![]() |
Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
no, not rhyming slang.
I've never been on, or been involved in an Easter egg hunt, nor do I remember it being a British thing. Does it happen there or is it a North American idea. The Easter Bunny, now what does he do? is he the Easter version of Santa but bringing eggs?? When I was very young and living in Co Durham we used to make pace eggs, eggs boiled in food colouring or painted. We then played jabby eggs which involved holding a hard boiled egg in your hand and bashing someone else's hard boiled egg. The one that lasted the longest was the winner. Are there any other regional traditions? |
Re: Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
Originally Posted by fledermaus
(Post 8474673)
no, not rhyming slang.
I've never been on, or been involved in an Easter egg hunt, nor do I remember it being a British thing. Does it happen there or is it a North American idea. The Easter Bunny, now what does he do? is he the Easter version of Santa but bringing eggs?? When I was very young and living in Co Durham we used to make pace eggs, eggs boiled in food colouring or painted. We then played jabby eggs which involved holding a hard boiled egg in your hand and bashing someone else's hard boiled egg. The one that lasted the longest was the winner. Are there any other regional traditions? Here, the Easter Bunny/Santa (me:lol:) hides the eggs and the kids go on a hunt with their easter baskets. |
Re: Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
I think you're right in that it was never a British thing although it seems to have taken off there more so in recent years; the same with Halloween really!
For the last few years, where I lived in Surrey, I know of a couple of large organised Easter Egg Hunts that are held each year now. I agree with your understanding re the Easter Bunny. I've never heard of the term "pace eggs" although I have done similar things with my children, both here and in the UK. I've never heard or "jabby eggs" either. Sounds more like conkers to me! Perhaps jabby eggs was a Co Durham thing? Sounds like fun though; perhaps I'll try that one next year! :thumbsup:
Originally Posted by fledermaus
(Post 8474673)
no, not rhyming slang.
I've never been on, or been involved in an Easter egg hunt, nor do I remember it being a British thing. Does it happen there or is it a North American idea. The Easter Bunny, now what does he do? is he the Easter version of Santa but bringing eggs?? When I was very young and living in Co Durham we used to make pace eggs, eggs boiled in food colouring or painted. We then played jabby eggs which involved holding a hard boiled egg in your hand and bashing someone else's hard boiled egg. The one that lasted the longest was the winner. Are there any other regional traditions? |
Re: Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
Originally Posted by TheThornes
(Post 8474796)
I think you're right in that it was never a British thing although it seems to have taken off there more so in recent years; the same with Halloween really!
For the last few years, where I lived in Surrey, I know of a couple of large organised Easter Egg Hunts that are held each year now. I agree with your understanding re the Easter Bunny. I've never heard of the term "pace eggs" although I have done similar things with my children, both here and in the UK. I've never heard or "jabby eggs" either. Sounds more like conkers to me! Perhaps jabby eggs was a Co Durham thing? Sounds like fun though; perhaps I'll try that one next year! :thumbsup: |
Re: Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
Originally Posted by fledermaus
(Post 8474852)
definitely a co durham thing, and always disappointing. The coloured egss were also called paste eggs, maybe from Pasques?? They were fun.
|
Re: Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
Originally Posted by Novocastrian
(Post 8474934)
Doubt it. County Dorhum yokels divn't taak french.
|
Re: Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
Originally Posted by dollface
(Post 8474784)
When I was little in Scotland we painted hard boiled eggs then rolled them down a hill on Easter Sunday before tucking into the choccy eggs!
Here, the Easter Bunny/Santa (me:lol:) hides the eggs and the kids go on a hunt with their easter baskets. |
Re: Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
Originally Posted by Oink
(Post 8475669)
It seems rather mean spirited for the Easter Bunny to hide the eggs, he should take a leaf out of FC's book and leave the bloody things on the end of the bed.
Mind you - if he was that conscious, he'd give up some carrots instead. |
Re: Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
We took our kids to the park so that they could "roll their eggs".
Hard-boil some eggs, decorate them, and then roll them down a hill until they crack. Then scoff them. Must be a Scottish thing. |
Re: Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
when I was growing up we used to have an Easter Tree. I think it was a German tradition that my parents picked up while posted there. Take a few twigs (I seem to remember pussy-willow catkins), stand them in a vase, and decorate with decorated blown eggs. Us kids used to paint a couple of eggs each every year, and combine them with the previous years' (minus the inevitable breakages and resultant tears...).
|
Re: Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
Originally Posted by Oakvillian
(Post 8475857)
when I was growing up we used to have an Easter Tree. I think it was a German tradition that my parents picked up while posted there. Take a few twigs (I seem to remember pussy-willow catkins), stand them in a vase, and decorate with decorated blown eggs. Us kids used to paint a couple of eggs each every year, and combine them with the previous years' (minus the inevitable breakages and resultant tears...).
|
Re: Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
Originally Posted by Jingsamichty
(Post 8475817)
We took our kids to the park so that they could "roll their eggs".
Hard-boil some eggs, decorate them, and then roll them down a hill until they crack. Then scoff them. Must be a Scottish thing. |
Re: Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
Originally Posted by Oink
(Post 8475669)
It seems rather mean spirited for the Easter Bunny to hide the eggs, he should take a leaf out of FC's book and leave the bloody things on the end of the bed.
|
Re: Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
The only tradition we had growing up was to gorge ourselves on chocolate for breakfast :lol:
I do an easter egg hunt for the kids - The easter bunny (ie me) hides the eggs and then they all run around screeching as they find them. I make them pool their haul and then divide it equally among them all to avoid fights and arguments. |
Re: Easter Egg Hunts and other traditions
The ones I recall from childhood & still know of now are:
blowing eggs & decorating them making easter bonnets & competitions making easter biscuits / cakes eating chocolate eggs - as many as allowed:p newer ones are the easter egg hunts to me too, as are the egg rolling (think that went on but not in my bit of Yorks) hunting the eggs was an easily adopted time killing activity for brownies, playgroup, school etc but not something I has as a child myself. |
| All times are GMT -12. The time now is 12:36 am. |
Powered by vBulletin: ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.