Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

What drops on New Year’s Eve? Not just Times Square ball

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NEW YORK >> That glittering ball in Times Square may be the bestknown object dropping on New Year’s Eve, but it’s by no means the weirdest.

There’s stiff competitio­n in that category: Everything from a fish to a shoe to a giant candy Peep will descend on Saturday to welcome in 2017.

The tiny lakeside town of Port Clinton, Ohio, will celebrate the new year by dropping a 20-footlong, 600-pound replica of a walleye fish. The annual Idaho potato drop in Boise will feature a massive lit-up “glowtato” to celebrate one of the state’s most famous products. In Lake Tahoe, Nevada, a brightly lit gondola is dropped at the Heavenly Mountain ski resort.

In Key West, Florida, four different things — including two humans — are lowered to welcome the new year. A giant conch shell is dropped at Sloppy Joe’s Bar, a costumed “pirate wench” is lowered outside the Schooner Wharf Bar, a wedge of Key lime descends into a huge margarita glass at the Ocean Key House Resort, and of course in what is probably Key West’s most famous New Year’s Eve tradition, a large red high-heeled shoe carrying female impersonat­or Gary “Sushi” Marion is lowered outside the Bourbon Street Pub

complex on Duval Street.

Bethlehem, Pennsylvan­ia, hosts a two-day family-friendly Peeps festival that includes the dropping of a 200-pound lit-up Peeps chick. Peeps manufactur­er Just Born began operating in Bethlehem in the 1930s.

In Memphis, Tennessee, a lit-up guitar is dropped at the Hard Rock Cafe on Beale Street. Raleigh, North Carolina, which calls itself the city of oaks, drops a giant acorn to welcome the new year. Atlanta hosts a peach drop, and New Orleans drops a fleur-de-lis.

The tradition of dropping a ball to mark a moment dates back to the 19th century, but it didn’t originate as a New Year’s Eve custom. “Time balls” were once displayed in harbors and lowered daily to signal a certain time of day so that ships could precisely set the chronomete­rs they used for navigation. The New Year’s Eve tradition began in 1907 when a time ball was dropped as part of a public celebratio­n hosted by The New York Times at its building in Times Square.

The Times Square ball has been redesigned a number of times over the decades. It was originally made of iron, wood and 25-watt lightbulbs. The ball that will drop Saturday night in the moments leading up to midnight is made from Waterford crystal triangles, illuminate­d by thousands of LED lights.

 ??  ?? In this file photo, provided by the Florida Keys News Bureau, female impersonat­or Gary Marion, known as Sushi, hangs in a giant replica of a woman’s high heel shoe in Key West, Fla. The shoe with Sushi in it was lowered to Duval Street to mark the...
In this file photo, provided by the Florida Keys News Bureau, female impersonat­or Gary Marion, known as Sushi, hangs in a giant replica of a woman’s high heel shoe in Key West, Fla. The shoe with Sushi in it was lowered to Duval Street to mark the...
 ?? SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The New Year’s Eve ball rests at the top of a building overlookin­g Times Square, in New York, Tuesday. The dropping of the ball has been a tradition in Times Square since 1907.
SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The New Year’s Eve ball rests at the top of a building overlookin­g Times Square, in New York, Tuesday. The dropping of the ball has been a tradition in Times Square since 1907.
 ?? MATT SMITH — THE EXPRESS-TIMES VIA AP, FILE ?? In this file photo, children gather around a large Peep after it was dropped during a New Year’s Eve celebratio­n, at the Levitt Pavillion on the Steelstack­s Campus in Bethlehem, Pa. It’s one of a number of ceremonies in which various objects are...
MATT SMITH — THE EXPRESS-TIMES VIA AP, FILE In this file photo, children gather around a large Peep after it was dropped during a New Year’s Eve celebratio­n, at the Levitt Pavillion on the Steelstack­s Campus in Bethlehem, Pa. It’s one of a number of ceremonies in which various objects are...

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