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14 January
is celebrated in India as Makar Sankranti - heralding the transition
of the sun into the Northern hemisphere. It is also a big kite day
in most parts of India when children from 6 to 60 can be seen with
their heads turned to the sky! In cities like Jaipur and Ahmedabad
kites virtually blot out the sky. Everyone joins in this riotous
celebration and shouts of " Woh Kata Hai !" reverberate
from rooftops to the accompaniment of drums as adversaries
kites are cut down. And everyones an adversary! Any kite in
the sky is fair game ! But for 5 years now weve held the Desert
Kite Festival every year to coincide with Makar Sankranti - safely.
No ones lost a kite, yet!

However, for some time, we've been seriously considering turning
this into a Festival that happens every two years instead of ever
year. Originally we were to take a break on 2001 and do the 5th
Festival in 2002. But then we got an invitation to fly at the Taj
Mahal in Jan 2001 - and that was just too good to pass up. So, there
will be no Desert Kite Festival in Jan 2002; we shall have the next
one in Jan 2003 - that gives everybody enough time to plan (and
save up!) and it also gives us a breather...
The
6th Festival, in Jan
2003 continues to offer the really exciting opportunity that we
added on this year - a chance to fly at the glorious Taj Mahal !We
fly in Jodhpur for two days - at the Polo Ground and the spectacular
Umaid Bhawan Palace, the residence of the Maharaja of Jodhpur; then
we go on to Jaipur to experience the incredible "Kite Frenzy"
that grips this town on Makar Sankranti - millions of kites fill
the sky and everyone seems to be caught up in the kite fever that
takes over the city ! We then move on to Agra and fly at the Taj
Mahal, one of the most beautiful monuments in the world. The Festival
comprises 2 sections - the Fighter Kite Competition and Display
Flying - with trophies in both categories.

We have also scheduled workshops,
including one with school children. The evenings are full of banquets,
revelry and gaiety - Rajasthan has some incredible folk artists
and you have a chance to experience their fascinating dance and
music in an intimate atmosphere.

Some of the finest fliers in the world have attended
our Festivals.

If
you're a kite freak you might recognise some of these names: Tal
Streeter, George Peters, Melanie Walker, David Brittain, Scott Skinner,
Ali Fujino ( U.S.A.), Nest Lernout, Frank Coenraets, Guy Van Acker
(Belgium), Rene de Calonne (Holland) Peter Stauffer (Australia),
Colin Mckay and Geraldine Lopdell (New Zealand), Ludo Petit, Philippe
Revel, Yves Fedon, Karine Boitrelle, Francois and Jacqueline Gonnet,
Anne and Laurent Nicole
(Manjha Club International, France), Jean-Philippe Bequet,
Nicolas Chorier, Jean-
Mi
chel
Petit, Nicolas
and Sylvain G
rez
,
Christophe Cheret, Sylvie Perruche, Sarah Michal and F
rederique
Barbier (France), Werner Steinmetzer, Klaus Hoffman, Uwe Groll (Germany),
Paul Thody, Martin Lester (England), Masami and Akiko Takakuwa (Japan),
Alfred Lee and the Hong Kong Fighter Kite Club, Allan Lim (Singapore)
and Babu Khan of India.
The winners so far:
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Fighter Kite Championship - Om Kite Club, Delhi
Best Display Flier - David Brittain, USA
Best Creative Kite Design ( Indian) - Babu Khan Patangwale, Jaipur
Best Creative Kite Design ( Foreign ) - Ludo Petit, President Manjha
Club, France


Hong Kong Kite Fighting Club, Hong Kong
Best Display Flier - Paul Thody, England
Most Creative Kite Design ( Foreign ) - George Peters and Melanie
Walker, USA
Most Creative Kite Design ( Indian ) - Asghar Hussain Baylim, Jodhpur. |



Fighter Kite Championship - Biplabi Surya Sen Kite Club, Calcutta
Best Display Fliers - Nicolas and Sylvain Grez, France
Most Creative Kite Design - Martin Lester, England
Best Team Effort - Werner Steinmetzer, Uwe Groll, Klaus Hoffman, Germany



I Millennium Cup of Fighter Kites - Ankush Kite Club,
Delhi

Most Creative Kite Design (Indian) - Babu Khan, India
Most Creative Kite Design (Foreign) - Collectif Zoone, France
Technical Innovation with Kites - Nicolas Chorier, France
Best Display Flying - Sarah Michal & Frederique Barbier, France
Delicacy and Beauty of Design - Akiko and Masami Takakuwa, Japan
But, winning apart, a good time is had by all ... the weathers
good, the beers chilled, the Palace is awesome, the Makar Sankranti
experience is out of this world, and the chance to fly at the Taj
is really special ... Just bring the wind with you!

Click here for TravelInfo

For more information send a message to nomadtravels@vsnl.com
specifying Desert Kite Festival as the subject.

Aerial
pictures by Nicholas Chorier

A series on the master craftsman Babu
Khan of Jaipur making a kite.

2001
Festival Images

Pictures
from the 2000 Desert Kite Festival

Photos
from the 99 Festival
 
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