DANCING IN THE STREETS 2012
2012年08月28日

The Bon Odori Dance, held in the main street in Takamatsu is always a colorful and spectacular event. More’s-the-pity my camera battery died and I had to resort to my cellphone to do the job. The pictures aren’t the best I’m sorry. I can and usually do much, much better.


This is an annual event with Buddhist roots and held to welcome back ancestors for the three-day period Obon when hundreds of thousands of people return to hometowns to tend the graves of their ancestors and reconnect with the past.

The culmination of this is the dance itself and the spectacular fireworks display within the same short Obon period. It’s also a time when the seasons are changing and for me at least, I often sense a palpable change in weather at this time. Crickets can be heard in the evenings, the cicadas are quieter and the winds pick up particularly in the evenings and the nighttime falls earlier. A welcome respite to be sure as the sticky summer days are at times, too much.

So here’s how people unwind while back home. Dancing teams compete for prizes, company employees usually form these teams and each team has their own colorful uniforms, which are also judged for creativity and style.

The dances themselves have and are still evolving from the traditional forms, the traditional kimono wear. The young take the initiatives in these two areas and some of the creations and dance moves are very exciting indeed.


At the end of the street performances, the teams come to the Central Park to do the very same routines on stage in front of a panel of judges who decide the winners.

The Central Park is also full of street vendors’ stalls and even these are changing a little with the introduction of Turkish Doner kebabs.

Still, the traditional foods & snacks stalls are all still here as are the traditional goldfish scooping stalls, (金魚すくい) ‘Kingyo-sukui’ where one has to pick up a fish with a tissue paper scoop. Sometimes colorful rubber balls are also used for prizes. The paper gets wet and tears of course and makes things more difficult so we have to be quick!
I’ll be back next week with a very interesting blog on a little known but fantastic art museum in Sakaide. So until then, enjoy the fading days of summer if in the northern hemisphere or conversely, if in the southern hemisphere please look forward to warmer days.
"Pat has lived in Takamatsu continuously since arriving here on a one year study and leave 1981. Originally from Tasmania, Australia, he was involved in education at a variety of levels including as a specialist teacher for children with learning difficulties, and at senior high schools throughout the state. Pat is employed full-time by the i-pal Kagawa International Exchange as a co-oridintaor for international relations amongst other duties including traveling to schools and giving talks in Japanese to kids about Australia. He has been involved with youth education exchanges between Japan and Australia for many years.
Pat has been many things in his colorful life including a seaman, helmsman, welder, carpenter, traffic warden, scholarship/studentship winner at the university of Tasmania, staff at the Australian Embassy in London to name but a few. Pat has far too many hobbies which include tennis, playing jazz flutes and saxes, riding bicycles with the Takamatsu Cycling Club all of which his long-suffering family tolerate. Recently he's become interested in painting again. His wife wishes he would put more time in to helping around the house and the garden which he artfully avoids ..."
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Posted by pat at 13:02
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