Kite flying
in India is a popular pastime, but nowhere more so than Jaipur. In the late
afternoon sky one can see hundreds of kites flying all around, and in the rest
of the day one can see thousands of kites stuck in trees and powerlines where
they have been cut and fallen.
The kite
festival is on January 14, and everyone tries to cut one another kite. The
string is actually made of glass, and it is desirable in competition to some
sliding up someone else’s kite and cut their string with your own, thus
emerging victorious until such time as your own kite might be cut be someone
else’s.
The kites
are as light as air themselves, made of tissue paper connected to two thin
pieces of bamboo. One of the wood pieces is straight, with the other curved
gracefully side to side.
The most
wonderful thing in the world is to sit at a rooftop bar, sipping gins and tonic,
with a few olives, watching the hotel staff fly kites as happily as small boys,
maybe having a go yourselves, and then watching the sun go down just as the
Muslim call to prayer sounds and a local wedding gets under way with loud drums
leading the dancing procession along the streets below.
Did you do your best Dick van Dyke cockney "Let's Go Fly a Kite" accent??
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