off the coast of Nova Scotia turned back to port when he discovered one of his crewmen had grey mittens; undertakers wore grey mittens, so it was like asking for a death on the journey.
And so much more...
- Canadian folklore suggests eating fish from the head downward; for a filet of fish, eat the widest part first and then move downward
- In Alberta, picking blackberries after October 11 is bad luck because by this time in the year, the devil has surely laid claim to the remaining berries
- A First Nations ritual advises blessing a new home by taking smoldering sage from room to room and saying prayers; this will banish everything from evil spirits to ill feelings
- A Manitoba urban legend says that if you run around St. Andrews-on-the-Red near Lockport three times at midnight, you'll disappear
- In dustbowl Depression-era Saskatchewan it was believed that a red sky at night in the springtime meant the next day would be a windy one, too windy for farmers to seed
- According to one old folktale, the captain of a schooner off the coast of Nova Scotia turned back to port when he discovered one of his crewmen had grey mittens; undertakers wore grey mittens, so it was like asking for a death on the journey.
And so much more...
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