In march the bulgarians have tradition to exchange these adornments called [martenitsa](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martenitsa) because it is believed they will give you luck and health after the winter. Feel free to read the wikipedia link I left
smoothfucker420 on
Martenitza. On the 1st of March you gift them to your friends
Elbowed_In_The_Face on
Yes, we give these out to people on the 1st day of March. You can wear it on your wrist for a couple of days, if you want, it’s like a spring good-luck charm. Traditionally, people are supposed to wear them until they see a stork (these birds coming back in March are a sign of spring) and then you either tie it to a blooming tree or put it under a rock.
It’s not exactly “lucky charm” It’s more like spring celebration. Most likely it’s in the region from pre Christian era. Thousands of year old tradition.
Fledermausmann69420 on
A mf luck and health charm.
ReActive9499 on
Какво да е?
Sahmmey on
A pagan occult practice. (Yes, I know I’ll get downvoted into oblivion but that’s the truth)
Frieb21 on
Dont listen to them. Bulgarians are big fans of Atletico de Madrid.
Substantial-One1934 on
In Bulgaria and other Balkans countries we use to give each other these red and white threads to celebrate the coming spring
Cold-Pomegranate6739 on
+1 Luck
+1 HP
AgileExPat on
Thank you, everyone, for your kind and informative answers. Now I know!
randomusername9284 on
A thing my cat tried to eat and almost swallowed it before I reacted and pulled it out of the bastard’s mouth.
15 Comments
Мартеничка.
Gift for 1st of March, it brings health and luck
In march the bulgarians have tradition to exchange these adornments called [martenitsa](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martenitsa) because it is believed they will give you luck and health after the winter. Feel free to read the wikipedia link I left
Martenitza. On the 1st of March you gift them to your friends
Yes, we give these out to people on the 1st day of March. You can wear it on your wrist for a couple of days, if you want, it’s like a spring good-luck charm. Traditionally, people are supposed to wear them until they see a stork (these birds coming back in March are a sign of spring) and then you either tie it to a blooming tree or put it under a rock.
[Martenitsa ](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martenitsa)
It’s not exactly “lucky charm” It’s more like spring celebration. Most likely it’s in the region from pre Christian era. Thousands of year old tradition.
A mf luck and health charm.
Какво да е?
A pagan occult practice. (Yes, I know I’ll get downvoted into oblivion but that’s the truth)
Dont listen to them. Bulgarians are big fans of Atletico de Madrid.
In Bulgaria and other Balkans countries we use to give each other these red and white threads to celebrate the coming spring
+1 Luck
+1 HP
Thank you, everyone, for your kind and informative answers. Now I know!
A thing my cat tried to eat and almost swallowed it before I reacted and pulled it out of the bastard’s mouth.
PAC-MAN, Bulgarian edition