The exact date you should put up your Christmas tree to avoid bad luck – and it isn’t December 1

According to experts, December 1 is not the best day to put up your Christmas tree. People should wait to decorate the Christmas tree during the holidays.

According to the experts at Christmas Tree World, traditional Advent begins on the fourth Sunday before Christmas, meaning the perfect date can range from November 27 to December 3.

This year it falls on December 3, which means it’s the perfect day to start the celebrations.

According to Christian rules, there is also a perfect day to take down your decorations: the twelfth day of Christmas.

According to experts, December 1 is not the best day to put up your Christmas tree. People should wait to decorate for the holidays.

And while this sounds simple, it’s not that clear as there are debates about when the twelve days of Christmas begin.

But as long as you take it down around January 5 or 6, you’re safe.

The Christmas tree experts noted that many people choose to ignore the religious ties and put up their trees on December 1 each year.

β€œMany households like to put up their tree and other festive decorations on the first day of the month to mark the start of the official countdown to the big day,” they said.

Some Australians go even earlier – South Australians grow their trees after the annual Christmas parade – which takes place in early November.

Others say they leave their trees up “the first weekend in December.”

While some ‘hang it up after Advent, on Christmas Eve’.

They also revealed which countries are ‘the biggest believers’ in Santa – and it turns out Australia is second on the list.

According to Google search data, the Land Down Under is second only to Ireland when it comes to questions asked about the man in red.

There were more than 500 searches per 100,000 people, making Australia the Christmas capital of the Southern Hemisphere.

“It’s fortunate that Aussies believe in the magic of Santa Claus as it would take him 34 hours to fly commercially from near the North Pole to Sydney,” they said.