Televised images of New York City’s glittery ball drop have become inextricably linked with New Year’s Eve. But Times Square isn’t the only place to ring in the new year with an object dropping at midnight.
Las Cruces, New Mexico, is spicing up New Year’s Eve with its first ever chile drop. In Miami, a 35-foot neon orange will light up Wednesday night, while Atlanta and Nashville, Tennessee, will mark the start of 2015 with peach and music note drops.
In Arizona, the celebratory New Year’s Eve drops include a pine cone, cowboy boot and playing card. Officials in cities with Times Square-styled celebrations have found that the events are great ways to draw people to their downtowns ? often with accompanying fireworks displays and concerts ? while embracing their heritage.
“It’s about raising the level of visibility downtown and doing things downtown that don’t go on elsewhere in the city,” said Andy Hume, coordinator of downtown development for Las Cruces. “For quite a long time, our downtown was on life support, and that’s putting it nicely.”
The city is also taking a more interactive approach by asking residents the age-old New Mexico question: red or green? Las Cruces residents have been voting through an online poll on whether the chile’s LED lights should shine red or green, organizer Russ Smith said.
“Since red and green is so common in the vocabulary here in New Mexico, it blends perfectly with the interest of the people,” Smith said. “It has created curiosity and interest on the part of the public.”
Around the country, the countdown-to-midnight events are quirky and sometimes bizarre. Objects range from a watermelon to walleye to a live opossum.
The town of Brasstown, North Carolina, for most of the past 20 years has used a live animal in its New Year’s Eve Possum Drop. But this year, after challenges from animal rights protesters, the organizer says he’ll no longer use a live opossum ? instead, it’ll be a road-kill opossum or perhaps a pot of opossum stew.
Flagstaff, Arizona, celebrates the new year with a 6-foot pine cone that drops from a downtown hotel twice ? once at 10 p.m. at an event geared toward families and again at midnight. In nearby Prescott, the city began dropping a 6-foot spurred cowboy boot above downtown’s Whiskey Row four years ago in a nod to its western culture.
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