Kite festivals are a popular form of entertainment throughout the world. They include large local events, traditional festivals which have been held for hundreds of years and major international festivals which bring in kite flyers from other countries to display their unique art kites and demonstrate the latest technical kites. Many countries have kite museums. These museums may have a focus on historical kites, preserving the country's kite traditions.
Asia Kite flying is popular in many Asian countries, where it often takes the form of "
kite fighting", in which participants try to snag each other's kites or cut other kites down.
Fighter kites are usually small, flattened
diamond-shaped kites made of paper and bamboo. Tails are not used on fighter kites so that agility and maneuverability are not compromised. ValleyIn
Afghanistan, kite flying is a popular game, and is known in
Dari as
Gudiparan Bazi. Some kite fighters pass their strings through a mixture of ground glass powder and glue, which is legal. The resulting strings are very abrasive and can sever the competitor's strings more easily. The abrasive strings can also injure people. Currently after Taliban rule in Afghanistan, kite flying is banned, among various other recreations. Kites are very popular in
India, with the states of Gujarat, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Haryana and Punjab notable for their kite fighting festivals. Highly maneuverable single-string paper and bamboo kites are flown from the rooftops while using line friction in an attempt to cut each other's kite lines, either by letting the cutting line loose at high speed or by pulling the line in a fast and repeated manner. During the Indian spring festival of
Makar Sankranti, near the middle of January, millions of people fly kites all over northern India. Kite flying in Hyderabad starts a month before this, but kite flying/fighting is an important part of other celebrations, including
Republic Day, Independence Day,
Raksha Bandhan,
Viswakarma Puja day in late September and
Janmashtami. An international kite festival is held every year before
Uttarayan for three days in
Vadodara,
Surat and
Ahmedabad. In
Indonesia kites are flown as both sport and recreation. One of the most popular kite variants is from
Bali. Balinese kites are unique and they have different designs and forms; birds, butterflies, dragons, ships, etc. In
Vietnam, kites are flown without tails. Instead small flutes are attached allowing the wind to "hum" a musical tune. There are other forms of sound-making kites. In Bali, large bows are attached to the front of the kites to make a deep throbbing vibration, and in Malaysia, a row of gourds with sound-slots are used to create a whistle as the kite flies. Malaysia is also home to the
Kite Museum in
Malacca. In
Japan, kite flying is traditionally a children's play in New Year holidays and in the Boys' Festival in May. In some areas, there is a tradition to celebrate a new boy baby with a new kite (祝い凧). There are many kite festivals throughout Japan. The most famous one is "Yōkaichi Giant Kite Festival" in
Higashiōmi, Shiga, which started in 1841. The largest kite ever built in the festival is wide by high and weighs . In the
Hamamatsu Kite Festival in
Hamamatsu, Shizuoka, more than 100 kites are flown in the sky over the
Nakatajima Sand Dunes, one of the three largest sand dunes in Japan, which overlooks the Enshunada Sea. Parents who have a new baby prepare a new kite with their baby's name and fly it in the festival. These kites are traditional ones made from bamboo and paper. Kite are also popular in
Nepal, especially in hilly areas and among the
Pahadi and
Newar communities, although people also fly kites in
Terai areas. Unlike India, people in Nepal fly kites in August – September period and is more popular in time of
Dashain. In
Pakistan, kite flying is often known as Gudi-Bazi or Patang-bazi. Although kite flying is a popular ritual for the celebration of spring festival known as
Jashn-e-Baharaan (lit. Spring Festival) or
Basant, kites are flown throughout the year.
