Pinecone Drop
People usher in the new year with horns, champagne and noisemakers. All well and good, but if you really want to do it right, there’s nothing like lowering a 70-pound, 6-foot-tall, well-lit metallic pinecone.
You might think such a New Year’s Eve breakthrough is recent, given advances in festive technology. But Flagstaff’s annual Pine Cone Drop goes back to 1999, a sand-weighted plastic trash can and lots of hot glue.
The huge pinecone that draws thousands to downtown Flagstaff each New Year’s Eve was merely a random thought launched at a meeting of Weatherford Hotel management seven years ago.
You might think such a New Year’s Eve breakthrough is recent, given advances in festive technology. But Flagstaff’s annual Pine Cone Drop goes back to 1999, a sand-weighted plastic trash can and lots of hot glue.
The huge pinecone that draws thousands to downtown Flagstaff each New Year’s Eve was merely a random thought launched at a meeting of Weatherford Hotel management seven years ago.
Happy New Year to our extended families and friends. Stan and Candy
1 Comments:
Happy New Year! We watched Dick Clark from home in light of our recent Vegas adventure!
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