Tió de Nadal: perhaps the world’s strangest Christmas custom

Photograph of a typical contemporary Tió

Image via Wikipedia

Christmas is far stranger than it seems, even in America. Add in foreign traditions like Krampus or Zwarte Piet, and it gets even weirder. Probably the most bizarre Christmas custom I’ve heard of, though, is that of the Tió de Nadal (the “Christmas log”), also known as the “Caga tió,” meaning – I’m not making this up – the “pooping log.”

The Tió de Nadal, according to Wikipedia, is a popular character in Catalan mythology in Catalonia, Spain. Basically, it’s a small, hollow log, typically adorned with legs, a face, and a festive hat. Sounds cute, maybe, but it gets weirder. Wikipedia goes on:

Beginning with the Feast of the Immaculate Conception (December 8), one gives the tió a little bit to “eat” every night and usually covers him with a little blanket so that he will not be cold at night.

On Christmas day or, depending on the particular household, on Christmas Eve, one puts the tió
partly into the fireplace and orders it to “poop” (the fire part of
this tradition is no longer as widespread as it once was, since many
modern homes do not have a fireplace). To make him “poop”, one beats him
with sticks, while singing various songs of Tió de Nadal.

The tió does not drop larger objects, as those are brought by the Three Wise Men. It does leave candies, nuts and torrons.
Depending on the part of Catalonia, it may also give out dried figs.
When nothing is left to “poop”, it drops a salt herring, a head of
garlic, an onion or “urinates”. What comes out of the tió is a communal rather than individual gift, shared by everyone present.

Catalans even sing carols to the Tió de Nadal. Here’s one such song (translation included):

caga tió,

caga torró,
avellanes i mató,
si no cagues bé
et daré un cop de bastó.
caga tió!”

poop log,

poop turrón,
hazelnuts and cottage cheese,
if you don’t poop well,
I’ll hit you with a stick,
poop log!

giving log,

give us treats,
give us sweets!
if you don’t want to give,
I’ll hit you with a stick,
give it up!

If you’d like to participate in this strange, ancient tradition with your own family, there is a helpful how-to guide here.

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The Origin of Rudolph

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer cover

Image by Eda Cherry via Flickr

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer is today one of the most popular and immutable fixtures of the Christmas season. But has it always been thus? Where and when did the Rudolph story originate? After all, you may have noted that Rudolph does not feature in the beloved 1823 poem “A Visit From St. Nicholas / The Night Before Christmas”; the poem lists only eight reindeer (“Now! Dasher, now! Dancer, now! Prancer and Vixen, / On! Comet, on! Cupid, on! Dunder and Blixem”), and Rudolph is not among them.

Rudolph, it turns out, was created by the Montgomery Ward department store in 1939. From the Smithsonian:

Rudolph
the Red-Nosed Reindeer first appeared in 1939 when Montgomery Ward
department store asked one of its copywriters, 34-year-old Robert L.
May, to create a Christmas story the store could give away to shoppers
as a promotional gimmick.

The
retailer had been buying and giving away coloring books for Christmas
every year; and it was decided that creating its own book would save
money. In the first year of publication, 2.4 million copies of Rudolph’s
story were distributed by Montgomery Ward.

Rudolph was further popularized, of course, by Gene Autry’s 1949 song (lyrics by Robert May’s brother-in-law) and Burl Ives’s 1964 TV special. You can read more here and here.

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The first solstice/lunar eclipse overlap in 372 years… tonight!

QINGDAO, CHINA - JANUARY 01:  A partial lunar ...

Image by Getty Images via @daylife

Astronomical events such as this don’t come around often. Be sure to head outside tonight to check out the lunar eclipse, if it will be visible in your area (it’s supposed to be particularly spectacular for North Americans). For more information, you can visit the useful page NASA set up for the occasion. According to NASA,

the eclipse will last about three hours and
twenty-eight minutes. For observers on the east coast of the U.S. the
eclipse lasts from 1:33am EST through 5:01 a.m. EST. Viewers on the west
coast will be able to tune in a bit earlier. For them the eclipse
begins at 10:33 p.m. PST on December 20 and lasts until 2:01am PST on
Dec. 21. Totality, the time when Earth’s shadow completely covers the
moon, will last a lengthy 72 minutes.

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The “terrible hairy fly” rediscovered in Kenya

Our friend Ryan brings our attention to this unusually-headlined article (this one, especially, sounds like a bad low-budget film, and one that I’d gladly watch). The article’s short, so I won’t let my commentary get in the way of your curiosity:

Scientists in Kenya have located one of the world’s rarest and oddest-looking flies after a long hunt for an insect dubbed the “terrible hairy fly,” experts said on Wednesday.


Scientists first stumbled across the yellow-haired fly in 1933 and then
again in 1948. Since then, at least half a dozen expeditions have
visited a site between the towns of Thika and Garissa to find it again.


At about one centimeter long and so far found on a single 20-meter high
rock, the Mormotomyia hirsuta looks more like a spider with its hairy
legs, scientists said.


Unable to fly and partial to breeding in bat feces, the fly is thought
to live only in the dank, bat-filled cleft of an isolated rock in the
Ukazi Hills. It also has non-functional wings that resemble miniature
belt-straps, and tiny eyes.

More details – and a photo – here.

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Bush hid the facts

This headline does not, in fact, refer to the Bush Administration’s conduct vis-a-vis the Iraq war (as accurate as it may be). Instead, according to Wikipedia, it is “a common name for a bug present in the function IsTextUnicode of Microsoft Windows, which causes a file of text encoded in Windows-1252 or similar encoding to be interpreted as if it were UTF-16LE, resulting in mojibake.”

In other words, when you type “Bush hid the facts” in a new Notepad document, save it, close it, and reopen it, the characters “畢桳栠摩琠敨映捡獴” inexplicably appear instead. A rather strange error, and certainly one that will unnerve conspiracy theorists! Try it out for yourself, if you’re using Windows NT, Windows 2000, or Windows XP (the error doesn’t occur in other versions of Windows). According to Wikipedia, other text strings that have similar effects include “this app can break”, “acre vai pra globo”, and “aaaa aaa aaa aaaaa”

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Ghost cities of China

Everything truly is bigger in China – they have ghost cities, not ghost towns, and they are huge. In fact, it would be easy to run out of adjectives trying to describe their size:

There’s city after city full of empty streets and vast government buildings, some in the most inhospitable locations. It is the modern equivalent of building pyramids.

By some estimates [there are] up to 64 million vacant homes.

the-ghost-city-of-dantu-has-been-mostly-empty-for-over-a_decade.jpg
Business Insider highlights some of these ghost cities, which you can check out here. (Highlights include a completely empty avante-garde art museum, a deserted $19 billion development, and a university designed for 2.3 million students that has 11,000 enrolled.)

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Check out this Google Maps teleporter

If you’re anything like me, you’ve probably spent a great deal of time on Google Maps / Google Earth just browsing around and seeing the sights. MapCrunch.com, though, makes all of that much more exciting: hit a button, and it will take you to a random street-view location somewhere in the world. It’s easier seen than explained, so check it out (today’s location-of-the-day is especially strange).

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