@0x11de784a In #Australia, the 'holidaying' focus is more around it being a long weekend with no work on Friday and Monday.
There's hot cross buns - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_cross_bun (a very British tradition)
And there's a lot of focus on having as much seafood as possible (ie http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-03-25/sydney-fish-market-scales-up-operation-for-easter-weekend/7276552)
Yes.
I don't think seafood isn't a religious thing (AFAIK). Seafood is also a big thing for Christmas here in Oz.
I don't think it'll be a big thing if you're not completely surrounded by ocean.
@superruserr Yeah, makes sense.
I was thinking about religious, christian fasting on Good Friday which I really don't know the rules of except it allows fish instead of meat so that's what people are eating.
@0x11de784a Hmm, didn't think of that. Most of the population resides around the coastal areas so seafood is a big thing (if that's in your diet in the first place).
@superruserr I'd guess you're right about that living on the coastal areas might have more influence on that. But I don't know much about coastal life, religious fasting nor seafood :D
@0x11de784a
CUF.org might have those answers
@superruserr Most people in Germany don't care about the dancing ban I guess and are just glad to have a longer weekend too :)
Seafood would be weird from my perspective. But while thinking about it that's maybe because I wasn't raised religious; German-style fish is common on Good Friday.
Sweet buns with raisins are common too, but without cross symbolism.
So Easter Friday and Monday are federal holidays in Australia?