World welcomes Chinese New Year
Dave Platter, global public relations and communications director for Juwai.com, a Chinese website for buyers of overseas property, said: "Most of my colleagues are Chinese and in Shanghai. At this time of year, all of them are sharing their plans on WeChat. What they will do, where they will go, and which family members they will visit.
"It makes me a bit jealous, really. They are all taking a week off and spending time with family, while my parents and siblings are far away. We don't even get a long lunch!
"I'm an Anglo married to an Australian woman of Chinese descent, so the traditions of Chinese New Year are new to me. For both of us, we have had to learn from friends and the media how to celebrate. We think Chinese New Year is what you make it. It's a time of hope and promise, when you cherish family and take stock of where you are going in life.
"I want my kids to know their Chinese roots because it's a part of who they are. … It seems so alien to them. I just hope that one day they'll realize that not only are they American and Australian, but they are also Chinese."
William Lin, who runs as a computer repair business in Sydney, emigrated to Australia from Guangzhou, Guangdong province in 1989.
For Lin and his Australian-born family, the Lunar New Year is still a big event.
"Although we are Australian, we still maintain some of our traditions," he said.
He said the Lunar New Year "is still important to us and I want the kids to feel an attachment to their heritage".