A dollop of cream on a Swiss floor on New Year's Eve signifies luck and prosperity rather than a messy eater.
Christmas trees are ceremoniously burnt as a farewell bonfire to the previous year.
In Norway and Denmark, they prepare a Nordic dessert called kransekage: a tall, layered cake made with marzipan and decorated with flags and other New Year's Eve party paraphernalia. Camilla Parker Bowles once joined Queen Sonja of Norway to take part in the Norwegian New Years' celebration.
If you're in Peru, try and catch the Takanakuy Festival, held near Cusco in Chumbivilcas Province. Local inhabitants gather to see out the year with fist fights to settle old scores. They can then greet the new year on a clean slate!
In Siberia, they plunge through a hole in a frozen lake while clutching a tree trunk, which is ceremoniously placed underneath the ice. The origin of this ritual has its roots in the idea of growth and renewal.
Across Ecuador at the stroke of midnight, effigies of politicians, pop culture figures, and other public icons are torched in the street in a symbolic ritual to cleanse the bad from the previous 12 months.
Hanging onions from the front door of a house on New Year's Eve is a symbol of rebirth for the coming year, according to many Greek households.
The Czechs believe that by cutting an apple in half and looking at the shape of its core, it's possible to predict what the coming year has in store.
Many people celebrate the new year by singing 'Auld Lang Syne.' And what about New York's Times Square Ball Drop? A wonderful occasion for sure, but hardly unusual. So, where can you celebrate New Year's Eve with a difference?
Browse this gallery and take a look at some of the oddest New Year traditions from around the globe.
Unique New Year traditions from around the world
The weirdest ways to go out with the old, and in with the new
TRAVEL Holidays
Many people celebrate the new year by singing 'Auld Lang Syne.' And what about New York's Times Square Ball Drop? A wonderful occasion for sure, but hardly unusual. So, where can you celebrate New Year's Eve with a difference?
Browse this gallery and take a look at some of the oddest New Year traditions from around the globe.