Songkran

allthai
allthai
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Thai New Year, or Songkran Festival

  • October 12, 2005
  • Rated 3 of 5 by writeonthespot from Bacolod, Philippines
We couldn’t have been any wetter! It was the Songkran Festival and everyone was just throwing water on anybody. From Vientiane, Laos, to Chiang Mai, Thailand, water sprinkled and splashed everywhere. Kids, friends, families –people from various ages went around town on pick-ups with barrels of water and water guns at hand. It was a sight to marvel! This Buddhist celebration has some similarities with a Catholic feast, but Songkran is just on a larger scale and in a more enjoyable and fun experience.

Though my friends and I were there only for the day, it was one of the most memorable travel experiences I’ve had.

To get to Chiang Mai, there are buses or train scheduled from Bangkok to Chiang Mai. Even during this peak season, we were fortunate to get seats in the train as well as purchase bus tickets during the day of the trip itself. But to be a lot safer, book ahead of time.

From journal Songkran Revelry

Editor Pick

Thai New Year or Songkran festival

  • August 26, 2004
  • Rated 5 of 5 by allthai from Chiangmai, Thailand
Thai New Year or Songkran festival

Songkran, or the Thai New Year, is still the most important of all the Thai festivals and holidays. My Thai wife and I usually have loads of friends from other countries to our home and we love to have them participate in all the traditional activities with us. Although we are not Buddhists we love to go to the temples to watch the activities, eat, drink, throw water and just have fun.


Each year, the four-day celebration of Songkran consists of many activities, and these are briefly explained below.


April 12 is Wan Sungkharn Lohng. This is a day for house cleaning and general preparation for the New Year. In the evening it is traditional for Thais to dress up as a signal of the coming new year.


In Chiangmai, the Songkran procession is held on this day. This is a parade through Chiangmai comprised of Buddha images and attendants on floats, which are accompanied by minstrels and the town's people.


Today we load up the pickup truck with 50-gallon drums filled with water. After the parade we go to the ice house for a large block of ice to put in the water barrel. We then travel around the city joining others in the largest water fight on the planet.


April 13 is Wan Nao. On this day people prepare cooked meals and preserved food for the Buddhist merit-making that takes place on the following day.


Activities at Wat Prasingh continue on this day and in the evening local residents go to the banks of the Mae Ping River and gather sand to be deposited in piles topped by flowers in the temples. This practice is the ancient "raising the temple grounds" ritual, which was necessary in the old days because then Thai New Year was held at the end of the rainy season in the first month of the old Thai Lunar Calendar.


April 14 is Wan Payawan. On this day a grand new year begins with early morning merit-making at the temples. Preserved and cooked foods, fresh fruit, monks' robes and other offerings are made at the temples. In the home, people do the final cleaning of Buddha images using scented water. Traditionally this is the day that the pouring of water begins. It was once the practice to pour gently, but the fun-loving Thais have transposed this into a relative water free-for-all.


April 15 is Wan Parg-bpee. On this day homage is paid to ancestors, elders and other persons deserving respect because of age of position. This is called 'Rohd Nam Songkran', meaning 'The Pouring of Songkran Water', and the water is sprinkled on the elder persons while uttering wishes of good luck and a happy future.


In Chiangmai, this is the final day of the celebration and the day on which people have built up to a crescendo of water throwing. It is the day when all family and religious obligations have been completed and the people are totally dedicated to having fun.


The Songkran Festival is by far the largest water fight on the planet. This was taken in Chiang Mai Thailand and happens every year April 13-15. You have to see this to believe it. Click on the link below to see the first video.
Songkran or Thai new year 2008 in Chiang Mai Thailand


In the second video link below watch us at Chiang Mai Gate in Chiang Mai Thailand during the Songkran festival or Thai new year. Live music, wanter fights, bar-b-que and beer, loads of fun. Also see the lady boys during the parade, very funny.
Thai New Year or Songkran Festival 2008

From journal Thai New Year or Songkran festival

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