If “bare” is intentional, it likely refers to a rustic, stripped-down, nature-based aesthetic – perfectly aligned with enature’s philosophy.
One major “break” in a joint celebration is the calendar. French Christmas (Noël) is celebrated on December 25th (Western Christian). Russian Christmas (Рождество) is celebrated on January 7th (Julian calendar, used by Russian Orthodox Church).
By J. Sinclair
There is a specific kind of silence that exists at 4,000 meters. It is not the silence of a library, nor the sterile hush of a noise-canceling headphone. It is a living silence—one filled with the percussive snap of a distant glacier, the conversation of wind through pine needles, and the steady drumbeat of your own heart.
For the first nineteen minutes of standing on that ridge, you notice the absence of the buzzing. The phantom limb of your smartphone, left in the car two valleys back. Then, something shifts. Your shoulders, which have been hitched up toward your ears for three consecutive fiscal quarters, finally descend. Your breath deepens to match the topography. You remember, suddenly and violently, that you are made of meat and bone and stardust, not of inboxes and notifications. enature russian bare french christmas celebration fix
This is the invitation of the outdoor lifestyle. It is not a hobby. It is not a weekend warrior’s quest for a Instagram carousel. It is a homecoming.
Fix: Celebrate on January 1 (New Year’s) as a compromise. Or hold a first celebration on Dec 25 (French style) and a second on Jan 7 (Russian style), but keep both “bare” – i.e., no extravagant spending, no over-decoration. If “bare” is intentional, it likely refers to
Instead of 12 Russian dishes + 13 French desserts, fix the menu by combining core natural foods: