event report by Neil Taylor

This
years festival was held to commemorate the "Celebrations on the Auspicious
Occasion of His Majesty the Kings 6th cycle Birthday Anniversary (5th
December 1999)"
Run on a tighter budget than in previous years the event still
attracted more than 50 fliers from 17 countries. Personally, I preferred this smaller
number than in previous years as it allowed for more quality time spent with both old and
new kite flying friends. The fliers were accommodated in great comfort at Bangkoks
Siam Beverley Hotel where there was never any shortage of delicious Thai cuisine or more
western dishes.
On Friday afternoon our luxury double decker bus whisked us away
along elevated
expressways, occasionally caught up in the
citys
quagmire
of pollution-belching traffic, to the recently built Muang Thong Thani Sports Stadium. The
venue was completed last year for the Asian Games but presumably there had been no future
plans made for holding kite festivals there! The "flying field" was apparently
only bulldozed a few days earlier. This was quite easy to believe considering the dozens
of pieces of re-inforcement steel sticking out of the dirt and rubble which were to play
havoc with multiple bridle lines and fly lines over the next few days. The fliers all
seemed to deal very well with this frustrating inconvenience and continued
unconcerned. Our introduction to
Bangkok continued with a leisurely evening dinner cruise on the Chow Phraya River with
more than the occasional beer being consumed.
Saturday morning brought light breezes, enough for
kite lines to be tied down allowing fliers to
spend a little time in the shade. The sun was scorching and the humidity
unrelenting
..this was not to improve throughout the weekend yet the atmosphere
amongst the fliers was always jovial. The most repeated word of the festival was
"HOT"!!
Late afternoon saw the arrival of an entourage of Mercedes
limousines and a Rolls Royce carrying H.S.H. Princess Siriwanwaree Mahidol.
Representatives of each country were presented to her as the Thai kite fighting teams took
to the field in
traditional costume and showed their skill with
their chula and pakpao kites. The Bay Area Sundowners impressed the crowds with a superb
aerial ballet demonstration under difficult conditions.
Sunday was tougher than Saturday with only brief gusts of wind from
various directions. So brief, in fact, that you could time them with a stop watch. The
smarter fliers would time the gusts for a minimum of one minute before venturing
out on the field!
There were one or two periods where kites stayed aloft for 20 minutes or
so but overall it was only the energetic enthusiasm of the fliers that kept the crowd
interested. Cornelia and Thomas Roth from Germany showed their superb applique skills with
a variety of edo-style kites as the Korean team launched their multi-celled dragons. The
colorful della Porta "Elephant" of Gail Wilmer (Aus) was a big hit with the Thai
camera crews. Sadly, due to the shortage of good breezes, the fliers were limited in their
ability to show off their kites in the air but the tent area was literally brimming with
kites!
Our thanks must go to the Tourism Authority of Thailand and Thai
Airways for their generosity and hospitality and also to the ever-present Ron Spaulding
who, although not directly involved this year, must take credit for building the festival
into the event it is today.
Footnote! One night Sundowner Barry Nash, Frits Jansma and I were in
a reasonably well lit but narrow street admiring a 10 feet high fully grown elephant. A
perfectly sober middle-aged tourist walked straight into its head and trunk, stepped back
slightly stunned and muttered
"I didnt see it!!" 





Photos:
Southern Thailand (beginning of article) ... kite
is made in the wau bulan style, using layers of cut paper.
bottom left: Superman is a very well known kite
personality in Bangkok named for the outfit he usually wears on the field! His
serpent is HUGE!
bottom middle: Theo and Thea Beerends'
Matchbox edo is painted. (It's superb!!)
bottom right, L-R: Gail Wilmer, Neil Taylor,
Ray Wilmer, David Bull, John Murray