As the aroma of sticky rice cakes fills homes today, millions across the Chinese mainland are celebrating Xiaonian โ the "Little New Year" that kicks off the countdown to Spring Festival! ๐งง Northern regions marked the occasion on February 10 with street parades straight out of a historical drama, while southern areas prep for their turn tomorrow.
In Jiangsu's Lianyungang, dragon dancers slithered through crowds as colorful "land boat" performers bobbed to drumbeats ๐ฅ. Over in Shandong's Liaocheng, bamboo-horse riders clip-clopped past cheering families โ proving ancient traditions still slay in 2026! ๐ธ
Why two dates? Blame it on Qing Dynasty budget cuts! ๐ Historians say 17th-century emperors merged Kitchen God rituals with other ceremonies, creating a northern shift to the 23rd day. Meanwhile, the south kept the OG 24th-day tradition โ a perfect example of China's "unity in diversity" cultural vibe.
As social media floods with #KitchenGod memes, young netizens are putting modern spins on the tradition. "I streamed our family's altar cleanup on Douyin," shares Beijing college student Li Wei. "Grandma's stoked our 500-year-old customs are trending!" ๐
With Spring Festival travel already in full swing ๐, this cultural warm-up act reminds us: whether you're Team 23rd or Team 24th, the real win is sticky cake for everyone! ๐ฐ
Reference(s):
Little New Year sparks festive folk celebrations across China
cgtn.com