Kite fighting is a very popular pastime all around Pakistan, but mostly in urban centers across the country (especially
Lahore). The kite fights are at their highest during the spring celebrations and the fighters enjoy competing with rivals to cut-loose the string of the others kite, popularly known as "Paecha". During the spring festival, kite flying competitions are held across the country and the skies are colored with kites. When a competitor succeeds in cutting another's kite loose, shouts of 'wo kata' ring through the air. Cut kites are reclaimed by chasing after them. This is a popular ritual, especially among the country's youth, and is depicted in the 2007 film
The Kite Runner (although that story is based in neighboring
Afghanistan). Kites and strings are a big business in the country and several different types of string are used, including glass-coated, metal, and tandi. Kite flying was banned in
Punjab, Pakistan due to more than one motorcyclist death caused by glass-coated or metal kite strings. Kup, Patang, Guda, and Nakhlaoo are some of the popular kite brands; they vary in balance, weight and speed. Kites have been flown in China since ancient times.
Weifang is home to the largest kite museum in the world. It also hosts an annual international kite festival on the large salt flats south of the city. There are several kite museums in Japan, UK,
Malaysia, Indonesia, Taiwan, Thailand and the US. In the pre-modern period, Malays in
Singapore used kites for fishing. File:Kite Flying by Suzuki Harunobu (鈴木 春信).jpg|
Kite Flying by
Suzuki Harunobu, 1766 (
Metropolitan Museum of Art) File:Malaysiakite.jpg|Making a traditional
Wau jala budi kite in
Malaysia. The bamboo frame is covered with plain paper and then decorated with multiple layers of shaped paper and foil. File:Balinese Kites 5.jpg|Various Balinese kites is on display in front of a store in
Ubud, Bali, Indonesia File:Kite shop in Lucknow.jpg|A kite shop in
Lucknow, India File:Japanese kites.jpg|Traditional Japanese kites File:Wt-3395EX4.5.jpg|Different kites are sold at a shop in
Hội An, Vietnam File:yokaichi01.jpg|The
Yokaichi Giant Kite Festival is held every July in
Higashiomi, Shiga, Japan.]
Europe In
Greece and
Cyprus, flying kites is a tradition for
Clean Monday, the first day of
Lent. In the
British Overseas Territory of
Bermuda, traditional
Bermuda kites are made and flown at
Easter, to symbolise Christ's ascent. In
Fuerteventura a kite festival is usually held on the weekend nearest to 8 November lasting for 3 days.
Polynesia Polynesian traditional kites are sometimes used at ceremonies and variants of traditional kites for amusement. Older pieces are kept in museums. These are treasured by the people of Polynesia. File:Charles-Barraud-maori-kite.jpg|
Māori kite File:Peter-lynn-octopus.jpg|Launch of ram-air inflated
Peter Lynn single-line kite, shaped like an octopus and long
South America . The size when flat is , . While flying it becomes a little smaller (about ) due to curvature of the edges when inflated.In Brazil, flying a kite is a very popular leisure activity for children, teenagers and even young adults. Mostly these are boys, and it is overwhelmingly
kite fighting a game whose goal is to maneuver their own kites to cut the other persons' kites' strings during flight, and followed by
kite running where participants race through the streets to take the free-drifting kites. As in other countries with similar traditions, injuries are common and motorcyclists in particular need to take precautions. In Chile, kites are very popular, especially during Independence Day festivities (September 18). In Peru, kites are also very popular. There are kite festivals in parks and beaches mostly on August. In Colombia, kites can be seen flown in parks and recreation areas during August which is calles as windy. It is during this month that most people, especially the young ones would fly kites. In
Guyana, kites are flown at Easter, an activity in which all ethnic and religious groups participate. Kites are generally not flown at any other time of year. Kites start appearing in the sky in the weeks leading up to Easter and school children are taken to parks for the activity. It all culminates in a massive airborne celebration on Easter Monday especially in Georgetown, the capital, and other coastal areas. The history of the practice is not entirely clear but given that Easter is a Christian festival, it is said that kite flying is symbolic of the Risen Lord. Moore describes the phenomenon in the 19th century as follows: The exact origins of the practice of kite flying (exclusively) at Easter are unclear.
Bridget Brereton and Kevin Yelvington speculate that kite flying was introduced by Chinese indentured immigrants to the then colony of British Guiana in the mid 19th century. The author of an article in the
Guyana Chronicle newspaper of May 6, 2007 is more certain: == World records ==