Unbelievable

My colleague's little ones are 2 and 5 years old.
These are the leftovers of their Nikolaus presents. He brought the "leftovers" to work today.

It was unbelievable to me. Chocolate and more chocolate and even more chocolate and these are the leftovers! Looks to me as if grandparents and parents and the rest of the family are trying to outdo one another in the amount of sweets given to the kiddies. The kiddies boots must be huge (see below).

Nikolaustag (Source: Wikipedia):
Sankt Nikolaus is usually celebrated on a small scale. Many children put a boot called Nikolaus-Stiefel (Nikolaus boot) outside the front door on the night of 5 December. St. Nicholas fills the boot with gifts and sweets overnight, and at the same time checks up on the children to see if they were good, polite and helpful the last year. If they were not, they will have a stick (eine Rute) in their boots instead. Nicholas is often portrayed in Bavarian folklore as being accompanied by Knecht Ruprecht who inquires of the children if they have been saying their prayers, and if not, he shakes his bag of ashes at them, or beats them with a stick. Sometimes a Nikolaus impersonator also visits the children at school or in their homes and asks them if they have been good (sometimes ostensibly checking his golden book for their record), handing out presents on the basis of their behavior. This has become more lenient in recent decades, and this task is often taken over by the Weihnachtsmann (Father Christmas). In more Catholic regions, St. Nikolaus is dressed very much like a bishop, rides on a horse, and is welcomed at public places by large crowds. He has a long beard, and loves children, except when they have been naughty. This tradition has been kept alive annually.

19:20; 1°C

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