Every New Yearâs Eve, in the harbour town of Stonehaven on Scotlandâs north-east coast, something extraordinary happens. Dozens of locals step into the High Street, each carrying a wire cage packed with flaming material. They swing them overhead as they march. The fire trails in arcs. The crowd watches, then erupts.


What Is the Stonehaven Fireball Ceremony?
The ceremony takes place on 31 December every year, beginning at the stroke of midnight. Locals â known as swingers â march through Stonehavenâs High Street, each one whirling a heavy chain with a burning wire cage fixed to the end.
The cages weigh several kilograms. The chains are roughly a metre long. As the swingers walk, they rotate the fireballs in sweeping circles around their bodies â overhead, to the sides, sometimes low to the ground.
The procession ends at the harbour wall. One by one, the swingers count down and hurl their burning cages into the sea. The crowd roars. The fireballs hiss. And Stonehaven begins its New Year.
Why Do They Do It?
The ceremony is believed to drive away evil spirits and bring good fortune to the coming year. Fire, in ancient Scottish and Norse tradition, was a powerful force of purification. You burned away the old to let the new enter.
Exactly how old the tradition is remains uncertain. The earliest written record dates to 1908, but most historians believe the practise is far older. Similar midwinter fire festivals existed across northern Scotland and Scandinavia for centuries.
Stonehaven sits in Aberdeenshire, an area with deep Norse connections. The Shetland Up Helly Aa festival, held each January, shares the same cultural roots â fire and community, midwinter and renewal.
How the Fireballs Are Made
Each swinger builds their own fireball. The wire cage is packed with rags, tar, wood shavings, and other combustible material, built up over several days beforehand. There is no official recipe.
The quality of the build matters enormously. A well-made fireball burns brightly for the full length of the march. A poorly made one fizzles out before the harbour â which is considered very bad luck.
Some families have been making fireballs and marching in the ceremony for generations. The knowledge is passed down, the chains maintained, the tradition protected.
What to Expect If You Go
The ceremony is free and open to the public. Stonehaven is about 15 miles south of Aberdeen and easy to reach by train or car. The procession begins at the clock tower on the High Street, just after midnight.
Arrive early to claim a spot along the High Street. The crowds press in close, and you want to see the fire clearly. Dress for a cold, dark, windy north-east Scottish night â layers, waterproofs, and good boots are not optional. A good guide to what seasoned travellers pack for Scotland is worth reading before you go.
The ceremony rarely cancels, even in poor weather. The swingers march regardless. That is part of the point.
Part of Scotlandâs Wider Hogmanay Tradition
Stonehaven is one corner of Scotlandâs extraordinary New Year, known as Hogmanay. Across the country, the last night of December is celebrated with more intensity and more peculiarity than Christmas.
In South Queensferry, the Loony Dook sees hundreds of people plunge into the freezing Firth of Forth on the morning of 1 January â another ancient tradition the Scots defend with complete sincerity.
And everywhere, as midnight strikes, Scotland sings Auld Lang Syne â the Robert Burns poem that the whole world knows, though few can explain what it actually means.
Why It Still Matters
There are easier ways to bring in the New Year. Stonehaven could have let this ceremony fade, as so many old customs have. Instead, hundreds of locals still prepare their fireballs, still march, still hurl them into the harbour.
That says something about Scotland. Traditions here are not performed for tourists. They are done because they matter, because they have always been done, because something would be lost without them.
If you are ever in Scotland at New Year, make the journey to Stonehaven. Stand on that High Street as midnight strikes. Watch the fire arc overhead against a dark winter sky. You will understand exactly what this country is made of.
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