A towering float – complete with a wooden pole that easily rises six storeys – heaves into view.
The float is elaborately decorated with tapestries festooned with gold, and has jet-black wheels taller than the average adult. About 50 people surround it, while a few stand guard on the roof and others sit inside.
The focus of spectators gathered at a road junction in Kyoto, Japan, is on the front of the float, where volunteers are pouring water on bamboo slats laid on the ground to help this behemoth slide through a 90-degree turn.
With loud chants and raw power, the volunteers direct the heavy structure through two small turns. Finally, with one big push, they turn the corner and begin moving forward again.
Decorated with a towering central pole, some of the floats in Kyoto’s Gion Matsuri reach up to 25 metres in height. Photo: Kissa Castaneda
The crowd breaks into applause.
AloJapan.com